* Revert "Don't show stack outputs when update fails (#1916)"
This reverts commit e3f89e82aa.
* Be more precise about printing outputs
This commit prints outputs only if they are known to be complete. This
avoids massive red diffs during previews and when component resources
fail to call registerResourceOutputs.
* CR: Clean up large boolean expression and comment
* CR: boolean compromise
* Combine two gRPC servers into one for testing
For some reason, our current gRPC test setup has become flaky now that
we are spinning up two gRPC servers. Hopefully merging them into one
helps clarify what's going on.
* Add back error logging for CI
* Retire pending deletions at start of plan
Instead of letting pending deletions pile up to be retired at the end of
a plan, this commit eagerly disposes of any pending deletions that were
pending at the end of the previous plan. This is a nice usability win
and also reclaims an invariant that at most one resource with a given
URN is live and at most one is pending deletion at any point in time.
* Rebase against master
* Fix a test issue arising from shared snapshots
* CR feedback
* plan -> replacement
* Use ephemeral statuses to communicate deletions
* Close cancellation source before closing events
The cancellation source logs cancellation messages to the engine event
channel, so we must first close the cancellation source before closing
the channel.
* CR: Fix race in shutdown of signal goroutine
* Don't show stack outputs when update fails
It is basically guaranteed that stack outputs are going to be
meaningless if a plan fails, so this commmit doesn't display them if an
error has occured.
* CR: expand on comment
We signal provider cancellation by hangning a goroutine off of the plan
executor's parent context. To ensure clean shutdown, this goroutine also
listens on a channel that closes once the plan has finished executing.
Unfortunately, we were closing this channel too early, and the close was
racing with the cancellation signal. These changes ensure that the
channel closes after the plan has fully completed.
Fixes#1906.
Fixespulumi/pulumi-kubernetes#185.
* Validate type tokens before using them
When registering or reading a resource, we take the type token given to
us from the language host and assume that it's valid, which resulted in
assertion failures in various places in the engine. This commit
validates the format of type tokens given to us from the language host
and issues an appropriate error if it's not valid.
Along the way, this commit also improves the way that fatal exceptions
are rendered in the Node language host.
* Pre-allocate an exception for ReadResource
* Fix integration test
* CR Feedback
This commit is a lower-impact change that fixes the bugs associated with
invalid types on component resources and only checks that a type is
valid on custom resources.
* CR Take 2: Fix up IsProviderType instead of fixing call sites
* Please gometalinter
It is possible for the inputs of a "same" resource to have changed even
if the contents of the input bags are different if the resource's
provider deems the physical change to be semantically irrelevant.
Instead of trying to probe for the normal path ourselves, just use
node's `require.resolve` statement to find `@pulumi/pulumi/cmd/run`.
This allows run to be found in cases where either yarn workspaces are
used, or the module has been installed globally.
Part of #1868
`opts.providers` is currently only read by the `Resource` constructor if
either `opts.parent` or `getRootResource` is not `undefined`. In
scnearios where exactly one copy of `@pulumi/pulumi` is loaded, one of
these conditions will always be true. In SxS scenarios, however, it is
possible for neither of these conditions to be true, and the created
resource will end up without a `providers` map. These changes fix that
by always copying the contents of `opts.providers` if it is defined.
This change improves the root command help text for the CLI. It
advertises common commands and includes a more prominent link to
our project website. Fixespulumi/pulumi#1652.
Previously `new` was operating under the assumption that it was always
going to be creating a new project/stack, and would always prompt for
these values. However, we want to be able to use `new` to pull down the
source for an existing stack. This change adds a `--stack` flag to `new`
that can be used to specify an existing stack. If the specified stack
already exists, we won't prompt for the project name/description, and
instead just use the existing stack's values. If `--stack` is specified,
but doesn't already exist, it will just use that as the stack name
(instead of prompting) when creating the stack. `new` also now handles
configuration like `up <url>`: if the stack is a preconfigured empty
stack (i.e. it was created/configured in the Pulumi Console via Pulumi
Button or New Project), we will use the existing stack's config without
prompting. Otherwise we will prompt for config, and just like `up
<url>`, we'll use the existing stack's config values as defaults when
prompting, or if the stack didn't exist, use the defaults from the
template.
Previously `up <url>`'s handling of the project name/description wasn't
correct: it would always automatically use the values from the template
without prompting. Now, just like `new`:
- When updating an existing stack, it will not prompt, and just use the
existing stack's values.
- When creating a new stack, it will prompt for the project
name/description, using the defaults from the template.
This PR consolidates some of the `new`/`up` implementation so it shares
code for this functionality. There's definitely opportunities for a lot
more code reuse, but that cleanup can happen down the line if/when we
have the cycles.
Node calls 'exit' event callbacks when a process is preparing to exit,
via process.exit or otherwise, but it does not execute the next callback
in the chain if a callback calls process.exit.
* Don't close eventChannel when panicking
The state of the system is completely unknown when panicking and in
general it's not safe to infer whether or not it is safe to close a
channel when in this tate.
* CR feedback
* Spelling
* Introduce Result type to engine
The Result type can be used to signal the failure of a computation due
to both internal and non-internal reasons. If a computation failed due
to an internal error, the Result type carries that error with it and
provides it when the 'Error' method on a Result is called. If a
computation failed gracefully, but wished to bail instead of continue a
doomed plan, the 'Error' method provides a value of null.
* CR feedback
We generally want examples and apps to be authored such that they are
clonable/deployable as-is without using new/up (and want to
encourage this). That means no longer using the ${PROJECT} and
${DESCRIPTION} replacement strings in Pulumi.yaml and other text files.
Instead, good default project names and descriptions should be specified
in Pulumi.yaml and elsewhere.
We'll use the specified values as defaults when prompting the user, and
then directly serialize/save the values to Pulumi.yaml when configuring
the user's project. This does mean that name in package.json (for nodejs
projects) won't be updated if it isn't using ${PROJECT}, but that's OK.
Our templates in the pulumi/templates repo will still use
${PROJECT}/${DESCRIPTION} for now, to continue to work well with v0.15
of the CLI. After that version is no longer in use, we can update the
templates to no longer use the replacement strings and delete the code
in the CLI that deals with it.
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...)
This simply refactors all the display logic out of the
pkg/backend/filestate package. This helps to gear us up to better unify
this logic between the filestate and httpstate backends.
Furthermore, this really ought to be in its own non-backend,
CLI-specific package, but I'm taking one step at a time here.
This change alters the login prompt slightly, so that it is more
obvious that alternative methods exist.
Before this change, we would say:
$ pulumi login
We need your Pulumi account to identify you.
Enter your access token from https://app.pulumi.com/account
or hit <ENTER> to log in using your browser :
After this change, we say this instead:
$ pulumi login
Manage your Pulumi stacks by logging in.
Run `pulumi login --help` for alternative login options.
Enter your access token from https://app.pulumi.com/account
or hit <ENTER> to log in using your browser :
Also updated the help text to advertise this a bit more prominently.
This renames the backend packages to more closely align with the
new direction for them. Namely, pkg/backend/cloud becomes
pkg/backend/httpstate and pkg/backend/local becomes
pkg/backend/filestate. This also helps to clarify that these are meant
to be around state management and so the upcoming refactoring required
to split out (e.g.) the display logic (amongst other things) will make
more sense, and we'll need better package names for those too.
As part of making the local backend more prominent, this changes a few
aspects of how you use it:
* Simplify how you log into a specific cloud; rather than
`pulumi login --cloud-url <url>`, just say `pulumi login <url>`.
* Use a proper URL scheme to denote local backend usage. We have chosen
file://, since the REST API backend is of course always https://.
This means that you can say `pulumi login file://~` to use the local
backend, with state files stored in your home directory. Similarly,
we support `pulumi login file://.` for the current directory.
* Add a --local flag to the login command, to make local logins a
bit easier in the common case of using your home directory. Just say
`pulumi login --local` and it is sugar for `pulumi login file://~`.
* Print the URL for the backend after logging in; for the cloud,
this is just the user's stacks page, and for the local backend,
this is the path to the user's stacks directory on disk.
* Tidy up the documentation for login a bit to be clearer about this.
This is part of pulumi/pulumi#1818.
The existing message put the URL to visit and some explanation text on
the same line, which makes it a little harder to copy only the URL
into a browser. If this extra text ends up being copied as well as the
URL it can lead to failures later, when we try to decode the query
string as part of the OAuth flow.
It's easy enough to fix by just putting the URL on its own line, split
off from the text itself.
Fixes#1832
In CI, when runing a test job for a Pull Request from a fork of
pulumi/pulumi we are unable to use the service (since we don't have an
access token, since Travis does not allow secure environment
varables in pull requests job).
Our "Lifecycle" tests already are no-ops in these cases, and some of our
directed tests use the local backend (in favor of just getting
skipped). Move one other directed test over to using the local
backend, as well. This should get PR's from forks green again.
* Fix new's auto-up to display things interactively
This change fixes `new` to check whether things should be done
interactively, and passes the information along when auto running `up`
so that the standard interactive output is displayed.
When running non-interactively, we'll now auto-accept all prompts as if
`--yes` was passed.
* Add --non-interactive flag