Do not fire a "resource outputs" display event for component resources
after their initial registration. Instead, defer this event until the
component's `RegisterResourceOutputs` call arrives.
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.
This command cancels a stack's currently running update, if any. It can
be used to recover from the scenario in which an update is aborted
without marking the running update as complete. Once an update has been
cancelled, it is likely that the affected stack will need to be repaired
via an pair of export/import commands before future updates can succeed.
This is part of #1077.
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 ...
This change introduces support for using the cloud backend when
`pulumi init` has not been run. When this is the case, we use the new
identity model, where a stack is referenced by an owner and a stack
name only.
There are a few things going on here:
- We add a new `--owner` flag to `pulumi stack init` that lets you
control what account a stack is created in.
- When listing stacks, we show stacks owned by you and any
organizations you are a member of. So, for example, I can do:
* `pulumi stack init my-great-stack`
* `pulumi stack init --owner pulumi my-great-stack`
To create a stack owned by my user and one owned by my
organization. When `pulumi stack ls` is run, you'll see both
stacks (since they are part of the same project).
- When spelling a stack on the CLI, an owner can be optionally
specified by prefixing the stack name with an owner name. For
example `my-great-stack` means the stack `my-great-stack` owned by
the current logged in user, where-as `pulumi/my-great-stack` would
be the stack owned by the `pulumi` organization
- `--all` can be passed to `pulumi stack ls` to see *all* stacks you
have access to, not just stacks tied to the current project.
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.
To prepare for a world where stack names must be unique across an
owner, add some randomness to the names we use for stacks as part of
our integration tests.
This change removes the need to `pulumi init` when targeting the local
backend. A fair amount of the change lays the foundation that the next
set of changes to stop having `pulumi init` be used for cloud stacks
as well.
Previously, `pulumi init` logically did two things:
1. It created the bookkeeping directory for local stacks, this was
stored in `<repository-root>/.pulumi`, where `<repository-root>` was
the path to what we belived the "root" of your project was. In the
case of git repositories, this was the directory that contained your
`.git` folder.
2. It recorded repository information in
`<repository-root>/.pulumi/repository.json`. This was used by the
cloud backend when computing what project to interact with on
Pulumi.com
The new identity model will remove the need for (2), since we only
need an owner and stack name to fully qualify a stack on
pulumi.com, so it's easy enough to stop creating a folder just for
that.
However, for the local backend, we need to continue to retain some
information about stacks (e.g. checkpoints, history, etc). In
addition, we need to store our workspace settings (which today just
contains the selected stack) somehere.
For state stored by the local backend, we change the URL scheme from
`local://` to `local://<optional-root-path>`. When
`<optional-root-path>` is unset, it defaults to `$HOME`. We create our
`.pulumi` folder in that directory. This is important because stack
names now must be unique within the backend, but we have some tests
using local stacks which use fixed stack names, so each integration
test really wants its own "view" of the world.
For the workspace settings, we introduce a new `workspaces` directory
in `~/.pulumi`. In this folder we write the workspace settings file
for each project. The file name is the name of the project, combined
with the SHA1 of the path of the project file on disk, to ensure that
multiple pulumi programs with the same project name have different
workspace settings.
This does mean that moving a project's location on disk will cause the
CLI to "forget" what the selected stack was, which is unfortunate, but
not the end of the world. If this ends up being a big pain point, we
can certianly try to play games in the future (for example, if we saw
a .git folder in a parent folder, we could store data in there).
With respect to compatibility, we don't attempt to migrate older files
to their newer locations. For long lived stacks managed using the
local backend, we can provide information on where to move things
to. For all stacks (regardless of backend) we'll require the user to
`pulumi stack select` their stack again, but that seems like the
correct trade-off vs writing complicated upgrade code.
Our normal lifecycle tests always call pulumi stack rm, but some of
the tests that used the more barebones framework did not do so. This
was "ok" in the past, since all bookkeeping data about a stack was
stored next to the Pulumi program itself and we deleted that folder
once the test passed.
As part of removing `pulumi init` workspace tracking will move to
~/.pulumi/workspaces and so we'd like to have a gesture that actually
removes the stack, which will cause the workspace file to be removed
as well, instead of littering ~/.pulumi/workspaces with tests.
Upcoming work to remove the need for `pulumi init` makes testing the
upgrade code much harder than it did in the past (since workspace data
is moving to a different location on the file system, as well as some
other changes).
Instead of trying to maintain the code and test, let's just remove
it. Folks who haven't migrated (LM and the PPC deployment in the
service) should use the 0.11.3 or earlier CLI to migrate their
projects (simply by logging in and running a pulumi command) or move
things forward by hand.
This field indicates the schema of the serialized deployment. This field
behaves identically to the `Version` field of
`PatchUpdateCheckpointRequest`.
This is part of pulumi/pulumi-service#1046
And make the deployment an opaque JSON message. The verison field
indicates the schema of the deployment. A missing version field will
behave as if the version was set to `1`. A version of `1` indicates that
the serialized deployment has the `DeploymentV1` schema.
This is part of pulumi/pulumi-service#1046.
This covers most of the transitive closure of the types that appear in a
checkpoint. A breaking change to any of these types implies a bump in
the checkpoint version number.
This is part of pulumi/pulumi-service#1046.
This makes two minor tweaks to the login prompt:
1. Change the text so that it hyperlinks in most terminals, including
iTerm, in a way that doesn't include excess characters.
2. Disable echoing of the token.
In cases where we are running against a local service, the CLI does
not print a Permalink line when updating a stack, because we can not
determine what the URL for the link would be. This breaks the diff
tests which need to clean the CLI output and compare them to known
values, since the output now has one less line than expected.
Update the test's cleaning logic to handle this case.
This change adopts `x is T` style of RTTI inquiry, which fits much
more nicely with TypeScript's typechecking flow.
Thanks to @lukehoban for teaching me a new trick today! :-)
This change moves us away from using JavaScript RTTI, by way of
`instanceof`, for built-in Pulumi types. If we use `instanceof`,
then the same logical type loaded from separate copies of the
SDK package -- as will happen in SxS scenarios -- are considered
different. This isn't actually what we want. The solution is
simple: implement our own quasi-RTTI solution, using __pulumi*
properties and manual as* and is* functions. Note that we could
have skipped the as* and is* functions, but I found that they led
to slightly easier to read code.
There is one strange thing in here, which I spoke to
@CyrusNajmabadi about: SerializedOutput<T>, because it implements
Output<T> as an _interface_, did not previously masquerade as an
actual Output<T>. In other words, `instanceof` would have returned
false, and indeed a few important properties (like promise) are
missing. This change preserves that behavior, although I'll admit
that this is slightly odd. I suspect we'll want to revisit this as
part of https://github.com/pulumi/pulumi/issues/1074.
Fixes https://github.com/pulumi/pulumi/issues/1203.
A previous change altered the calculation of plugin sizes broke the
ability to install plugins that weren't backed by a directory. This
fixes that by making getPluginSize act correctly for any kind of path.