Commit graph

466 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Joe Duffy f2ae3a7afc
Permit plugin versions to float (#1122)
This change lets plugin versions to float in two ways:

1) If a `pulumi plugin install` detects a newer version is available
   already, there's no need to download and install the older version.

2) If the engine attempts to load a plugin at a particular version,
   if a newer version is available, it will be accepted without error.

As part of this, we permit $PATH to have the final say when determining
which version to accept.  That is, it can always override the choice.

Note that I highly suspect, in the limit, that we'll want to stop doing
this for major version incompatibilities. For now, since we don't
envision any such version changes imminently, this will suffice.
2018-04-05 16:37:50 -07:00
Matt Ellis d3240fdc64 Require pulumi login before commands that need a backend
This change does three major things:

1. Removes the ability to be logged into multiple clouds at the same
time. Previously, we supported being logged into multiple clouds at
the same time and the CLI would fan out requests and join responses
when needed. In general, this was only useful for Pulumi employees
that wanted run against multiple copies of the service (say production
and staging) but overall was very confusing (for example in the old
world a stack with the same identity could appear twice (since it was
in two backends) which the CLI didn't handle very well).

2. Stops treating the "local" backend as a special thing, from the
point of view of the CLI. Previouly we'd always connect to the local
backend and merge that data with whatever was in clouds we were
connected to. We had gestures like `--local` in `pulumi stack init`
that meant "use the local mode". Instead, to use the local mode now
you run `pulumi login --cloud-url local://` and then you are logged in
the local backend. Since you can only ever be logged into a single
backend, we can remove the `--local` and `--remote` flags from `pulumi
stack init`, it just now requires you to be logged in and creates a
stack in whatever back end you were logged into. When logging into the
local backend, you are not prompted for an access key.

3. Prompt for login in places where you have to log in, if you are not
already logged in.
2018-04-05 10:19:41 -07:00
Luke Hoban 5ede33e03d
Run tests against managed stacks backend instead of FnF (#1092)
Tests now target managed stacks instead of local stacks.

The existing logged in user and target backend API are used unless PULUMI_ACCES_TOKEN is defined, in which case tests are run under that access token and against the PULUMI_API backend.

For developer machines, we will now need to be logged in to Pulumi to run tests, and whichever default API backend is logged in (the one listed as current in ~/.pulumi/credentials.json) will be used. If you need to override these, provide PULUMI_ACCESS_TOKEN and possibly PULUMI_API.

For Travis, we currently target the staging service using the Pulumi Bot user.

We have decided to run tests in the pulumi organization. This can be overridden for local testing (or in Travis in the future) by defining PULUMI_API_OWNER_ORGANIZATION and using an access token with access to that organization.

Part of pulumi/home#195.
2018-04-02 21:34:54 -07:00
Chris Smith aecf0d8d19
Fix typeo in error message
Adding space in "Use--plaintext to avoid this warning".
2018-03-31 13:48:46 -07:00
Pat Gavlin b7e55108c9 Fix stack import.
At some point--likely when we were tweaking API types--`stack import`
stopped working correctly. These changes straighten things out again.
2018-03-30 15:51:40 -07:00
joeduffy 8b5874dab5 General prep work for refresh
This change includes a bunch of refactorings I made in prep for
doing refresh (first, the command, see pulumi/pulumi#1081):

* The primary change is to change the way the engine's core update
  functionality works with respect to deploy.Source.  This is the
  way we can plug in new sources of resource information during
  planning (and, soon, diffing).  The way I intend to model refresh
  is by having a new kind of source, deploy.RefreshSource, which
  will let us do virtually everything about an update/diff the same
  way with refreshes, which avoid otherwise duplicative effort.

  This includes changing the planOptions (nee deployOptions) to
  take a new SourceFunc callback, which is responsible for creating
  a source specific to the kind of plan being requested.

  Preview, Update, and Destroy now are primarily differentiated by
  the kind of deploy.Source that they return, rather than sprinkling
  things like `if Destroying` throughout.  This tidies up some logic
  and, more importantly, gives us precisely the refresh hook we need.

* Originally, we used the deploy.NullSource for Destroy operations.
  This simply returns nothing, which is how Destroy works.  For some
  reason, we were no longer doing this, and instead had some
  `if Destroying` cases sprinkled throughout the deploy.EvalSource.
  I think this is a vestige of some old way we did configuration, at
  least judging by a comment, which is apparently no longer relevant.

* Move diff and diff-printing logic within the engine into its own
  pkg/engine/diff.go file, to prepare for upcoming work.

* I keep noticing benign diffs anytime I regenerate protobufs.  I
  suspect this is because we're also on different versions.  I changed
  generate.sh to also dump the version into grpc_version.txt.  At
  least we can understand where the diffs are coming from, decide
  whether to take them (i.e., a newer version), and ensure that as
  a team we are monotonically increasing, and not going backwards.

* I also tidied up some tiny things I noticed while in there, like
  comments, incorrect types, lint suppressions, and so on.
2018-03-28 07:45:23 -07:00
Pat Gavlin e884c63104 Extract a Pulumi API client.
These changes refactor direct interactions with the Pulumi API out of
the cloud backend and into a subpackage, `pkg/backend/cloud/client`.
This package exposes a slightly higher-level API that takes care of
calculating paths, performing HTTP calls, and occasionally wrapping
multiple physical calls into a single logical call (notably the creation
of an update and the upload of its program).

This is primarily intended as preparation for some of the changes
suggested in the feedback for #1067.
2018-03-21 16:45:54 -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 abbac13655
Assume --remote when --cloud-url is set (#1060)
If you use --cloud-url, as in

    $ pulumi stack init foo --cloud-url https://x.io

we would silently fall back to logic that creates local stacks.

I realize all of this will get better with the new stack identity
model, however in the meantime, let's infer that the user wanted
--remote when --cloud-url is non-"".
2018-03-18 12:44:00 -07:00
Matt Ellis 642ee91065 Advise about --plaintext in config warning message
When run without a `--plaintext` or `--secret` argument, `pulumi
config` warns that the value is stored unecrypted and that you can
pass `--secret` to encrypt it. Now, we also mention that `--plaintext`
can be pased explicity on the command line to avoid the warning.

Fixes #752
2018-03-16 12:07:03 -07:00
Justin Van Patten c7985ed296
Support offline template descriptions (#1044)
Note: This is a minor issue that I didn't get to for M11 that isn't
required for M11 and would be fine merging for post-M11.

When you specify a template name explicitly (e.g.
`pulumi new typescript`), we'll try to download the template tarball
without first downloading the JSON list of available templates. The JSON
includes a description used when replacing the `${DESCRIPTION}` string
in template files. Since we didn't download the JSON, we won't have a
description, so we fallback to a default value (`"A Pulumi project."`).
This also happens when specifying `--offline` to use an existing
template under `~/.pulumi/templates`; we won't have a description for
the template, so we fallback to a default description. The fallback
value happens to be the same as the description for each of our current
templates, so noone will currently notice an issue.

For M11, I included initial support for a template manifest file where
the description (and any future metadata) could be stored, but didn't go
as far as actually reading the file.

This change makes it so the CLI actually reads the description from the
manifest file (if it exists), otherwise falling back to the default
value as is done currently. Some minor related cleanup is included in
this change.
2018-03-13 16:09:25 -07:00
Joe Duffy fc3908b853
Fix two DST bugs in logs test (#1042)
This fixes two different DST bugs in the logs test, one of which
led to the failure in pulumi/pulumi#1041:

1) The assertion was using ANSIC formatting, which does not contain
   a time-zone, and because we are now in DST, the resulting time
   didn't parse and format in a round-trippable way.  Instead, let's
   use RFC3339, and let's be explicit about the timezone.

2) The parseSince("1m30s") would in theory fail if the DST changed
   at just the right moment, since the reference time could end up
   different from the reference time that the test is using.  Let's
   expose the reference time to the caller, so that they may decide
   how to deal with these situations, and let's use UTC here.
2018-03-12 15:49:52 -07:00
Justin Van Patten aa940b40dc
Cleanup pulumi new flag descriptions (#1036)
- Use `templates` instead of `releases`
- Fix typo
2018-03-12 11:22:32 -07:00
Justin Van Patten 8906731315
Adds a pulumi new command to scaffold a project (#1008)
This adds a `pulumi new` command which makes it easy to quickly
automatically create the handful of needed files to get started building
an empty Pulumi project.

Usage:

```
$ pulumi new typescript
```

Or you can leave off the template name, and it will ask you to choose
one:

```
$ pulumi new
Please choose a template:
> javascript
  python
  typescript
```
2018-03-09 15:27:55 -08:00
Matt Ellis db079b1b0a Emit richer events for resource steps
The engine now emits events with richer metadata during the
ResourceOutputs and ResourcePre callbacks. The CLI can then use this
information to decide if it should display the event or not and how
much of the event to display.

Options dealing with what to display and how to display it have moved
into the CLI and the engine now emits all information for each event.
2018-03-09 13:11:42 -08:00
Matt Ellis 4e2f94df95 Remove UpdateOptions.ShowConfig
The engine now unconditionally emits a new type of event, a
PreludeEvent, which contains the configuration for a stack as well as
an indication if the stack is being previewed or updated. The
responsibility for interpreting the --show-config flag on the command
line is now handled by the CLI, which uses this to decide if it should
print the configuration or not, and then writes the "Previewing
changes" or "Deploying chanages" header.
2018-03-09 11:13:06 -08:00
Matt Ellis 731463c282 Have MakeKey fail if namespace contains a colon
This helper method is only really used for testing, but we should not
allow it to create a Key who's namespace has a colon (as ParseKey
would not build something like this).
2018-03-08 11:52:48 -08:00
Matt Ellis 81a273c7bb Change represention of config.Key
config.Key has become a pair of namespace and name. Because the whole
world has not changed yet, there continues to be a way to convert
between a tokens.ModuleMember and config.Key, however now sometime the
conversion from tokens.ModuleMember can fail (when the module member
is not of the form `<package>:config:<name>`).
2018-03-08 10:52:25 -08:00
Matt Ellis 7c39620e9a Introduce config.Key
Right now, config.Key is a type alias for tokens.ModuleMember. I did a
pass over the codebase such that we use config.Key everywhere it
looked like the value did not leak to some external process (e.g a
resource provider or a langhost).

Doing this makes it a little clearer (hopefully) where code is
depending on a module member structure (e.g. <package>:config:<value>)
instead of just an opaque type.
2018-03-08 10:52:25 -08:00
CyrusNajmabadi c544accfa6
Only attempt to serialize the properties of an object that are actually used. (#1000) 2018-03-07 21:10:12 -08:00
pat@pulumi.com 45a4a41e0d Configure resource providers upon load.
As it stands, we only configure those providers for which configuration
is present. This can lead to surprising failure modes if those providers
are then used to create resources. These changes ensure that all
resource providers that are not configured during plan initialization
are configured upon first load.

Fixes #758.
2018-03-06 16:38:53 -08:00
Sean Gillespie 93cc2cd5cb
Fix some unecessary branches to appease golint (#999) 2018-03-05 16:15:09 -08:00
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
Matt Ellis 96d7f9307a
Merge pull request #986 from pulumi/config-refactor
Rework config storage
2018-03-02 13:46:49 -08:00
Matt Ellis cdcee76abd Fix flaky update history test
The filenames we used to store history data locally only had second
level precision. On my machine, the test history test is able to run
multiple `pulumi update` commands in the same second, which causes a
newer history file to overwrite an older one.

This change moves to using a nanosecond precision timestamp when
writing config. In addition, the CLI was trying to sort the updates
that came back from the backend (instead of just trusting them to be
in newest first order, as we documented) so I removed that code as
well.
2018-03-01 16:20:09 -08:00
Matt Ellis e2ce16b057 Upgrade configuration files on first run
Migrate configuration from the old model to the new model. The
strategy here is that when we first run `pulumi` we enumerate all of
the stacks from all of the backends we know about and for each stack
get the configuration values from the project and workspace and
promote them into the new file. As we do this, we remove stack
specific config from the workspace and Pulumi.yaml file.

If we are able to upgrade all the stacks we know about, we delete all
global configuration data in the workspace and in Pulumi.yaml as well.

We have a test that ensures upgrades continue to work.
2018-02-28 17:37:18 -08:00
Matt Ellis 207a9755d8 Rework configuration model
This change updates our configuration model to make it simpler to
understand by removing some features and changing how things are
persisted in files.

Notable changes:

- We've removed the notion of "workspace" vs "project"
  config. Now, configuration is always stored in a file next to
  `Pulumi.yaml` named `Pulumi.<stack-name>.yaml` (the same file we'd
  use for an other stack specific information we would need to persist
  in the future).
- We've removed the notion of project wide configuration. Every new
  stack gets a completely empty set of configuration and there's no
  way to share common values across stacks, instead the common value
  has to be set on each stack.

We retain some of the old code for the configuration system so we can
support upgrading a project in place. That will happen with the next
change.

This change fixes some issues and allows us to close some
others (since they are no longer possible).

Fixes #866
Closes #872
Closes #731
2018-02-28 17:30:50 -08:00
Matt Ellis 5f83fbf642 Remove Project() method from Workspace interface
We had other ways to get at this data, so let's just unify on them.
2018-02-28 17:25:09 -08:00
Matt Ellis d99f9457b0 Deprecate old configuration model
We are going to be changing the configuration model. To begin, let's
take most of the existing stuff and mark it as "deprecated" so we can
keep the existing behavior (to help transition newer code forward)
while making it clear what APIs should not be called in the
implementation of `pulumi` itself.
2018-02-28 17:25:09 -08:00
joeduffy c737a3c89a Add a package apitype comment
Addresses feedback from @lukehoban.
2018-02-28 13:24:38 -08:00
joeduffy d7ef2fe498 Error if importing cross-stack checkpoints
Per pulumi/pulumi#984, we will now issue an error if it appears you're
importing a checkpoint from a different stack.  This can be overridden
if you know what you're doing (with --force), but in general this is a
sign that you're doing something very wrong that will be hard to undo.
2018-02-28 12:46:18 -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
Justin Van Patten ac58f151b4
Change default of where stack is created (#971)
If currently logged in, `stack init` creates a managed stack. Otherwise, it creates a local
stack. This avoids the need to specify `--local` when not using the service.

As today, `--local` can be passed, which will create a local stack regardless of being logged
in or not.

A new flag, `--remote`, has been added, which can be passed to indicate a managed stack,
used to force an error if not logged into the service.
2018-02-26 11:00:16 -08:00
Sean Gillespie 9757d069ed
Merge pull request #972 from pulumi/swgillespie/dependency-view
Save resource dependency information in the checkpoint file
2018-02-23 11:19:38 -08:00
Sean Gillespie 99da1f5350
Spruce up the stack graph command:
1. Output different-colored edges for parent-child resource
    relationships
    2. Allow the changing of edge colors via command-line parameters
    3. Allow the skipping of the parent-child graph or the
    dependency graph when calculating all edges

This modifies the Graph interface slightly to allow an edge to specify
what color should be used when drawing it.
2018-02-22 17:31:45 -08:00
Sean Gillespie 30826a34f5
Code review feedback: rework graph construction to be done eagerly and efficiently, gate under PULUMI_DEBUG_COMMANDS 2018-02-22 15:52:06 -08:00
Matt Ellis 258c34620d Guard BirthTime checks with HasBirthTimes
Some file systems do not record BithTimes and BirthTime panics in
these cases. We use HasBirthTimes to guard against this and print n/a
when we do not have a BirthTime.
2018-02-22 10:32:21 -08:00
Sean Gillespie ad06e9b0d8
Save resource dependency information in the checkpoint file
This commit does two things:
    1. All dependencies of a resource, both implicit and explicit, are
    communicated directly to the engine when registering a resource. The
    engine keeps track of these dependencies and ultimately serializes
    them out to the checkpoint file upon successful deployment.
    2. Once a successful deployment is done, the new `pulumi stack
    graph` command reads the checkpoint file and outputs the dependency
    information within in the DOT format.

Keeping track of dependency information within the checkpoint file is
desirable for a number of reasons, most notably delete-before-create,
where we want to delete resources before we have created their
replacement when performing an update.
2018-02-21 17:49:09 -08:00
Joe Duffy 811759fb77
Fix missing emojis on Windows (#966)
I was reminded of this yesterday with unprintable characters as I
debugged some things on Windows.  Inspired by Yarn, this change adds
a new flag --emoji (-e for short) that can be used to control whether
we show ASCII-only characters or not in the console.  On Mac, it
defaults to true, and on Windows and Linux, it defaults to false.

This also brings back the retro ASCII-friendly progress spinner
when --emoji is disabled.
2018-02-21 09:42:06 -08:00
joeduffy 25f5a71568 Add support for project plugins
This adds support for two things:

* Installing all plugins that a project requires with a single command:

    $ pulumi plugin install

* Listing the plugins that this project requires:

    $ pulumi plugin ls --project
    $ pulumi plugin ls -p
2018-02-19 11:24:19 -08:00
joeduffy 932e755305 Move plugins to their own directories
Prior to this change, we had a flat list of files in the
~/.pulumi/plugins directory.  This was simple but unfortunately
too naive, since we in fact have multi-file plugins already.
Dumping them in the same directory increases the risk of a
collision.  Instead, let's put them in their own directories.

This means, for example, you'll see things like

    ~/.pulumi/plugins/
        resource-aws-v0.11.0-dev-8-g57a0d62/
            README.txt
            pulumi-resource-aws

Notice that the binary name stays the same -- e.g., in this
case pulumi-resource-aws -- and does not include the version.
This makes it simple to add it to your $PATH in the usual ways
and have it loaded as a preferred location.
2018-02-19 09:31:00 -08:00
joeduffy ffe8c4681a Rename plugin prune to rm
This change renames prune to rm, to match what we use for other
similar commands.  Someday perhaps we will add a prune that uses
some smarts to prune old plugins, etc.

Also tidy up some minor things about the command.  For example,
we now require --all if you want to truly clear the entire plugin
cache.  We also print more detail, like the full list of plugins
to be removed, in the confirmation prompt.
2018-02-19 09:06:02 -08:00
joeduffy 041e44beff Skip reinstalling existing plugins
This change introduces logic to skip installing plugins that already
exist, unless --reinstall is explicitly passed to `pulumi plugin install`.
2018-02-18 08:08:15 -08:00
joeduffy 548c22d014 Reimplement GetRequiredPlugins in Go
This brings back the Node.js language plugin's GetRequiredPlugins
function, reimplemented in Go now that the language host has been
rewritten from JavaScript.  Fairly rote translation, along with
some random fixes required to get tests passing again.
2018-02-18 08:08:15 -08:00
joeduffy 4614aa6f22 Enable installing plugins from files
This enables you to install a plugin directly from a file, rather
than the default of downloading it from our release share.  This is
primarily useful as a test tool, but will also be a useful escape
hatch for 3rd party extensibility, where we do not have a share.

    $ pulumi plugin install resource aws v0.1.0 -f my_aws_provider.tgz
2018-02-18 08:08:15 -08:00
joeduffy c04341edb2 Consult the program for its list of plugins
This change adds a GetRequiredPlugins RPC method to the language
host, enabling us to query it for its list of plugin requirements.
This is language-specific because it requires looking at the set
of dependencies (e.g., package.json files).

It also adds a call up front during any update/preview operation
to compute the set of plugins and require that they are present.
These plugins are populated in the cache and will be used for all
subsequent plugin-related operations during the engine's activity.

We now cache the language plugins, so that we may load them
eagerly too, which we never did previously due to the fact that
we needed to pass the monitor address at load time.  This was a
bit bizarre anyhow, since it's really the Run RPC function that
needs this information.  So, to enable caching and eager loading
-- which we need in order to invoke GetRequiredPlugins -- the
"phone home" monitor RPC address is passed at Run time.

In a subsequent change, we will switch to faulting in the plugins
that are missing -- rather than erroring -- in addition to
supporting the `pulumi plugin install` CLI command.
2018-02-18 08:08:15 -08:00
joeduffy c1752d357e Implement basic plugin management
This change implements basic plugin management, but we do not yet
actually use the plugins for anything (that comes next).

Plugins are stored in `~/.pulumi/plugins`, and are expected to be
in the format `pulumi-<KIND>-<NAME>-v<VERSION>[.exe]`.  The KIND is
one of `analyzer`, `language`, or `resource`, the NAME is a hyphen-
delimited name (e.g., `aws` or `foo-bar`), and VERSION is the
plugin's semantic version (e.g., `0.9.11`, `1.3.7-beta.a736cf`, etc).

This commit includes four new CLI commands:

* `pulumi plugin` is the top-level plugin command.  It does nothing
  but show the help text for associated child commands.

* `pulumi plugin install` can be used to install plugins manually.
  If run with no additional arguments, it will compute the set of
  plugins used by the current project, and download them all.  It
  may be run to explicitly download a single plugin, however, by
  invoking it as `pulumi plugin install KIND NAME VERSION`.  For
  example, `pulumi plugin install resource aws v0.9.11`.  By default,
  this command uses the cloud backend in the usual way to perform the
  download, although a separate URL may be given with --cloud-url,
  just like all other commands that interact with our backend service.

* `pulumi plugin ls` lists all plugins currently installed in the
  plugin cache.  It displays some useful statistics, like the size
  of the plugin, when it was installed, when it was last used, and
  so on.  It sorts the display alphabetically by plugin name, and
  for plugins with multiple versions, it shows the newest at the top.
  The command also summarizes how much disk space is currently being
  consumed by the plugin cache.  There are no filtering capabilities yet.

* `pulumi plugin prune` will delete plugins from the cache.  By
  default, when run with no arguments, it will delete everything.
  It may be run with additional arguments, KIND, NAME, and VERSION,
  each one getting more specific about what it will delete.  For
  instance, `pulumi plugin prune resource aws` will delete all AWS
  plugin versions, while `pulumi plugin prune resource aws <0.9`
  will delete all AWS plugins before version 0.9.  Unless --yes is
  passed, the command will confirm the deletion with a count of how
  many plugins will be affected by the command.

We do not yet actually download plugins on demand yet.  That will
come in a subsequent change.
2018-02-18 08:08:15 -08:00
Joe Duffy 776a76dffd
Make some stack-related CLI improvements (#947)
This change includes a handful of stack-related CLI formatting
improvements that I've been noodling on in the background for a while,
based on things that tend to trip up demos and the inner loop workflow.

This includes:

* If `pulumi stack select` is run by itself, use an interactive
  CLI menu to let the user select an existing stack, or choose to
  create a new one.  This looks as follows

      $ pulumi stack select
      Please choose a stack, or choose to create a new one:
        abcdef
        babblabblabble
      > currentlyselected
        defcon
        <create a new stack>

  and is navigated in the usual way (key up, down, enter).

* If a stack name is passed that does not exist, prompt the user
  to ask whether s/he wants to create one on-demand.  This hooks
  interesting moments in time, like `pulumi stack select foo`,
  and cuts down on the need to run additional commands.

* If a current stack is required, but none is currently selected,
  then pop the same interactive menu shown above to select one.
  Depending on the command being run, we may or may not show the
  option to create a new stack (e.g., that doesn't make much sense
  when you're running `pulumi destroy`, but might when you're
  running `pulumi stack`).  This again lets you do with a single
  command what would have otherwise entailed an error with multiple
  commands to recover from it.

* If you run `pulumi stack init` without any additional arguments,
  we interactively prompt for the stack name.  Before, we would
  error and you'd then need to run `pulumi stack init <name>`.

* Colorize some things nicely; for example, now all prompts will
  by default become bright white.
2018-02-16 15:03:54 -08:00
Matt Ellis 194ed8e2ad Adjust stack output formating in the CLI
Previously, we would just use normal go formatting when displaying
output values. This was fine for simple values like strings and ints,
but for arrays or objects, you'd end up with values that looked a
little stange.

We now run the objects through json.Marshal first, to get nicer string
values for more complex objects. However, when the top level value is
a single string, we elide the quotes. This is not true JSON, but it
displays much nicer.

When we add something like `--format=json` (see pulumi#496) it will
provide a way to treat output unfiormly as JSON.

Fixes #736
2018-02-16 12:25:25 -08:00
Matt Ellis 78a2e39aab Exit when an error when confirmation is declined
Fixes #931
2018-02-16 00:32:24 -08:00