Commit graph

42 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Matt Ellis 70e16a2acd Allow using the passphrase secrets manager with the pulumi service
This change allows using the passphrase secrets manager when creating
a stack managed by the Pulumi service.  `pulumi stack init`, `pulumi
new` and `pulumi up` all learned a new optional argument
`--secrets-provider` which can be set to "passphrase" to force the
passphrase based secrets provider to be used.  When unset the default
secrets provider is used based on the backend (for local stacks this
is passphrase, for remote stacks, it is the key managed by the pulumi
service).

As part of this change, we also initialize the secrets manager when a
stack is created, instead of waiting for the first time a secret
config value is stored. We do this so that if an update is run using
`pulumi.secret` before any secret configuration values are used, we
already have the correct encryption method selected for a stack.
2019-05-10 17:07:52 -07:00
Matt Ellis 6278c1c8d9 Do not depend on backend package from client package
The next change is going to do some code motion that would create some
circular imports if we did not do this. There was nothing that
required the members we were moving be in the backend package, so it
was easy enough to pull them out.
2019-05-10 17:07:52 -07:00
Matt Ellis 10792c417f Remove backend.GetStackCrypter
As part of the pluggable secrets work, the crypter's used for secrets
are no longer tied to a backend. To enforce this, we remove the
`backend.GetStackCrypter` function and then have the relevent logic to
construct one live inside the CLI itself.

Right now the CLI still uses the backend type to decide what Crypter
to build, but we'll change that shortly.
2019-05-10 17:07:52 -07:00
Matt Ellis 97902ee50b Refactor config loading out of the backend
We require configuration to preform updates (as well as previews,
destroys and refreshes). Because of how everything evolved, loading
this configuration (and finding the coresponding decrypter) was
implemented in both the file and http backends, which wasn't great.

Refactor things such that the CLI itself builds out this information
and passes it along to the backend to preform operations. This means
less code duplicated between backends and less places the backend
assume things about the existence of `Pulumi.yaml` files and in
general makes the interface more plesent to use for others uses.
2019-05-10 17:07:52 -07:00
Matt Ellis d076bad1a5 Remove Config() from backend.Stack
For cloud backed stacks, this was already returning nil and due to the
fact that we no longer include config in the checkpoint for local
stacks, it was nil there as well.

Removing this helps clean stuff up and is should make some future
refactorings around custom secret managers easier to land.

We can always add it back later if we miss it (and make it actually do
the right thing!)
2019-05-10 17:07:52 -07:00
Alex Clemmer da82638edd Add query primitives to state backend
Because `pulumi query` is not implemented with the update
infrastructure, it is important that we *not* do things like open an
update when the query program runs.

This commit will thus implement the "query" path in the state backend in
a completely parallel universe. Conceptually, this is much like the
update path, but with a conspicuous lack of any connection to the
backend service.
2019-05-02 18:08:08 -07:00
CyrusNajmabadi c6d87157d9
Use result.Result in more places. (#2568) 2019-03-19 16:21:50 -07:00
Matt Ellis a1bb16407d Add pulumi stack rename
`pulumi stack rename` allows you to change the name of an existing
stack. This operation is non-distructive, however it is possible that
the next update will show additional changes to resources, if the
pulumi program uses the value of `getStack()` as part of a resource
name.
2019-03-19 11:04:33 -07:00
Justin Van Patten 5d3d8c01dd
Add commands for managing stack tags (#2333)
Adds `pulumi stack tag` commands for managing stack tags.
2019-01-04 13:23:47 -08:00
Joe Duffy 9aedb234af
Tidy up some data structures (#2135)
In preparation for some workspace restructuring, I decided to scratch a
few itches of my own in the code:

* Change project's RuntimeInfo field to just Runtime, to match the
  serialized name in JSON/YAML.

* Eliminate the no-longer-used Context and NoDefaultIgnores fields on
  project, and all of the associated legacy PPC-related code.

* Eliminate the no-longer-used IgnoreFile constant.

* Remove a bunch of "// nolint: lll" annotations, and simply format
  the structures with comments on dedicated lines, to avoid overly
  lengthy lines and lint suppressions.

* Mark Dependencies and InitErrors as `omitempty` in the JSON
  serialization directives for CheckpointV2 files. This was done for
  the YAML directives, but (presumably accidentally) omitted for JSON.
2018-11-01 08:28:11 -07:00
Praneet Loke 052bc69a52
Add gitlab metadata - Part 1 (#2090)
* Introduce new metadata keys `vcs.repo`, `vcs.kind` and `vcs.owner` to keep the keys generic for any vcs. Expanded the git SSH regex to account for bitbucket's .org domain.

* Introduce new stack tags keys with the same theme of detecting the vcs.
2018-10-23 14:53:52 -07:00
joeduffy 95e917441a Implement preview-then-update for local stacks
This change implements the same preview behavior we have for
cloud stacks, in pkg/backend/httpbe, for local stacks, in
pkg/backend/filebe. This mostly required just refactoring bits
and pieces so that we can share more of the code, although it
does still entail quite a bit of redundancy. In particular, the
apply functions for both backends are now so close to being
unified, but still require enough custom logic that it warrants
keeping them separate (for now...)
2018-09-05 07:33:18 -07:00
Matt Ellis ce5eaa8343 Support TypeScript in a more first-class way
This change lets us set runtime specific options in Pulumi.yaml, which
will flow as arguments to the language hosts. We then teach the nodejs
host that when the `typescript` is set to `true` that it should load
ts-node before calling into user code. This allows using typescript
natively without an explicit compile step outside of Pulumi.

This works even when a tsconfig.json file is not present in the
application and should provide a nicer inner loop for folks writing
typescript (I'm pretty sure everyone has run into the "but I fixed
that bug!  Why isn't it getting picked up?  Oh, I forgot to run tsc"
problem.

Fixes #958
2018-08-06 14:00:58 -07:00
Chris Smith 485bb35180
Relax stack name requirements (#1381)
* Relax stack name requirements

* Add error if stack name too long

* Max tag length is 256 chars
2018-05-29 13:52:11 -07:00
Matt Ellis 9a8f8881c0 Show manifest information for stacks
This change supports displaying manifest information for a stack and
changes the way we handle Snapshots in our backend.

Previously, every call to GetStack would synthesize a Snapshot by
taking the set of resources returned from the
`/api/stacks/<owner>/<name>` endpoint, combined with an empty
manfiest (since the service was not returning the manifest).

This wasn't great for two reasons:

1. We didn't have manifest information, so we couldn't display any of
   its information (most important the last updated time).

2. This strategy required that the service return all the resources
   for a stack anytime GetStack was called. While the CLI did not
   often need this detailed information the fact that we forced the
   Service to produce it (which in the case of stack managed PPC would
   require the service to talk to yet another service) creates a bunch
   of work that we end up ignoring.

I've refactored the code such that `backend.Stack`'s `Snapshot()` method
now lazily requests the information from the service such that we can
construct a `Snapshot()` on demand and only pay the cost when we
actually need it.

I think making more of this stuff lazy is the long term direction we
want to follow.

Unfortunately, right now, it means in cases where we do need this data
we end up fetching it twice. The service does it once when we call
GetStack and then we do it again when we actually need to get at the
Snapshot.  However, once we land this change, we can update the
service to no longer return resources on the apistack.Stack type. The
CLI no longer needs this property.  We'll likely want to continue in a
direction where `apistack.Stack` can be created quickly by the
service (without expensive database queries or fetching remote
resources) and just add additional endpoints that let us get at the
specific information we want in the specific cases when we want it
instead of forcing us to return a bunch of data that we often ignore.

Fixes pulumi/pulumi-service#371
2018-05-23 16:43:34 -07:00
joeduffy 5967259795 Add license headers 2018-05-22 15:02:47 -07:00
Matt Ellis 0732b05c5d Remove pulumi init
`pulumi init` was part of our old identity model with the service and
is no longer used. We can now delete this code.

Fixes #1241
2018-05-22 13:37:08 -07:00
Pat Gavlin e3020e820b Expose change summaries from the backend.
This is a smallish refactoring that exposes the resource change
summaries reported by the engine from the relevant backend methods.
2018-05-15 17:44:35 -07:00
Matt Ellis 6845f9ed20 Add pulumi config refresh to fetch most recent configuration
The newly added `pulumi config refresh` updates your local copy of the
Pulumi.<stack-name>.yaml file to have the same configuration as the
most recent deployment in the cloud.

This can be used in a varirty of ways. One place we plan to use it is
in automation to clean up "leaked" stacks we have in CI. With the
changes you'll now be able to do the following:

```
$ cd $(mktemp -d)
$ echo -e "name: who-cares\nruntime: nodejs" > Pulumi.yaml
$ pulumi stack select <leaked-stack-name>
$ pulumi config refresh -f
$ pulumi destroy --force
```

Having a simpler gesture for the above is something we'll want to do
long term (we should be able to support `pulumi destory <stack-name>`
from a completely empty folder, today you need a Pulumi.yaml file
present, even if the contents don't matter).

But this gets us a little closer to where we want to be and introduces
a helpful primitive in the system.

Contributes to #814
2018-05-14 10:28:42 -07:00
Pat Gavlin 97ace29ab1
Begin tracing Pulumi API calls. (#1330)
These changes enable tracing of Pulumi API calls.

The span with which to associate an API call is passed via a
`context.Context` parameter. This required plumbing a
`context.Context` parameter through a rather large number of APIs,
especially in the backend.

In general, all API calls are associated with a new root span that
exists for essentially the entire lifetime of an invocation of the
Pulumi CLI. There were a few places where the plumbing got a bit hairier
than I was willing to address with these changes; I've used
`context.Background()` in these instances. API calls that receive this
context will create new root spans, but will still be traced.
2018-05-07 18:23:03 -07:00
joeduffy 7c7f6d3ed7 Bring back preview, swizzle some flags
This changes the CLI interface in a few ways:

* `pulumi preview` is back!  The alternative of saying
  `pulumi update --preview` just felt awkward, and it's a common
  operation to want to perform.  Let's just make it work.

* There are two flags consistent across all update commands,
  `update`, `refresh`, and `destroy`:

    - `--skip-preview` will skip the preview step.  Note that this
      does *not* skip the prompt to confirm that you'd like to proceed.
      Indeed, it will still prompt, with a little warning text about
      the fact that the preview has been skipped.

    * `--yes` will auto-approve the updates.

This lands us in a simpler and more intuitive spot for common scenarios.
2018-05-06 13:55:39 -07:00
joeduffy 6ad785d5c4 Revise the way previews are controlled
I found the flag --force to be a strange name for skipping a preview,
since that name is usually reserved for operations that might be harmful
and yet you're coercing a tool to do it anyway, knowing there's a chance
you're going to shoot yourself in the foot.

I also found that what I almost always want in the situation where
--force was being used is to actually just run a preview and have the
confirmation auto-accepted.  Going straight to --force isn't the right
thing in a CI scenario, where you actually want to run a preview first,
just to ensure there aren't any issues, before doing the update.

In a sense, there are four options here:

1. Run a preview, ask for confirmation, then do an update (the default).
2. Run a preview, auto-accept, and then do an update (the CI scenario).
3. Just run a preview with neither a confirmation nor an update (dry run).
4. Just do an update, without performing a preview beforehand (rare).

This change enables all four workflows in our CLI.

Rather than have an explosion of flags, we have a single flag,
--preview, which can specify the mode that we're operating in.  The
following are the values which correlate to the above four modes:

1. "": default (no --preview specified)
2. "auto": auto-accept preview confirmation
3. "only": only run a preview, don't confirm or update
4. "skip": skip the preview altogether

As part of this change, I redid a bit of how the preview modes
were specified.  Rather than booleans, which had some illegal
combinations, this change introduces a new enum type.  Furthermore,
because the engine is wholly ignorant of these flags -- and only the
backend understands them -- it was confusing to me that
engine.UpdateOptions stored this flag, especially given that all
interesting engine options _also_ accepted a dryRun boolean.  As of
this change, the backend.PreviewBehavior controls the preview options.
2018-05-06 13:55:04 -07:00
Matt Ellis cc938a3bc8 Merge remote-tracking branch 'origin/master' into ellismg/identity 2018-04-20 01:56:41 -04:00
Pat Gavlin 4fa69bfd72
Plumb basic cancellation through the engine. (#1231)
hese changes plumb basic support for cancellation through the engine.
Two types of cancellation are supported for all engine operations:
- Cancellation, which waits for the operation to drive itself to a safe
  point before the operation returns, and
- Termination, which does not wait for the operation to drive itself
  to a safe opint for the operation returns.

When updating local or managed stacks, a single ^C triggers cancellation
of any running operation; a second ^C will trigger termination.

Fixes #513, #1077.
2018-04-19 18:59:14 -07:00
joeduffy b77403b4bb Implement a refresh command
This change implements a `pulumi refresh` command.  It operates a bit
like `pulumi update`, and friends, in that it supports `--preview` and
`--diff`, along with the usual flags, and will update your checkpoint.

It works through substitution of the deploy.Source abstraction, which
generates a sequence of resource registration events.  This new
deploy.RefreshSource takes in a prior checkpoint and will walk it,
refreshing the state via the associated resource providers by invoking
Read for each resource encountered, and merging the resulting state with
the prior checkpoint, to yield a new resource.Goal state.  This state is
then fed through the engine in the usual ways with a few minor caveats:
namely, although the engine must generate steps for the logical
operations (permitting us to get nice summaries, progress, and diffs),
it mustn't actually carry them out because the state being imported
already reflects reality (a deleted resource has *already* been deleted,
so of course the engine need not perform the deletion).  The diffing
logic also needs to know how to treat the case of refresh slightly
differently, because we are going to be diffing outputs and not inputs.

Note that support for managed stacks is not yet complete, since that
requires updates to the service to support a refresh endpoint.  That
will be coming soon ...
2018-04-18 10:57:16 -07:00
Matt Ellis c0b2c4f17f Introduce backend.StackReference
Long term, a stack name alone will not be sufficent to address a
stack. Introduce a new `backend.StackReference` interface that allows
each backend to give an opaque stack reference that can be used across
operations.
2018-04-18 04:54:02 -07:00
CyrusNajmabadi f2b9bd4b13
Remove the explicit 'pulumi preview' command. (#1170)
Old command still exists, but tells you to run "pulumi update --preview".
2018-04-13 22:26:01 -07:00
Chris Smith ab2385437a
Validate stack properties like names, runtime, etc. (#1146)
* Validate stack properties like names, runtime, etc.

* Fix build error
2018-04-11 10:08:32 -07:00
CyrusNajmabadi a759f2e085
Switch to a resource-progress oriented view for pulumi preview/update/destroy (#1116) 2018-04-10 12:03:11 -07:00
Pat Gavlin a23b10a9bf
Update the copyright end date to 2018. (#1068)
Just what it says on the tin.
2018-03-21 12:43:21 -07:00
Joe Duffy caceeea290
Reintroduce untyped deployments (#996)
By using untyped deployment structures via `json.RawMessage`, we can
support round-tripping between old CLI clients and newer servers, without
dropping possibly-important information on the floor.  I hadn't realized
this design goal with the original system, and after talking to @pgavlin,
I better realized the intent and that we want to preserve this.
2018-03-03 12:12:54 -08:00
joeduffy 2362d45a5c Eliminate type redundancy
Despite our good progress moving towards having an apitype package,
where our exchange types live and can be shared among the engine and
our services, there were a few major types that were still duplciated.
Resource was the biggest example -- and indeed, the apitype varirant
was missing the new Dependencies property -- but there were others,
like Manfiest, PluginInfo, etc.  These too had semi-random omissions.

This change merges all of these types into the apitype package.  This
not only cleans up the redundancy and missing properties, but will
"force the issue" with respect to keeping them in sync and properly
versioning the information in a backwards compatible way.

The resource/stack package still exists as a simple marshaling layer
to and from the engine's core data types.

Finally, I've made the controversial change to share the actual
Deployment data structure at the apitype layer also.  This will force
us to confront differences in that data structure similarly, and will
allow us to leverage the strong typing throughout to catch issues.
2018-02-28 12:44:55 -08:00
Joe Duffy 902d646215
Rename package to project (#935)
This addresses pulumi/pulumi#446: what we used to call "package" is
now called "project".  This has gotten more confusing over time, now
that we're doing real package management.

Also fixes pulumi/pulumi#426, while in here.
2018-02-14 13:56:16 -08:00
Matt Ellis 39dbdc98e9 Clean up colorization logic
The existing logic would flow colorization information into the
engine, so depending on the settings in the CLI, the engine may or may
not have emitted colorized events. This coupling is not great and we
want to start moving to a world where the presentation happens
exclusively at the CLI level.

With this change, the engine will always produce strings that have the
colorization formatting directives (i.e. the directives that
reconquest/loreley understands) and the CLI will apply
colorization (which could mean either running loreley to turn the
directives into ANSI escape codes, or drop them or retain them, for
debuging purposes).

Fixes #742
2018-01-31 15:46:14 -08:00
Chris Smith 4c217fd358
Add "pulumi history" command (#826)
This PR adds a new `pulumi history` command, which prints the update history for a stack.

The local backend stores the update history in a JSON file on disk, next to the checkpoint file. The cloud backend simply provides the update metadata, and expects to receive all the data from a (NYI) `/history` REST endpoint.

`pkg/backend/updates.go` defines the data that is being persisted. The way the data is wired through the system is adding a new `backend.UpdateMetadata` parameter to a Stack/Backend's `Update` and `Destroy` methods.

I use `tests/integration/stack_outputs/` as the simple app for the related tests, hence the addition to the `.gitignore` and fixing the name in the `Pulumi.yaml`.

Fixes #636.
2018-01-24 18:22:41 -08:00
Chris Smith 3a3d0698ae
Surface update options to the service (#806)
This PR surfaces the configuration options available to updates, previews, and destroys to the Pulumi Service. As part of this I refactored the options to unify them into a single `engine.UpdateOptions`, since they were all overlapping to various degrees.

With this PR we are adding several new flags to commands, e.g. `--summary` was not available on `pulumi destroy`.

There are also a few minor breaking changes.

- `pulumi destroy --preview` is now `pulumi destroy --dry-run` (to match the actual name of the field).
- The default behavior for "--color" is now `Always`. Previously it was `Always` or `Never` based on the value of a `--debug` flag. (You can specify `--color always` or `--color never` to get the exact behavior.)

Fixes #515, and cleans up the code making some other features slightly easier to add.
2018-01-18 11:10:15 -08:00
pat@pulumi.com c56e716c31 Refactor the engine's entrypoints.
These changes refactor the engine's entrypoints--Deploy, Destroy, and
Preview--to be update-centric rather than stack-centric. Each of these
methods now takes a value of a new type, Update, that abstracts away the
vagaries of fetching and maintaining the update's state. This
refactoring also reinforces Pulumi.yaml as a CLI concept rather than an
engine concept; the CLI is now the only reader/writer of this format.

These changes will smooth the way for a few refactorings on the service
side that will aid in update isolation.
2018-01-08 14:15:16 -08:00
pat@pulumi.com 7782a83030 Appease the linters. 2018-01-05 17:35:22 -08:00
pat@pulumi.com b96217341f Add the ability to {ex,im}port a stack's deployment.
These changes add the ability to export a stack's latest deployment or
import a new deployment to a stack via the Pulumi CLI. These
capabilities are exposed by two new verbs under `stack`:
- export, which writes the current stack's latest deployment to stdout
- import, which reads a new deployment from stdin and applies it to the
  current stack.

In the local case, this simply involves reading/writing the stack's
latest checkpoint file. In the cloud case, this involves hitting two new
endpoints on the service to perform the export or import.
2018-01-05 16:22:31 -08:00
Pat Gavlin e4d9eb6fd3 Support secrets for cloud stacks.
Use the new {en,de}crypt endpoints in the Pulumi.com API to secure
secret config values. The ciphertext for a secret config value is bound
to the stack to which it applies and cannot be shared with other stacks
(e.g. by copy/pasting it around in Pulumi.yaml). All secrets will need
to be encrypted once per target stack.
2017-12-22 07:59:27 -08:00
joeduffy 2eb86b24c2 Make some updates based on CR feedback
This change implements some feedback from @ellismg.

* Make backend.Stack an interface and let backends implement it,
  enabling dynamic type testing/casting to access information
  specific to that backend.  For instance, the cloud.Stack conveys
  the cloud URL, org name, and PPC name, for each stack.

* Similarly expose specialized backend.Backend interfaces,
  local.Backend and cloud.Backend, to convey specific information.

* Redo a bunch of the commands in terms of these.

* Keeping with this theme, turn the CreateStack options into an
  opaque interface{}, and let the specific backends expose their
  own structures with their own settings (like PPC name in cloud).

* Show both the org and PPC names in the cloud column printed in
  the stack ls command, in addition to the Pulumi Cloud URL.

Unrelated, but useful:

* Special case the 401 HTTP response and make a friendly error,
  to tell the developer they must use `pulumi login`.  This is
  better than tossing raw "401: Unauthorized" errors in their face.

* Change the "Updating stack '..' in the Pulumi Cloud" message to
  use the correct action verb ("Previewing", "Destroying", etc).
2017-12-03 08:10:50 -08:00
joeduffy 1c4e41b916 Improve the overall cloud CLI experience
This improves the overall cloud CLI experience workflow.

Now whether a stack is local or cloud is inherent to the stack
itself.  If you interact with a cloud stack, we transparently talk
to the cloud; if you interact with a local stack, we just do the
right thing, and perform all operations locally.  Aside from sometimes
seeing a cloud emoji pop-up ☁️, the experience is quite similar.

For example, to initialize a new cloud stack, simply:

    $ pulumi login
    Logging into Pulumi Cloud: https://pulumi.com/
    Enter Pulumi access token: <enter your token>
    $ pulumi stack init my-cloud-stack

Note that you may log into a specific cloud if you'd like.  For
now, this is just for our own testing purposes, but someday when we
support custom clouds (e.g., Enterprise), you can just say:

    $ pulumi login --cloud-url https://corp.acme.my-ppc.net:9873

The cloud is now the default.  If you instead prefer a "fire and
forget" style of stack, you can skip the login and pass `--local`:

    $ pulumi stack init my-faf-stack --local

If you are logged in and run `pulumi`, we tell you as much:

    $ pulumi
    Usage:
      pulumi [command]

    // as before...

    Currently logged into the Pulumi Cloud ☁️
        https://pulumi.com/

And if you list your stacks, we tell you which one is local or not:

    $ pulumi stack ls
    NAME            LAST UPDATE       RESOURCE COUNT   CLOUD URL
    my-cloud-stack  2017-12-01 ...    3                https://pulumi.com/
    my-faf-stack    n/a               0                n/a

And `pulumi stack` by itself prints information like your cloud org,
PPC name, and so on, in addition to the usuals.

I shall write up more details and make sure to document these changes.

This change also fairly significantly refactors the layout of cloud
versus local logic, so that the cmd/ package is resonsible for CLI
things, and the new pkg/backend/ package is responsible for the
backends.  The following is the overall resulting package architecture:

* The backend.Backend interface can be implemented to substitute
  a new backend.  This has operations to get and list stacks,
  perform updates, and so on.

* The backend.Stack struct is a wrapper around a stack that has
  or is being manipulated by a Backend.  It resembles our existing
  Stack notions in the engine, but carries additional metadata
  about its source.  Notably, it offers functions that allow
  operations like updating and deleting on the Backend from which
  it came.

* There is very little else in the pkg/backend/ package.

* A new package, pkg/backend/local/, encapsulates all local state
  management for "fire and forget" scenarios.  It simply implements
  the above logic and contains anything specific to the local
  experience.

* A peer package, pkg/backend/cloud/, encapsulates all logic
  required for the cloud experience.  This includes its subpackage
  apitype/ which contains JSON schema descriptions required for
  REST calls against the cloud backend.  It also contains handy
  functions to list which clouds we have authenticated with.

* A subpackage here, pkg/backend/state/, is not a provider at all.
  Instead, it contains all of the state management functions that
  are currently shared between local and cloud backends.  This
  includes configuration logic -- including encryption -- as well
  as logic pertaining to which stacks are known to the workspace.

This addresses pulumi/pulumi#629 and pulumi/pulumi#494.
2017-12-02 14:34:42 -08:00