pulumi/sdk/dotnet
Mikhail Shilkov a95a4d1195
Unit testing in .NET (#3696)
Mock-based testing in .NET
2020-03-11 23:10:01 +01:00
..
cmd/pulumi-language-dotnet Fix golangci-lint warning (#3651) 2019-12-12 22:25:56 +00:00
Pulumi Unit testing in .NET (#3696) 2020-03-11 23:10:01 +01:00
Pulumi.FSharp .NET: Treat warnings as errors (#3650) 2019-12-12 17:13:26 +00:00
Pulumi.Tests Unit testing in .NET (#3696) 2020-03-11 23:10:01 +01:00
.editorconfig Add **preview** .NET Core support for pulumi. (#3399) 2019-10-25 16:59:50 -07:00
.gitignore Add **preview** .NET Core support for pulumi. (#3399) 2019-10-25 16:59:50 -07:00
dotnet.sln Remove .NET examples (#3419) 2019-10-30 08:16:06 +01:00
Makefile Run dotnet test with version parameters so that it doesn't generate a differently versioned .nupkg file (#3888) 2020-02-10 14:43:43 -08:00
pulumi_logo_64x64.png Add **preview** .NET Core support for pulumi. (#3399) 2019-10-25 16:59:50 -07:00
README.md Update .NET README file to reflect the preview 2019-11-14 14:48:41 +00:00

.NET Language Provider (Preview)

A .NET language provider for Pulumi (currently in preview).

Building and Running

To build, you'll want to install the .NET Core 3.0 SDK or greater, and ensure dotnet is on your path. Once that it does, running make in either the root directory or the sdk/dotnet directory will build and install the language plugin.

Once this is done you can write a Pulumi app written on top of .NET. You can find many examples showing how this can be done with C#, F#, or VB. Your application will need to reference the Pulumi NuGet package or the Pulumi.dll built above.

Here's a simple example of a Pulumi app written in C# that creates some simple AWS resources:

// Copyright 2016-2019, Pulumi Corporation

using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Threading.Tasks;
using Pulumi;
using Pulumi.Aws.S3;

class Program
{
    static Task<int> Main()
        => Deployment.RunAsync(() =>
        {
            var config = new Config("hello-dotnet");
            var name = config.Require("name");

            // Create the bucket, and make it public.
            var bucket = new Bucket(name, new BucketArgs { Acl = "public-read" });

            // Add some content.
            var content = new BucketObject($"{name}-content", new BucketObjectArgs
            {
                Acl = "public-read",
                Bucket = bucket.Id,
                ContentType = "text/plain; charset=utf8",
                Key = "hello.txt",
                Source = new StringAsset("Made with ❤, Pulumi, and .NET"),
            });

            // Return some values that will become the Outputs of the stack.
            return new Dictionary<string, object>
            {
                { "hello", "world" },
                { "bucket-id", bucket.Id },
                { "content-id", content.Id },
                { "object-url", Output.Format($"http://{bucket.BucketDomainName}/{content.Key}") },
            };
        });
}

Make a Pulumi.yaml file:

$ cat Pulumi.yaml

name: hello-dotnet
runtime: dotnet

Then, configure it:

$ pulumi stack init hello-dotnet
$ pulumi config set name hello-dotnet
$ pulumi config set aws:region us-west-2

And finally, preview and update as you would any other Pulumi project.