* Add actions to the plans and change
* jsonplan - ignoring LinkedResources for now, those are not in the MVP
* pausing here: we'll work on the plan rendering later
These ideas are both already implied by some logic elsewhere in the system,
but until now we didn't have the decision logic centralized in a single
place that could therefore evolve over time without necessarily always
updating every caller together.
We'll now have the modules runtime produce its own boolean ruling about
each characteristic, which callers can rely on for the mechanical
decision-making of whether to offer the user an "approve" prompt, and
whether to remind the user after apply that it was an incomplete plan
that will probably therefore need at least one more plan/apply round to
converge.
The "Applyable" flag directly replaces the previous method Plan.CanApply,
with equivalent logic. Making this a field instead of a method means that
we can freeze it as part of a saved plan, rather than recalculating it
when we reload the plan, and we can export the field value in our export
formats like JSON while ensuring it'll always be consistent with what
Terraform is using internally.
Callers can (and should) still use other context in the plan to return
more tailored messages for specific situations they already know about
that might be useful to users, but with these flags as a baseline callers
can now just fall back to a generic presentation when encountering a
situation they don't yet understand, rather than making the wrong decision
and causing something strange to happen. That is: a lack of awareness of
a new rule will now cause just a generic message in the UI, rather than
incorrect behavior.
This commit mostly just deals with populating the flags, and then all of
the direct consequences of that on our various tests. Further changes to
actually make use of these flags elsewhere in the system will follow in
later commits, both in this repository and in other repositories.
One funny bit: We need to know the ViewType at the point where we ask the Cloud
backend for the plan JSON, because we need to switch between two distinctly
different formats for human show vs. `show -json`. I chose to pass that by
stashing it on the command struct; passing it as an argument would also work,
but one, the argument lists in these nested method calls were getting a little
unwieldy, and two, many of these functions had to be receiver methods anyway in
order to call methods on Meta.
This commit replaces the existing jsonformat.PlanRendererOpt type with a new
type with identical semantics, located in the plans package.
We needed to be able to exchange the facts represented by
`jsonformat.PlanRendererOpt` across some package boundaries, but the jsonformat
package is implicated in too many dependency chains to be safe for that purpose!
So, we had to make a new one. The plans package seems safe to import from all
the places that must emit or accept this info, and already contains plans.Mode,
which is effectively a sibling of this type.
* Use the new structured renderer in place of the old diffs package
* remove old plan tests
* refresh only plans should show moved resources in the refresh section
This is part of a general effort to move all of Terraform's non-library
package surface under internal in order to reinforce that these are for
internal use within Terraform only.
If you were previously importing packages under this prefix into an
external codebase, you could pin to an earlier release tag as an interim
solution until you've make a plan to achieve the same functionality some
other way.
This is part of a general effort to move all of Terraform's non-library
package surface under internal in order to reinforce that these are for
internal use within Terraform only.
If you were previously importing packages under this prefix into an
external codebase, you could pin to an earlier release tag as an interim
solution until you've make a plan to achieve the same functionality some
other way.
This is part of a general effort to move all of Terraform's non-library
package surface under internal in order to reinforce that these are for
internal use within Terraform only.
If you were previously importing packages under this prefix into an
external codebase, you could pin to an earlier release tag as an interim
solution until you've make a plan to achieve the same functionality some
other way.