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20 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
evanboyle fccf301d14 move pkg/util/contract -> sdk/go/common/util/contract 2020-03-18 14:40:07 -07:00
evanboyle 8fb3f428b0 move pkg/workspace -> sdk/go/common/workspace 2020-03-18 14:35:53 -07:00
evanboyle dfab571aac move pkg/resource/plugin -> sdk/go/common/resource/plugin 2020-03-18 14:26:24 -07:00
Pat Gavlin 730fe8617e
Buffer events. (#3332)
This avoids unnecessary blocking inside pre/post-step callbacks if the
reader on the other side of the event channel is slow.

We do not use a buffered channel in the event pipe because it is
empirically less likely that the goroutine reading from a buffered
channel will be scheduled when new data is placed in the channel. In the
case of our event system in which events will not be delivered to the
service and display until the copying goroutine is scheduled, this can
lead to unacceptable delay between the send of the original event and
its output.
2019-10-15 15:47:40 -07:00
Matt Ellis 917f3738c5 Add --server to pulumi plugin install
Previously, when the CLI wanted to install a plugin, it used a special
method, `DownloadPlugin` on the `httpstate` backend to actually fetch
the tarball that had the plugin. The reason for this is largely tied
to history, at one point during a closed beta, we required presenting
an API key to download plugins (as a way to enforce folks outside the
beta could not download them) and because of that it was natural to
bake that functionality into the part of the code that interfaced with
the rest of the API from the Pulumi Service.

The downside here is that it means we need to host all the plugins on
`api.pulumi.com` which prevents community folks from being able to
easily write resource providers, since they have to manually manage
the process of downloading a provider to a machine and getting it on
the `$PATH` or putting it in the plugin cache.

To make this easier, we add a `--server` argument you can pass to
`pulumi plugin install` to control the URL that it attempts to fetch
the tarball from. We still have perscriptive guidence on how the
tarball must be
named (`pulumi-[<type>]-[<provider-name>]-vX.Y.Z.tar.gz`) but the base
URL can now be configured.

Folks publishing packages can use install scripts to run `pulumi
plugin install` passing a custom `--server` argument, if needed.

There are two improvements we can make to provide a nicer end to end
story here:

- We can augment the GetRequiredPlugins method on the language
  provider to also return information about an optional server to use
  when downloading the provider.

- We can pass information about a server to download plugins from as
  part of a resource registration or creation of a first class
  provider.

These help out in cases where for one reason or another where `pulumi
plugin install` doesn't get run before an update takes place and would
allow us to either do the right thing ahead of time or provide better
error messages with the correct `--server` argument. But, for now,
this unblocks a majority of the cases we care about and provides a
path forward for folks that want to develop and host their own
resource providers.
2019-06-03 09:31:18 -07:00
Matt Ellis 0574d8cd6f Attempt to download plugins before doing a refresh
Like `preview`, `update` and `destroy` we should ensure any plugins
that are listed in the snapshot are present.

Fixes #2669
2019-05-24 16:12:22 -07:00
CyrusNajmabadi c6d87157d9
Use result.Result in more places. (#2568) 2019-03-19 16:21:50 -07:00
Sean Gillespie 26cc1085b1
Install missing plugins on startup (#2560)
* Install missing plugins on startup

This commit addresses the problem of missing plugins by scanning the
snapshot and language host on startup for the list of required plugins
and, if there are any plugins that are required but not installed,
installs them. The mechanism by which plugins are installed is exactly
the same as 'pulumi plugin install'.

The installation of missing plugins is best-effort and, if it fails,
will not fail the update.

This commit addresses pulumi/pulumi-azure#200, where users using Pulumi
in CI often found themselves missing plugins.

* Add CHANGELOG

* Skip downloading plugins if no client provided

* Reduce excessive test output

* Update Gopkg.lock

* Update pkg/engine/destroy.go

Co-Authored-By: swgillespie <sean@pulumi.com>

* CR: make pluginSet a newtype

* CR: Assign loop induction var to local var
2019-03-15 15:01:37 -07:00
Alex Clemmer dea68b8b37 Implement status sinks
This commit reverts most of #1853 and replaces it with functionally
identical logic, using the notion of status message-specific sinks.

In other words, where the original commit implemented ephemeral status
messages by adding an `isStatus` parameter to most of the logging
methdos in pulumi/pulumi, this implements ephemeral status messages as a
parallel logging sink, which emits _only_ ephemeral status messages.

The original commit message in that PR was:

> Allow log events to be marked "status" events
>
> This commit will introduce a field, IsStatus to LogRequest. A "status"
> logging event will be displayed in the Info column of the main
> display, but will not be printed out at the end, when resource
> operations complete.
>
> For example, for complex resource initialization, we'd like to display
> a series of intermediate results: [1/4] Service object created, for
> example. We'd like these to appear in the Info column, but not at the
> end, where they are not helpful to the user.
2018-08-31 15:56:53 -07:00
Pat Gavlin 73f4f2c464
Reimplement refresh. (#1814)
Replace the Source-based implementation of refresh with a phase that
runs as the first part of plan execution and rewrites the snapshot in-memory.

In order to fit neatly within the existing framework for resource operations,
these changes introduce a new kind of step, RefreshStep, to represent
refreshes. RefreshSteps operate similar to ReadSteps but do not imply that
the resource being read is not managed by Pulumi.

In addition to the refresh reimplementation, these changes incorporate those
from #1394 to run refresh in the integration test framework.

Fixes #1598.
Fixes pulumi/pulumi-terraform#165.
Contributes to #1449.
2018-08-22 17:52:46 -07:00
Sean Gillespie 3cba431ada
Show a better error message when decrypting fails (#1815)
* Show a better error message when decrypting fails

It is most often the case that failing to decrypt a secret implies that
the secret was transferred from one stack to another via copying the
configuration. This commit introduces a better error message for this
case and instructs users to explicitly re-encrypt their encrypted keys
in the context of the new stack.

* Spelling

* CR: Grammar fixes
2018-08-22 15:32:54 -07:00
Pat Gavlin a222705143
Implement first-class providers. (#1695)
### First-Class Providers
These changes implement support for first-class providers. First-class
providers are provider plugins that are exposed as resources via the
Pulumi programming model so that they may be explicitly and multiply
instantiated. Each instance of a provider resource may be configured
differently, and configuration parameters may be source from the
outputs of other resources.

### Provider Plugin Changes
In order to accommodate the need to verify and diff provider
configuration and configure providers without complete configuration
information, these changes adjust the high-level provider plugin
interface. Two new methods for validating a provider's configuration
and diffing changes to the same have been added (`CheckConfig` and
`DiffConfig`, respectively), and the type of the configuration bag
accepted by `Configure` has been changed to a `PropertyMap`.

These changes have not yet been reflected in the provider plugin gRPC
interface. We will do this in a set of follow-up changes. Until then,
these methods are implemented by adapters:
- `CheckConfig` validates that all configuration parameters are string
  or unknown properties. This is necessary because existing plugins
  only accept string-typed configuration values.
- `DiffConfig` either returns "never replace" if all configuration
  values are known or "must replace" if any configuration value is
  unknown. The justification for this behavior is given
  [here](https://github.com/pulumi/pulumi/pull/1695/files#diff-a6cd5c7f337665f5bb22e92ca5f07537R106)
- `Configure` converts the config bag to a legacy config map and
  configures the provider plugin if all config values are known. If any
  config value is unknown, the underlying plugin is not configured and
  the provider may only perform `Check`, `Read`, and `Invoke`, all of
  which return empty results. We justify this behavior becuase it is
  only possible during a preview and provides the best experience we
  can manage with the existing gRPC interface.

### Resource Model Changes
Providers are now exposed as resources that participate in a stack's
dependency graph. Like other resources, they are explicitly created,
may have multiple instances, and may have dependencies on other
resources. Providers are referred to using provider references, which
are a combination of the provider's URN and its ID. This design
addresses the need during a preview to refer to providers that have not
yet been physically created and therefore have no ID.

All custom resources that are not themselves providers must specify a
single provider via a provider reference. The named provider will be
used to manage that resource's CRUD operations. If a resource's
provider reference changes, the resource must be replaced. Though its
URN is not present in the resource's dependency list, the provider
should be treated as a dependency of the resource when topologically
sorting the dependency graph.

Finally, `Invoke` operations must now specify a provider to use for the
invocation via a provider reference.

### Engine Changes
First-class providers support requires a few changes to the engine:
- The engine must have some way to map from provider references to
  provider plugins. It must be possible to add providers from a stack's
  checkpoint to this map and to register new/updated providers during
  the execution of a plan in response to CRUD operations on provider
  resources.
- In order to support updating existing stacks using existing Pulumi
  programs that may not explicitly instantiate providers, the engine
  must be able to manage the "default" providers for each package
  referenced by a checkpoint or Pulumi program. The configuration for
  a "default" provider is taken from the stack's configuration data.

The former need is addressed by adding a provider registry type that is
responsible for managing all of the plugins required by a plan. In
addition to loading plugins froma checkpoint and providing the ability
to map from a provider reference to a provider plugin, this type serves
as the provider plugin for providers themselves (i.e. it is the
"provider provider").

The latter need is solved via two relatively self-contained changes to
plan setup and the eval source.

During plan setup, the old checkpoint is scanned for custom resources
that do not have a provider reference in order to compute the set of
packages that require a default provider. Once this set has been
computed, the required default provider definitions are conjured and
prepended to the checkpoint's resource list. Each resource that
requires a default provider is then updated to refer to the default
provider for its package.

While an eval source is running, each custom resource registration,
resource read, and invoke that does not name a provider is trapped
before being returned by the source iterator. If no default provider
for the appropriate package has been registered, the eval source
synthesizes an appropriate registration, waits for it to complete, and
records the registered provider's reference. This reference is injected
into the original request, which is then processed as usual. If a
default provider was already registered, the recorded reference is
used and no new registration occurs.

### SDK Changes
These changes only expose first-class providers from the Node.JS SDK.
- A new abstract class, `ProviderResource`, can be subclassed and used
  to instantiate first-class providers.
- A new field in `ResourceOptions`, `provider`, can be used to supply
  a particular provider instance to manage a `CustomResource`'s CRUD
  operations.
- A new type, `InvokeOptions`, can be used to specify options that
  control the behavior of a call to `pulumi.runtime.invoke`. This type
  includes a `provider` field that is analogous to
  `ResourceOptions.provider`.
2018-08-06 17:50:29 -07:00
joeduffy 5967259795 Add license headers 2018-05-22 15:02:47 -07:00
joeduffy 4e9b228089 Don't pass PluginEvents for refresh
The PluginEvents will now try to register loaded plugins which,
during a refresh preview, will result in attempting to save mutations
when a token is missing.  This change mirrors the changes made to
destroy which avoid it panicing similarly, by simply leaving
PluginEvents unset.  Also adds a bit of tracing that was helpful to
me as I debugged through the underlying issues.

Fixes #1377.
2018-05-18 13:54:23 -07:00
Joe Duffy 369c619ab9
Skip loading language plugins when not needed (#1367)
In pulumi/pulumi#1356, we observed that we can fail during a destroy
because we attempt to load the language plugin, which now eagerly looks
for the @pulumi/pulumi package.

This is also blocking ingestion of the latest engine bits into the PPC.

It turns out that for destroy (and refresh), we have no need for the
language plugin.  So, let's skip loading it when appropriate.
2018-05-14 20:32:53 -07:00
Pat Gavlin 2d6579acee
Enhance the engine's tracing support a bit. (#1328)
- Allow callers to provide a parent span for the engine's operations
- Tag each plan context with the name of its associated operation
2018-05-04 17:01:35 -07:00
Sean Gillespie 14baf866f6
Snapshot management overhaul and refactor (#1273)
* Refactor the SnapshotManager interface

Lift snapshot management out of the engine by delegating it to the
SnapshotManager implementation in pkg/backend.

* Add a event interface for plugin loads and use that interface to record plugins in the snapshot

* Remove dead code

* Add comments to Events

* Add a number of tests for SnapshotManager

* CR feedback: use a successful bit on 'End' instead of having a separate 'Abort' API

* CR feedback

* CR feedback: register plugins one-at-a-time instead of the entire state at once
2018-04-25 17:20:08 -07:00
Sean Gillespie fba87909a0
Re-introduce interface for snapshot management (#1254)
* Re-introduce interface for snapshot management

Snapshot management was done through the Update interface; this commit
splits it into a separate interface

* Put the SnapshotManager instance onto the engine context

* Remove SnapshotManager from planContext and updateActions now that it can be accessed by engine Context
2018-04-23 14:12:13 -07:00
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