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.
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
Uploading a bunch of tiny files is inefficient. Worse, it results in a ton of
paths printed to `stdout` -- enough that we could hit Travis' 4MB limit and
kill the job before we'd finished uploading.
Now we create a `.tar.gz` and upload that one, compressed file.
We also noticed that copied files might not be accessible from the `dev`
account, even though that account owns the `eng.pulumi.com` bucket. When
files are uploaded by one AWS account to a bucket owned by another, the
objects are, by default, only readable by the first account (the writer).
Change the ACL so the account that owns the bucket also has full access.
The windows build was still on the old plan from way back when where
we had binaries littered in the build tree and you had to add parts of
your build-tree to the `%PATH%` for the integration tests to work.
This cleans that up and moves all of our scripts that invoke
javascript to be on the same plan. They invoke our specially named
node with a relative path to the JS code we want to run.
We no longer have a node_modules folder in the SDK (since all
packages now come from NPM) so we need to adjust the shell script we
use to launch our runner to use a relative path.
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 fixespulumi/pulumi#426, while in here.
This improves the failure messages in two circumstances:
1) If the resource monitor RPC connection is missing. This can happen
two ways: either you run a Pulumi program using vanilla Node.js, instead
of the CLI, or you've accidentally loaded the Pulumi SDK more than once.
2) Failure to load the custom Pulumi SDK Node.js extension. This is a new
addition and would happen if you tried running a Pulumi program using a
vanilla Node.js, rather than using the Pulumi CLI.
At one point `pulumi update` was spelled `pulumi push` and we wrote
some help documentation about that. When we changed to `pulumi update`
we did not revise the documentation.
Fixes#925
Our use of parens around the individual clauses of our if condition
seemed to cause Travis to ignore the condition and build
regardless. I've asked Travis about this, but for now, drop them (with
a comment) so we stop building pushes for topic branchs.
We've seen yarn fail from time to time during our integration
tests (usually timeouts talking to the npm registry) so let's add a
few retries to all yarn commands.
When reading a configuration value from standard in and standard in is
not connected to a terminal, read until EOF and then trim a trailing
newline (if present) to get the value
Fixes#822
In order to begin publishing our core SDK package to NPM, we will
need it to be underneath the @pulumi scope so that it may remain
private. Eventually, we can alias pulumi back to it.
This is part of pulumi/pulumi#915.
Resources in the checkpoint file which are pending-delete represent old versions of resources which are no longer part of the active deployment. For purposes of constructing the active resource tree, we should skip these resources.
* experimental: separate language host from node
* Remove langhost details from the NodeJS SDK runtime
* Cleanup
* Work around an issue where Node sometimes loads the same module twice in two different contexts, resulting in two distinct module objects. Some additional cleanup.
* Add some tests
* Fix up the Windows script
* Fix up the install scripts and Windows build
* Code review feedback
* Code review feedback: error capitalization
As it stands, we currently hammer the service's update logs endpoint in
a tight loop while waiting for a deployment to complete. This is not
necessary, and can indeed be deletrious to the user experience: it
appears that this may be exacerbating some mysterious 500 responses from
API gateway.
These changes add a brief sleep in the relevant loop that waits for 5
seconds if the last call produced new log entries or 15 seconds if it
did not.
Fixes#844.
As it stands, we serialize more than is correct when registering
resources: in addition to serializing the RegisterResource RPC, we also
wait for input properties to resolve in the same context. Unfortunately,
this means that we can create cycles in the promise graph when a
resource A is constructed in an earlier turn than some resource B and
one of B's output properties is an input to resource A. These changes
fix this issue by allowing input properties to resolve *before*
serializing the RegisterResource RPC.
Some integration tests had taken a dependency on the ordering of resources in
either the output of the `pulumi` command or the checkpoint file. The
only test that took a dependency on command output was updated s.t. its
resources have exactly one legal topographical sort (and therefore their
ordering is deterministic). The other tests were updated s.t. their
validation did not depend on resource ordering.
Today we don't send any version information with API requests to the service, so we cannot make breaking changes between versions of the backend API while preserving backwards compatibility.
This PR adds a `User-Agent` header with REST requests that sends a CLI version number of "1". If the service were to make a breaking change, it could use this header to determine which response handler to use. (e.g. return a different response for "" or "1" and another for "2".) Obviously we want to avoid being in this situation, but in the event that we need to make a breaking change, we'll need this value.
We send the Pulumi version as well, though the SDK will probably rev much more quickly than the backend API client version.
Fixes#848
We were pretty careful to keep the test directory around if the test ever
exited early due to a panic or error return. But if the test ran to
completion and failed -- for example, if ExtraRuntimeValidation caused the
test to fail -- we would end up deleting the test directory.
Fixes#868