packer/hcl2template/function/templatefile.go
hashicorp-copywrite[bot] 19055df3ec
[COMPLIANCE] License changes (#12568)
* Updating the license from MPL to Business Source License

Going forward, this project will be licensed under the Business Source License v1.1. Please see our blog post for more details at https://hashi.co/bsl-blog, FAQ at https://hashi.co/license-faq, and details of the license at www.hashicorp.com/bsl.

* Update copyright file headers to BUSL-1.1

---------

Co-authored-by: hashicorp-copywrite[bot] <110428419+hashicorp-copywrite[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
2023-08-10 15:53:29 -07:00

143 lines
4.8 KiB
Go

// Copyright (c) HashiCorp, Inc.
// SPDX-License-Identifier: BUSL-1.1
package function
import (
"fmt"
"github.com/hashicorp/go-cty-funcs/filesystem"
"github.com/hashicorp/hcl/v2"
"github.com/hashicorp/hcl/v2/hclsyntax"
"github.com/zclconf/go-cty/cty"
"github.com/zclconf/go-cty/cty/function"
)
// MakeTemplateFileFunc constructs a function that takes a file path and
// an arbitrary object of named values and attempts to render the referenced
// file as a template using HCL template syntax.
//
// The template itself may recursively call other functions so a callback
// must be provided to get access to those functions. The template cannot,
// however, access any variables defined in the scope: it is restricted only to
// those variables provided in the second function argument.
//
// As a special exception, a referenced template file may not recursively call
// the templatefile function, since that would risk the same file being
// included into itself indefinitely.
func MakeTemplateFileFunc(baseDir string, funcsCb func() map[string]function.Function) function.Function {
params := []function.Parameter{
{
Name: "path",
Type: cty.String,
},
{
Name: "vars",
Type: cty.DynamicPseudoType,
},
}
loadTmpl := func(fn string) (hcl.Expression, error) {
// We re-use File here to ensure the same filename interpretation
// as it does, along with its other safety checks.
tmplVal, err := filesystem.File(baseDir, cty.StringVal(fn))
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
expr, diags := hclsyntax.ParseTemplate([]byte(tmplVal.AsString()), fn, hcl.Pos{Line: 1, Column: 1})
if diags.HasErrors() {
return nil, diags
}
return expr, nil
}
renderTmpl := func(expr hcl.Expression, varsVal cty.Value) (cty.Value, error) {
if varsTy := varsVal.Type(); !(varsTy.IsMapType() || varsTy.IsObjectType()) {
return cty.DynamicVal, function.NewArgErrorf(1, "invalid vars value: must be a map") // or an object, but we don't strongly distinguish these most of the time
}
ctx := &hcl.EvalContext{
Variables: varsVal.AsValueMap(),
}
// We require all of the variables to be valid HCL identifiers, because
// otherwise there would be no way to refer to them in the template
// anyway. Rejecting this here gives better feedback to the user
// than a syntax error somewhere in the template itself.
for n := range ctx.Variables {
if !hclsyntax.ValidIdentifier(n) {
// This error message intentionally doesn't describe _all_ of
// the different permutations that are technically valid as an
// HCL identifier, but rather focuses on what we might
// consider to be an "idiomatic" variable name.
return cty.DynamicVal, function.NewArgErrorf(1, "invalid template variable name %q: must start with a letter, followed by zero or more letters, digits, and underscores", n)
}
}
// We'll pre-check references in the template here so we can give a
// more specialized error message than HCL would by default, so it's
// clearer that this problem is coming from a templatefile call.
for _, traversal := range expr.Variables() {
root := traversal.RootName()
if _, ok := ctx.Variables[root]; !ok {
return cty.DynamicVal, function.NewArgErrorf(1, "vars map does not contain key %q, referenced at %s", root, traversal[0].SourceRange())
}
}
givenFuncs := funcsCb() // this callback indirection is to avoid chicken/egg problems
funcs := make(map[string]function.Function, len(givenFuncs))
for name, fn := range givenFuncs {
if name == "templatefile" {
// We stub this one out to prevent recursive calls.
funcs[name] = function.New(&function.Spec{
Params: params,
Type: func(args []cty.Value) (cty.Type, error) {
return cty.NilType, fmt.Errorf("cannot recursively call templatefile from inside templatefile call")
},
})
continue
}
funcs[name] = fn
}
ctx.Functions = funcs
val, diags := expr.Value(ctx)
if diags.HasErrors() {
return cty.DynamicVal, diags
}
return val, nil
}
return function.New(&function.Spec{
Params: params,
Type: func(args []cty.Value) (cty.Type, error) {
if !(args[0].IsKnown() && args[1].IsKnown()) {
return cty.DynamicPseudoType, nil
}
// We'll render our template now to see what result type it
// produces. A template consisting only of a single interpolation
// can potentially return any type.
expr, err := loadTmpl(args[0].AsString())
if err != nil {
return cty.DynamicPseudoType, err
}
// This is safe even if args[1] contains unknowns because the HCL
// template renderer itself knows how to short-circuit those.
val, err := renderTmpl(expr, args[1])
return val.Type(), err
},
Impl: func(args []cty.Value, retType cty.Type) (cty.Value, error) {
expr, err := loadTmpl(args[0].AsString())
if err != nil {
return cty.DynamicVal, err
}
return renderTmpl(expr, args[1])
},
})
}