Documentation ¶
Overview ¶
Package addrs contains types that represent "addresses", which are references to specific objects within a Durgaform configuration or state.
All addresses have string representations based on HCL traversal syntax which should be used in the user-interface, and also in-memory representations that can be used internally.
For object types that exist within Durgaform modules a pair of types is used. The "local" part of the address is represented by a type, and then an absolute path to that object in the context of its module is represented by a type of the same name with an "Abs" prefix added, for "absolute".
All types within this package should be treated as immutable, even if this is not enforced by the Go compiler. It is always an implementation error to modify an address object in-place after it is initially constructed.
Index ¶
- Constants
- func Equivalent[T UniqueKeyer](a, b T) bool
- func InstanceKeyLess(i, j InstanceKey) bool
- func IsDefaultProvider(addr Provider) bool
- func IsProviderPartNormalized(str string) (bool, error)
- func MustParseProviderPart(given string) string
- func ParseProviderPart(given string) (string, error)
- func ParseProviderSourceString(str string) (tfaddr.Provider, tfdiags.Diagnostics)
- type AbsInputVariableInstance
- type AbsLocalValue
- type AbsModuleCall
- type AbsMoveable
- type AbsMoveableResource
- type AbsOutputValue
- type AbsProviderConfig
- func ParseAbsProviderConfig(traversal hcl.Traversal) (AbsProviderConfig, tfdiags.Diagnostics)
- func ParseAbsProviderConfigStr(str string) (AbsProviderConfig, tfdiags.Diagnostics)
- func ParseLegacyAbsProviderConfig(traversal hcl.Traversal) (AbsProviderConfig, tfdiags.Diagnostics)
- func ParseLegacyAbsProviderConfigStr(str string) (AbsProviderConfig, tfdiags.Diagnostics)
- type AbsResource
- func (r AbsResource) AddrType() TargetableAddrType
- func (r AbsResource) AffectedAbsResource() AbsResource
- func (r AbsResource) Config() ConfigResource
- func (r AbsResource) Equal(o AbsResource) bool
- func (r AbsResource) Instance(key InstanceKey) AbsResourceInstance
- func (r AbsResource) MoveDestination(fromMatch, toMatch *MoveEndpointInModule) (AbsResource, bool)
- func (r AbsResource) String() string
- func (r AbsResource) TargetContains(other Targetable) bool
- func (r AbsResource) UniqueKey() UniqueKey
- type AbsResourceInstance
- func (r AbsResourceInstance) AddrType() TargetableAddrType
- func (r AbsResourceInstance) AffectedAbsResource() AbsResource
- func (r AbsResourceInstance) Check(t CheckType, i int) Check
- func (r AbsResourceInstance) ContainingResource() AbsResource
- func (r AbsResourceInstance) Equal(o AbsResourceInstance) bool
- func (r AbsResourceInstance) Less(o AbsResourceInstance) bool
- func (r AbsResourceInstance) MoveDestination(fromMatch, toMatch *MoveEndpointInModule) (AbsResourceInstance, bool)
- func (r AbsResourceInstance) String() string
- func (r AbsResourceInstance) TargetContains(other Targetable) bool
- func (r AbsResourceInstance) UniqueKey() UniqueKey
- type Check
- type CheckType
- type Checkable
- type ConfigMoveable
- type ConfigResource
- type CountAttr
- type DurgaformAttr
- type ForEachAttr
- type InputVariable
- type InstanceKey
- type InstanceKeyType
- type IntKey
- type LocalProviderConfig
- type LocalValue
- type Map
- func (m Map[K, V]) Elements() []MapElem[K, V]
- func (m Map[K, V]) Get(key K) V
- func (m Map[K, V]) GetOk(key K) (V, bool)
- func (m Map[K, V]) Has(key K) bool
- func (m Map[K, V]) Keys() Set[K]
- func (m Map[K, V]) Len() int
- func (m Map[K, V]) Put(key K, value V)
- func (m Map[K, V]) PutElement(elem MapElem[K, V])
- func (m Map[K, V]) Remove(key K)
- func (m Map[K, V]) Values() []V
- type MapElem
- type Module
- func (m Module) AddrType() TargetableAddrType
- func (m Module) Ancestors() []Module
- func (m Module) Call() (Module, ModuleCall)
- func (m Module) Child(name string) Module
- func (m Module) Equal(other Module) bool
- func (m Module) IsRoot() bool
- func (m Module) Parent() Module
- func (m Module) Resource(mode ResourceMode, typeName string, name string) ConfigResource
- func (m Module) String() string
- func (m Module) TargetContains(other Targetable) bool
- func (m Module) UnkeyedInstanceShim() ModuleInstance
- type ModuleCall
- type ModuleCallInstance
- func (c ModuleCallInstance) Absolute(moduleAddr ModuleInstance) ModuleInstance
- func (c ModuleCallInstance) ModuleInstance(caller ModuleInstance) ModuleInstance
- func (c ModuleCallInstance) Output(name string) ModuleCallInstanceOutput
- func (c ModuleCallInstance) String() string
- func (c ModuleCallInstance) UniqueKey() UniqueKey
- type ModuleCallInstanceOutput
- type ModuleCallOutput
- type ModuleInstance
- func (m ModuleInstance) AddrType() TargetableAddrType
- func (m ModuleInstance) Ancestors() []ModuleInstance
- func (m ModuleInstance) Call() (ModuleInstance, ModuleCall)
- func (m ModuleInstance) CallInstance() (ModuleInstance, ModuleCallInstance)
- func (m ModuleInstance) Child(name string, key InstanceKey) ModuleInstance
- func (m ModuleInstance) ChildCall(name string) AbsModuleCall
- func (m ModuleInstance) Equal(o ModuleInstance) bool
- func (m ModuleInstance) InputVariable(name string) AbsInputVariableInstance
- func (m ModuleInstance) IsAncestor(o ModuleInstance) bool
- func (m ModuleInstance) IsDeclaredByCall(other AbsModuleCall) bool
- func (m ModuleInstance) IsRoot() bool
- func (m ModuleInstance) Less(o ModuleInstance) bool
- func (m ModuleInstance) LocalValue(name string) AbsLocalValue
- func (m ModuleInstance) Module() Module
- func (m ModuleInstance) MoveDestination(fromMatch, toMatch *MoveEndpointInModule) (ModuleInstance, bool)
- func (m ModuleInstance) OutputValue(name string) AbsOutputValue
- func (m ModuleInstance) Parent() ModuleInstance
- func (m ModuleInstance) ProviderConfigAliased(provider Provider, alias string) AbsProviderConfig
- func (m ModuleInstance) ProviderConfigDefault(provider Provider) AbsProviderConfig
- func (m ModuleInstance) Resource(mode ResourceMode, typeName string, name string) AbsResource
- func (m ModuleInstance) ResourceInstance(mode ResourceMode, typeName string, name string, key InstanceKey) AbsResourceInstance
- func (m ModuleInstance) String() string
- func (m ModuleInstance) TargetContains(other Targetable) bool
- func (m ModuleInstance) UniqueKey() UniqueKey
- type ModuleInstanceStep
- type ModulePackage
- type ModuleRegistryPackage
- type ModuleSource
- type ModuleSourceLocal
- type ModuleSourceRegistry
- type ModuleSourceRemote
- type MoveEndpoint
- type MoveEndpointInModule
- func (e *MoveEndpointInModule) CanChainFrom(other *MoveEndpointInModule) bool
- func (e *MoveEndpointInModule) Equal(other *MoveEndpointInModule) bool
- func (e *MoveEndpointInModule) InModuleInstance(modInst ModuleInstance) AbsMoveable
- func (from *MoveEndpointInModule) IsModuleReIndex(to *MoveEndpointInModule) bool
- func (e *MoveEndpointInModule) Module() Module
- func (e *MoveEndpointInModule) ModuleCallTraversals() (Module, []ModuleCall)
- func (e *MoveEndpointInModule) NestedWithin(other *MoveEndpointInModule) bool
- func (e *MoveEndpointInModule) ObjectKind() MoveEndpointKind
- func (e *MoveEndpointInModule) SelectsModule(addr ModuleInstance) bool
- func (e *MoveEndpointInModule) SelectsResource(addr AbsResource) bool
- func (e *MoveEndpointInModule) String() string
- type MoveEndpointKind
- type OutputValue
- type PathAttr
- type Provider
- func ImpliedProviderForUnqualifiedType(typeName string) Provider
- func MustParseProviderSourceString(str string) Provider
- func NewBuiltInProvider(name string) Provider
- func NewDefaultProvider(name string) Provider
- func NewLegacyProvider(name string) Provider
- func NewProvider(hostname svchost.Hostname, namespace, typeName string) Provider
- type ProviderConfig
- type Reference
- type Referenceable
- type Resource
- func (r Resource) Absolute(module ModuleInstance) AbsResource
- func (r Resource) Equal(o Resource) bool
- func (r Resource) ImpliedProvider() string
- func (r Resource) InModule(module Module) ConfigResource
- func (r Resource) Instance(key InstanceKey) ResourceInstance
- func (r Resource) Phase(rpt ResourceInstancePhaseType) ResourcePhase
- func (r Resource) String() string
- func (r Resource) UniqueKey() UniqueKey
- type ResourceInstance
- func (r ResourceInstance) Absolute(module ModuleInstance) AbsResourceInstance
- func (r ResourceInstance) ContainingResource() Resource
- func (r ResourceInstance) Equal(o ResourceInstance) bool
- func (r ResourceInstance) Phase(rpt ResourceInstancePhaseType) ResourceInstancePhase
- func (r ResourceInstance) String() string
- func (r ResourceInstance) UniqueKey() UniqueKey
- type ResourceInstancePhase
- type ResourceInstancePhaseType
- type ResourceMode
- type ResourcePhase
- type Set
- type StringKey
- type Target
- type Targetable
- type TargetableAddrType
- type UniqueKey
- type UniqueKeyer
Constants ¶
const BuiltInProviderHost = tfaddr.BuiltInProviderHost
BuiltInProviderHost is the pseudo-hostname used for the "built-in" provider namespace. Built-in provider addresses must also have their namespace set to BuiltInProviderNamespace in order to be considered as built-in.
const BuiltInProviderNamespace = tfaddr.BuiltInProviderNamespace
BuiltInProviderNamespace is the provider namespace used for "built-in" providers. Built-in provider addresses must also have their hostname set to BuiltInProviderHost in order to be considered as built-in.
The this namespace is literally named "builtin", in the hope that users who see FQNs containing this will be able to infer the way in which they are special, even if they haven't encountered the concept formally yet.
const DefaultModuleRegistryHost = tfaddr.DefaultModuleRegistryHost
DefaultModuleRegistryHost is the hostname used for registry-based module source addresses that do not have an explicit hostname.
const DefaultProviderRegistryHost = tfaddr.DefaultProviderRegistryHost
DefaultProviderRegistryHost is the hostname used for provider addresses that do not have an explicit hostname.
const LegacyProviderNamespace = tfaddr.LegacyProviderNamespace
LegacyProviderNamespace is the special string used in the Namespace field of type Provider to mark a legacy provider address. This special namespace value would normally be invalid, and can be used only when the hostname is DefaultRegistryHost because that host owns the mapping from legacy name to FQN.
const Self selfT = 0
Self is the address of the special object "self" that behaves as an alias for a containing object currently in scope.
Variables ¶
This section is empty.
Functions ¶
func Equivalent ¶
func Equivalent[T UniqueKeyer](a, b T) bool
func InstanceKeyLess ¶
func InstanceKeyLess(i, j InstanceKey) bool
InstanceKeyLess returns true if the first given instance key i should sort before the second key j, and false otherwise.
func IsDefaultProvider ¶
func IsProviderPartNormalized ¶
IsProviderPartNormalized compares a given string to the result of ParseProviderPart(string)
func MustParseProviderPart ¶
MustParseProviderPart is a wrapper around ParseProviderPart that panics if it returns an error.
func ParseProviderPart ¶
ParseProviderPart processes an addrs.Provider namespace or type string provided by an end-user, producing a normalized version if possible or an error if the string contains invalid characters.
A provider part is processed in the same way as an individual label in a DNS domain name: it is transformed to lowercase per the usual DNS case mapping and normalization rules and may contain only letters, digits, and dashes. Additionally, dashes may not appear at the start or end of the string.
These restrictions are intended to allow these names to appear in fussy contexts such as directory/file names on case-insensitive filesystems, repository names on GitHub, etc. We're using the DNS rules in particular, rather than some similar rules defined locally, because the hostname part of an addrs.Provider is already a hostname and it's ideal to use exactly the same case folding and normalization rules for all of the parts.
In practice a provider type string conventionally does not contain dashes either. Such names are permitted, but providers with such type names will be hard to use because their resource type names will not be able to contain the provider type name and thus each resource will need an explicit provider address specified. (A real-world example of such a provider is the "google-beta" variant of the GCP provider, which has resource types that start with the "google_" prefix instead.)
It's valid to pass the result of this function as the argument to a subsequent call, in which case the result will be identical.
func ParseProviderSourceString ¶
func ParseProviderSourceString(str string) (tfaddr.Provider, tfdiags.Diagnostics)
ParseProviderSourceString parses the source attribute and returns a provider. This is intended primarily to parse the FQN-like strings returned by durgaform-config-inspect.
The following are valid source string formats:
name namespace/name hostname/namespace/name
Types ¶
type AbsInputVariableInstance ¶
type AbsInputVariableInstance struct { Module ModuleInstance Variable InputVariable }
AbsInputVariableInstance is the address of an input variable within a particular module instance.
func (AbsInputVariableInstance) String ¶
func (v AbsInputVariableInstance) String() string
type AbsLocalValue ¶
type AbsLocalValue struct { Module ModuleInstance LocalValue LocalValue }
AbsLocalValue is the absolute address of a local value within a module instance.
func (AbsLocalValue) String ¶
func (v AbsLocalValue) String() string
type AbsModuleCall ¶
type AbsModuleCall struct { Module ModuleInstance Call ModuleCall }
AbsModuleCall is the address of a "module" block relative to the root of the configuration.
This is similar to ModuleInstance alone, but specifically represents the module block itself rather than any one of the instances that module block declares.
func (AbsModuleCall) Equal ¶
func (c AbsModuleCall) Equal(other AbsModuleCall) bool
func (AbsModuleCall) Instance ¶
func (c AbsModuleCall) Instance(key InstanceKey) ModuleInstance
func (AbsModuleCall) String ¶
func (c AbsModuleCall) String() string
func (AbsModuleCall) UniqueKey ¶
func (c AbsModuleCall) UniqueKey() UniqueKey
type AbsMoveable ¶
type AbsMoveable interface { UniqueKeyer String() string // contains filtered or unexported methods }
AbsMoveable is an interface implemented by address types that can be either the source or destination of a "moved" statement in configuration, along with any other similar cross-module state refactoring statements we might allow.
Note that AbsMoveable represents an absolute address relative to the root of the configuration, which is different than the direct representation of these in configuration where the author gives an address relative to the current module where the address is defined. The type MoveEndpoint
type AbsMoveableResource ¶
type AbsMoveableResource interface { AbsMoveable AffectedAbsResource() AbsResource }
AbsMoveableResource is an AbsMoveable that is either a resource or a resource instance.
type AbsOutputValue ¶
type AbsOutputValue struct { Module ModuleInstance OutputValue OutputValue // contains filtered or unexported fields }
AbsOutputValue is the absolute address of an output value within a module instance.
This represents an output globally within the namespace of a particular configuration. It is related to but separate from ModuleCallOutput, which represents a module output from the perspective of its parent module.
func ParseAbsOutputValue ¶
func ParseAbsOutputValue(traversal hcl.Traversal) (AbsOutputValue, tfdiags.Diagnostics)
func ParseAbsOutputValueStr ¶
func ParseAbsOutputValueStr(str string) (AbsOutputValue, tfdiags.Diagnostics)
func (AbsOutputValue) Equal ¶
func (v AbsOutputValue) Equal(o AbsOutputValue) bool
func (AbsOutputValue) ModuleCallOutput ¶
func (v AbsOutputValue) ModuleCallOutput() (ModuleInstance, ModuleCallInstanceOutput)
ModuleCallOutput converts an AbsModuleOutput into a ModuleCallOutput, returning also the module instance that the ModuleCallOutput is relative to.
The root module does not have a call, and so this method cannot be used with outputs in the root module, and will panic in that case.
func (AbsOutputValue) String ¶
func (v AbsOutputValue) String() string
type AbsProviderConfig ¶
AbsProviderConfig is the absolute address of a provider configuration within a particular module instance.
func ParseAbsProviderConfig ¶
func ParseAbsProviderConfig(traversal hcl.Traversal) (AbsProviderConfig, tfdiags.Diagnostics)
ParseAbsProviderConfig parses the given traversal as an absolute provider address. The following are examples of traversals that can be successfully parsed as absolute provider configuration addresses:
provider["registry.durgaform.io/hashicorp/aws"] provider["registry.durgaform.io/hashicorp/aws"].foo module.bar.provider["registry.durgaform.io/hashicorp/aws"] module.bar.module.baz.provider["registry.durgaform.io/hashicorp/aws"].foo
This type of address is used, for example, to record the relationships between resources and provider configurations in the state structure. This type of address is not generally used in the UI, except in error messages that refer to provider configurations.
func ParseAbsProviderConfigStr ¶
func ParseAbsProviderConfigStr(str string) (AbsProviderConfig, tfdiags.Diagnostics)
ParseAbsProviderConfigStr is a helper wrapper around ParseAbsProviderConfig that takes a string and parses it with the HCL native syntax traversal parser before interpreting it.
This should be used only in specialized situations since it will cause the created references to not have any meaningful source location information. If a reference string is coming from a source that should be identified in error messages then the caller should instead parse it directly using a suitable function from the HCL API and pass the traversal itself to ParseAbsProviderConfig.
Error diagnostics are returned if either the parsing fails or the analysis of the traversal fails. There is no way for the caller to distinguish the two kinds of diagnostics programmatically. If error diagnostics are returned the returned address is invalid.
func ParseLegacyAbsProviderConfig ¶
func ParseLegacyAbsProviderConfig(traversal hcl.Traversal) (AbsProviderConfig, tfdiags.Diagnostics)
ParseLegacyAbsProviderConfig parses the given traversal as an absolute provider address. The following are examples of traversals that can be successfully parsed as legacy absolute provider configuration addresses:
provider.aws provider.aws.foo module.bar.provider.aws module.bar.module.baz.provider.aws.foo
This type of address is used in legacy state and may appear in state v4 if the provider config addresses have not been normalized to include provider FQN.
func ParseLegacyAbsProviderConfigStr ¶
func ParseLegacyAbsProviderConfigStr(str string) (AbsProviderConfig, tfdiags.Diagnostics)
func (AbsProviderConfig) Inherited ¶
func (pc AbsProviderConfig) Inherited() (AbsProviderConfig, bool)
Inherited returns an address that the receiving configuration address might inherit from in a parent module. The second bool return value indicates if such inheritance is possible, and thus whether the returned address is valid.
Inheritance is possible only for default (un-aliased) providers in modules other than the root module. Even if a valid address is returned, inheritence may not be performed for other reasons, such as if the calling module provided explicit provider configurations within the call for this module. The ProviderTransformer graph transform in the main durgaform module has the authoritative logic for provider inheritance, and this method is here mainly just for its benefit.
func (AbsProviderConfig) LegacyString ¶
func (pc AbsProviderConfig) LegacyString() string
LegacyString() returns a legacy-style AbsProviderConfig string and should only be used for legacy state shimming.
func (AbsProviderConfig) String ¶
func (pc AbsProviderConfig) String() string
String() returns a string representation of an AbsProviderConfig in the following format:
provider["example.com/namespace/name"] provider["example.com/namespace/name"].alias module.module-name.provider["example.com/namespace/name"] module.module-name.provider["example.com/namespace/name"].alias
type AbsResource ¶
type AbsResource struct { Module ModuleInstance Resource Resource // contains filtered or unexported fields }
AbsResource is an absolute address for a resource under a given module path.
func ParseAbsResource ¶
func ParseAbsResource(traversal hcl.Traversal) (AbsResource, tfdiags.Diagnostics)
ParseAbsResource attempts to interpret the given traversal as an absolute resource address, using the same syntax as expected by ParseTarget.
If no error diagnostics are returned, the returned target includes the address that was extracted and the source range it was extracted from.
If error diagnostics are returned then the AbsResource value is invalid and must not be used.
func ParseAbsResourceStr ¶
func ParseAbsResourceStr(str string) (AbsResource, tfdiags.Diagnostics)
ParseAbsResourceStr is a helper wrapper around ParseAbsResource that takes a string and parses it with the HCL native syntax traversal parser before interpreting it.
Error diagnostics are returned if either the parsing fails or the analysis of the traversal fails. There is no way for the caller to distinguish the two kinds of diagnostics programmatically. If error diagnostics are returned the returned address may be incomplete.
Since this function has no context about the source of the given string, any returned diagnostics will not have meaningful source location information.
func (AbsResource) AddrType ¶
func (r AbsResource) AddrType() TargetableAddrType
func (AbsResource) AffectedAbsResource ¶
func (r AbsResource) AffectedAbsResource() AbsResource
AffectedAbsResource returns the AbsResource.
func (AbsResource) Config ¶
func (r AbsResource) Config() ConfigResource
Config returns the unexpanded ConfigResource for this AbsResource.
func (AbsResource) Equal ¶
func (r AbsResource) Equal(o AbsResource) bool
func (AbsResource) Instance ¶
func (r AbsResource) Instance(key InstanceKey) AbsResourceInstance
Instance produces the address for a specific instance of the receiver that is idenfied by the given key.
func (AbsResource) MoveDestination ¶
func (r AbsResource) MoveDestination(fromMatch, toMatch *MoveEndpointInModule) (AbsResource, bool)
MoveDestination considers a an address representing a resource in the context of source and destination move endpoints and then, if the resource address matches the from endpoint, returns the corresponding new resource address that the object should move to.
MoveDestination will return false in its second return value if the receiver doesn't match fromMatch, indicating that the given move statement doesn't apply to this object.
Both of the given endpoints must be from the same move statement and thus must have matching object types. If not, MoveDestination will panic.
func (AbsResource) String ¶
func (r AbsResource) String() string
func (AbsResource) TargetContains ¶
func (r AbsResource) TargetContains(other Targetable) bool
TargetContains implements Targetable by returning true if the given other address is either equal to the receiver or is an instance of the receiver.
func (AbsResource) UniqueKey ¶
func (r AbsResource) UniqueKey() UniqueKey
type AbsResourceInstance ¶
type AbsResourceInstance struct { Module ModuleInstance Resource ResourceInstance // contains filtered or unexported fields }
AbsResourceInstance is an absolute address for a resource instance under a given module path.
func ParseAbsResourceInstance ¶
func ParseAbsResourceInstance(traversal hcl.Traversal) (AbsResourceInstance, tfdiags.Diagnostics)
ParseAbsResourceInstance attempts to interpret the given traversal as an absolute resource instance address, using the same syntax as expected by ParseTarget.
If no error diagnostics are returned, the returned target includes the address that was extracted and the source range it was extracted from.
If error diagnostics are returned then the AbsResource value is invalid and must not be used.
func ParseAbsResourceInstanceStr ¶
func ParseAbsResourceInstanceStr(str string) (AbsResourceInstance, tfdiags.Diagnostics)
ParseAbsResourceInstanceStr is a helper wrapper around ParseAbsResourceInstance that takes a string and parses it with the HCL native syntax traversal parser before interpreting it.
Error diagnostics are returned if either the parsing fails or the analysis of the traversal fails. There is no way for the caller to distinguish the two kinds of diagnostics programmatically. If error diagnostics are returned the returned address may be incomplete.
Since this function has no context about the source of the given string, any returned diagnostics will not have meaningful source location information.
func (AbsResourceInstance) AddrType ¶
func (r AbsResourceInstance) AddrType() TargetableAddrType
func (AbsResourceInstance) AffectedAbsResource ¶
func (r AbsResourceInstance) AffectedAbsResource() AbsResource
AffectedAbsResource returns the AbsResource for the instance.
func (AbsResourceInstance) ContainingResource ¶
func (r AbsResourceInstance) ContainingResource() AbsResource
ContainingResource returns the address of the resource that contains the receving resource instance. In other words, it discards the key portion of the address to produce an AbsResource value.
func (AbsResourceInstance) Equal ¶
func (r AbsResourceInstance) Equal(o AbsResourceInstance) bool
func (AbsResourceInstance) Less ¶
func (r AbsResourceInstance) Less(o AbsResourceInstance) bool
Less returns true if the receiver should sort before the given other value in a sorted list of addresses.
func (AbsResourceInstance) MoveDestination ¶
func (r AbsResourceInstance) MoveDestination(fromMatch, toMatch *MoveEndpointInModule) (AbsResourceInstance, bool)
MoveDestination considers a an address representing a resource instance in the context of source and destination move endpoints and then, if the instance address matches the from endpoint, returns the corresponding new instance address that the object should move to.
MoveDestination will return false in its second return value if the receiver doesn't match fromMatch, indicating that the given move statement doesn't apply to this object.
Both of the given endpoints must be from the same move statement and thus must have matching object types. If not, MoveDestination will panic.
func (AbsResourceInstance) String ¶
func (r AbsResourceInstance) String() string
func (AbsResourceInstance) TargetContains ¶
func (r AbsResourceInstance) TargetContains(other Targetable) bool
TargetContains implements Targetable by returning true if the given other address is equal to the receiver.
func (AbsResourceInstance) UniqueKey ¶
func (r AbsResourceInstance) UniqueKey() UniqueKey
type Check ¶
Check is the address of a check rule within a checkable object.
This represents the check rule globally within a configuration, and is used during graph evaluation to identify a condition result object to update with the result of check rule evaluation.
The check address is not distinct from resource traversals, and check rule values are not intended to be available to the language, so the address is not Referenceable.
Note also that the check address is only relevant within the scope of a run, as reordering check blocks between runs will result in their addresses changing.
type CheckType ¶
type CheckType int
CheckType describes the category of check.
func (CheckType) Description ¶
Description returns a human-readable description of the check type. This is presented in the user interface through a diagnostic summary.
type Checkable ¶
type Checkable interface { // Check returns the address of an individual check rule of a specified // type and index within this checkable container. Check(CheckType, int) Check String() string // contains filtered or unexported methods }
Checkable is an interface implemented by all address types that can contain condition blocks.
type ConfigMoveable ¶
type ConfigMoveable interface {
// contains filtered or unexported methods
}
ConfigMoveable is similar to AbsMoveable but represents a static object in the configuration, rather than an instance of that object created by module expansion.
Note that ConfigMovable represents an absolute address relative to the root of the configuration, which is different than the direct representation of these in configuration where the author gives an address relative to the current module where the address is defined. The type MoveEndpoint represents the relative form given directly in configuration.
type ConfigResource ¶
type ConfigResource struct { Module Module Resource Resource // contains filtered or unexported fields }
ConfigResource is an address for a resource within a configuration.
func (ConfigResource) Absolute ¶
func (r ConfigResource) Absolute(module ModuleInstance) AbsResource
Absolute produces the address for the receiver within a specific module instance.
func (ConfigResource) AddrType ¶
func (r ConfigResource) AddrType() TargetableAddrType
func (ConfigResource) Equal ¶
func (r ConfigResource) Equal(o ConfigResource) bool
func (ConfigResource) String ¶
func (r ConfigResource) String() string
func (ConfigResource) TargetContains ¶
func (r ConfigResource) TargetContains(other Targetable) bool
TargetContains implements Targetable by returning true if the given other address is either equal to the receiver or is an instance of the receiver.
type CountAttr ¶
type CountAttr struct { Name string // contains filtered or unexported fields }
CountAttr is the address of an attribute of the "count" object in the interpolation scope, like "count.index".
type DurgaformAttr ¶
type DurgaformAttr struct { Name string // contains filtered or unexported fields }
DurgaformAttr is the address of an attribute of the "durgaform" object in the interpolation scope, like "durgaform.workspace".
func (DurgaformAttr) String ¶
func (ta DurgaformAttr) String() string
func (DurgaformAttr) UniqueKey ¶
func (ta DurgaformAttr) UniqueKey() UniqueKey
type ForEachAttr ¶
type ForEachAttr struct { Name string // contains filtered or unexported fields }
ForEachAttr is the address of an attribute referencing the current "for_each" object in the interpolation scope, addressed using the "each" keyword, ex. "each.key" and "each.value"
func (ForEachAttr) String ¶
func (f ForEachAttr) String() string
func (ForEachAttr) UniqueKey ¶
func (f ForEachAttr) UniqueKey() UniqueKey
type InputVariable ¶
type InputVariable struct { Name string // contains filtered or unexported fields }
InputVariable is the address of an input variable.
func (InputVariable) Absolute ¶
func (v InputVariable) Absolute(m ModuleInstance) AbsInputVariableInstance
Absolute converts the receiver into an absolute address within the given module instance.
func (InputVariable) String ¶
func (v InputVariable) String() string
func (InputVariable) UniqueKey ¶
func (v InputVariable) UniqueKey() UniqueKey
type InstanceKey ¶
type InstanceKey interface { String() string // Value returns the cty.Value of the appropriate type for the InstanceKey // value. Value() cty.Value // contains filtered or unexported methods }
InstanceKey represents the key of an instance within an object that contains multiple instances due to using "count" or "for_each" arguments in configuration.
IntKey and StringKey are the two implementations of this type. No other implementations are allowed. The single instance of an object that _isn't_ using "count" or "for_each" is represented by NoKey, which is a nil InstanceKey.
var NoKey InstanceKey
NoKey represents the absense of an InstanceKey, for the single instance of a configuration object that does not use "count" or "for_each" at all.
func ParseInstanceKey ¶
func ParseInstanceKey(key cty.Value) (InstanceKey, error)
ParseInstanceKey returns the instance key corresponding to the given value, which must be known and non-null.
If an unknown or null value is provided then this function will panic. This function is intended to deal with the values that would naturally be found in a hcl.TraverseIndex, which (when parsed from source, at least) can never contain unknown or null values.
type InstanceKeyType ¶
type InstanceKeyType rune
InstanceKeyType represents the different types of instance key that are supported. Usually it is sufficient to simply type-assert an InstanceKey value to either IntKey or StringKey, but this type and its values can be used to represent the types themselves, rather than specific values of those types.
const ( NoKeyType InstanceKeyType = 0 IntKeyType InstanceKeyType = 'I' StringKeyType InstanceKeyType = 'S' )
type IntKey ¶
type IntKey int
IntKey is the InstanceKey representation representing integer indices, as used when the "count" argument is specified or if for_each is used with a sequence type.
type LocalProviderConfig ¶
type LocalProviderConfig struct { LocalName string // If not empty, Alias identifies which non-default (aliased) provider // configuration this address refers to. Alias string }
LocalProviderConfig is the address of a provider configuration from the perspective of references in a particular module.
Finding the corresponding AbsProviderConfig will require looking up the LocalName in the providers table in the module's configuration; there is no syntax-only translation between these types.
func NewDefaultLocalProviderConfig ¶
func NewDefaultLocalProviderConfig(LocalNameName string) LocalProviderConfig
NewDefaultLocalProviderConfig returns the address of the default (un-aliased) configuration for the provider with the given local type name.
func (LocalProviderConfig) String ¶
func (pc LocalProviderConfig) String() string
func (LocalProviderConfig) StringCompact ¶
func (pc LocalProviderConfig) StringCompact() string
StringCompact is an alternative to String that returns the form that can be parsed by ParseProviderConfigCompact, without the "provider." prefix.
type LocalValue ¶
type LocalValue struct { Name string // contains filtered or unexported fields }
LocalValue is the address of a local value.
func (LocalValue) Absolute ¶
func (v LocalValue) Absolute(m ModuleInstance) AbsLocalValue
Absolute converts the receiver into an absolute address within the given module instance.
func (LocalValue) String ¶
func (v LocalValue) String() string
func (LocalValue) UniqueKey ¶
func (v LocalValue) UniqueKey() UniqueKey
type Map ¶
type Map[K UniqueKeyer, V any] struct { // Elems is the internal data structure of the map. // // This is exported to allow for comparisons during tests and other similar // careful read operations, but callers MUST NOT modify this map directly. // Use only the methods of Map to modify the contents of this structure, // to ensure that it remains correct and consistent. Elems map[UniqueKey]MapElem[K, V] }
Map represents a mapping whose keys are address types that implement UniqueKeyer.
Since not all address types are comparable in the Go language sense, this type cannot work with the typical Go map access syntax, and so instead has a method-based syntax. Use this type only for situations where the key type isn't guaranteed to always be a valid key for a standard Go map.
func (Map[K, V]) Elements ¶
Elements returns a slice containing a snapshot of the current elements of the map, in an unpredictable order.
func (Map[K, V]) Get ¶
func (m Map[K, V]) Get(key K) V
Get returns the value of the element with the given key, or the zero value of V if there is no such element.
func (Map[K, V]) GetOk ¶
GetOk is like Get but additionally returns a flag for whether there was an element with the given key present in the map.
func (Map[K, V]) Has ¶
Has returns true if and only if there is an element in the map which has the given key.
func (Map[K, V]) Keys ¶
Keys returns a Set[K] containing a snapshot of the current keys of elements of the map.
func (Map[K, V]) Put ¶
func (m Map[K, V]) Put(key K, value V)
Put inserts a new element into the map, or replaces an existing element which has an equivalent key.
func (Map[K, V]) PutElement ¶
PutElement is like Put but takes the key and value from the given MapElement structure instead of as individual arguments.
type MapElem ¶
type MapElem[K UniqueKeyer, V any] struct { Key K Value V }
func MakeMapElem ¶
func MakeMapElem[K UniqueKeyer, V any](key K, value V) MapElem[K, V]
type Module ¶
type Module []string
Module is an address for a module call within configuration. This is the static counterpart of ModuleInstance, representing a traversal through the static module call tree in configuration and does not take into account the potentially-multiple instances of a module that might be created by "count" and "for_each" arguments within those calls.
This type should be used only in very specialized cases when working with the static module call tree. Type ModuleInstance is appropriate in more cases.
Although Module is a slice, it should be treated as immutable after creation.
var RootModule Module
RootModule is the module address representing the root of the static module call tree, which is also the zero value of Module.
Note that this is not the root of the dynamic module tree, which is instead represented by RootModuleInstance.
func (Module) AddrType ¶
func (m Module) AddrType() TargetableAddrType
func (Module) Ancestors ¶
Ancestors returns a slice containing the receiver and all of its ancestor modules, all the way up to (and including) the root module. The result is ordered by depth, with the root module always first.
Since the result always includes the root module, a caller may choose to ignore it by slicing the result with [1:].
func (Module) Call ¶
func (m Module) Call() (Module, ModuleCall)
Call returns the module call address that corresponds to the given module instance, along with the address of the module that contains it.
There is no call for the root module, so this method will panic if called on the root module address.
In practice, this just turns the last element of the receiver into a ModuleCall and then returns a slice of the receiever that excludes that last part. This is just a convenience for situations where a call address is required, such as when dealing with *Reference and Referencable values.
func (Module) Child ¶
Child returns the address of a child call in the receiver, identified by the given name.
func (Module) IsRoot ¶
IsRoot returns true if the receiver is the address of the root module, or false otherwise.
func (Module) Parent ¶
Parent returns the address of the parent module of the receiver, or the receiver itself if there is no parent (if it's the root module address).
func (Module) Resource ¶
func (m Module) Resource(mode ResourceMode, typeName string, name string) ConfigResource
Resource returns the address of a particular resource within the module.
func (Module) TargetContains ¶
func (m Module) TargetContains(other Targetable) bool
TargetContains implements Targetable for Module by returning true if the given other address either matches the receiver, is a sub-module-instance of the receiver, or is a targetable absolute address within a module that is contained within the receiver.
func (Module) UnkeyedInstanceShim ¶
func (m Module) UnkeyedInstanceShim() ModuleInstance
UnkeyedInstanceShim is a shim method for converting a Module address to the equivalent ModuleInstance address that assumes that no modules have keyed instances.
This is a temporary allowance for the fact that Durgaform does not presently support "count" and "for_each" on modules, and thus graph building code that derives graph nodes from configuration must just assume unkeyed modules in order to construct the graph. At a later time when "count" and "for_each" support is added for modules, all callers of this method will need to be reworked to allow for keyed module instances.
type ModuleCall ¶
type ModuleCall struct { Name string // contains filtered or unexported fields }
ModuleCall is the address of a call from the current module to a child module.
func (ModuleCall) Absolute ¶
func (c ModuleCall) Absolute(moduleAddr ModuleInstance) AbsModuleCall
func (ModuleCall) Equal ¶
func (c ModuleCall) Equal(other ModuleCall) bool
func (ModuleCall) Instance ¶
func (c ModuleCall) Instance(key InstanceKey) ModuleCallInstance
Instance returns the address of an instance of the receiver identified by the given key.
func (ModuleCall) String ¶
func (c ModuleCall) String() string
func (ModuleCall) UniqueKey ¶
func (c ModuleCall) UniqueKey() UniqueKey
type ModuleCallInstance ¶
type ModuleCallInstance struct { Call ModuleCall Key InstanceKey // contains filtered or unexported fields }
ModuleCallInstance is the address of one instance of a module created from a module call, which might create multiple instances using "count" or "for_each" arguments.
There is no "Abs" version of ModuleCallInstance because an absolute module path is represented by ModuleInstance.
func (ModuleCallInstance) Absolute ¶
func (c ModuleCallInstance) Absolute(moduleAddr ModuleInstance) ModuleInstance
func (ModuleCallInstance) ModuleInstance ¶
func (c ModuleCallInstance) ModuleInstance(caller ModuleInstance) ModuleInstance
ModuleInstance returns the address of the module instance that corresponds to the receiving call instance when resolved in the given calling module. In other words, it returns the child module instance that the receving call instance creates.
func (ModuleCallInstance) Output ¶
func (c ModuleCallInstance) Output(name string) ModuleCallInstanceOutput
Output returns the absolute address of an output of the receiver identified by its name.
func (ModuleCallInstance) String ¶
func (c ModuleCallInstance) String() string
func (ModuleCallInstance) UniqueKey ¶
func (c ModuleCallInstance) UniqueKey() UniqueKey
type ModuleCallInstanceOutput ¶
type ModuleCallInstanceOutput struct { Call ModuleCallInstance Name string // contains filtered or unexported fields }
ModuleCallInstanceOutput is the address of a particular named output produced by an instance of a module call.
func (ModuleCallInstanceOutput) AbsOutputValue ¶
func (co ModuleCallInstanceOutput) AbsOutputValue(caller ModuleInstance) AbsOutputValue
AbsOutputValue returns the absolute output value address that corresponds to the receving module call output address, once resolved in the given calling module.
func (ModuleCallInstanceOutput) ModuleCallOutput ¶
func (co ModuleCallInstanceOutput) ModuleCallOutput() ModuleCallOutput
ModuleCallOutput returns the referenceable ModuleCallOutput for this particular instance.
func (ModuleCallInstanceOutput) String ¶
func (co ModuleCallInstanceOutput) String() string
func (ModuleCallInstanceOutput) UniqueKey ¶
func (co ModuleCallInstanceOutput) UniqueKey() UniqueKey
type ModuleCallOutput ¶
type ModuleCallOutput struct { Call ModuleCall Name string // contains filtered or unexported fields }
ModuleCallOutput is the address of a named output and its associated ModuleCall, which may expand into multiple module instances
func (ModuleCallOutput) String ¶
func (m ModuleCallOutput) String() string
func (ModuleCallOutput) UniqueKey ¶
func (m ModuleCallOutput) UniqueKey() UniqueKey
type ModuleInstance ¶
type ModuleInstance []ModuleInstanceStep
ModuleInstance is an address for a particular module instance within the dynamic module tree. This is an extension of the static traversals represented by type Module that deals with the possibility of a single module call producing multiple instances via the "count" and "for_each" arguments.
Although ModuleInstance is a slice, it should be treated as immutable after creation.
var RootModuleInstance ModuleInstance
RootModuleInstance is the module instance address representing the root module, which is also the zero value of ModuleInstance.
func ParseModuleInstance ¶
func ParseModuleInstance(traversal hcl.Traversal) (ModuleInstance, tfdiags.Diagnostics)
func ParseModuleInstanceStr ¶
func ParseModuleInstanceStr(str string) (ModuleInstance, tfdiags.Diagnostics)
ParseModuleInstanceStr is a helper wrapper around ParseModuleInstance that takes a string and parses it with the HCL native syntax traversal parser before interpreting it.
This should be used only in specialized situations since it will cause the created references to not have any meaningful source location information. If a reference string is coming from a source that should be identified in error messages then the caller should instead parse it directly using a suitable function from the HCL API and pass the traversal itself to ParseModuleInstance.
Error diagnostics are returned if either the parsing fails or the analysis of the traversal fails. There is no way for the caller to distinguish the two kinds of diagnostics programmatically. If error diagnostics are returned then the returned address is invalid.
func (ModuleInstance) AddrType ¶
func (m ModuleInstance) AddrType() TargetableAddrType
func (ModuleInstance) Ancestors ¶
func (m ModuleInstance) Ancestors() []ModuleInstance
Ancestors returns a slice containing the receiver and all of its ancestor module instances, all the way up to (and including) the root module. The result is ordered by depth, with the root module always first.
Since the result always includes the root module, a caller may choose to ignore it by slicing the result with [1:].
func (ModuleInstance) Call ¶
func (m ModuleInstance) Call() (ModuleInstance, ModuleCall)
Call returns the module call address that corresponds to the given module instance, along with the address of the module instance that contains it.
There is no call for the root module, so this method will panic if called on the root module address.
A single module call can produce potentially many module instances, so the result discards any instance key that might be present on the last step of the instance. To retain this, use CallInstance instead.
In practice, this just turns the last element of the receiver into a ModuleCall and then returns a slice of the receiever that excludes that last part. This is just a convenience for situations where a call address is required, such as when dealing with *Reference and Referencable values.
func (ModuleInstance) CallInstance ¶
func (m ModuleInstance) CallInstance() (ModuleInstance, ModuleCallInstance)
CallInstance returns the module call instance address that corresponds to the given module instance, along with the address of the module instance that contains it.
There is no call for the root module, so this method will panic if called on the root module address.
In practice, this just turns the last element of the receiver into a ModuleCallInstance and then returns a slice of the receiever that excludes that last part. This is just a convenience for situations where a call\ address is required, such as when dealing with *Reference and Referencable values.
func (ModuleInstance) Child ¶
func (m ModuleInstance) Child(name string, key InstanceKey) ModuleInstance
Child returns the address of a child module instance of the receiver, identified by the given name and key.
func (ModuleInstance) ChildCall ¶
func (m ModuleInstance) ChildCall(name string) AbsModuleCall
ChildCall returns the address of a module call within the receiver, identified by the given name.
func (ModuleInstance) Equal ¶
func (m ModuleInstance) Equal(o ModuleInstance) bool
Equal returns true if the receiver and the given other value contains the exact same parts.
func (ModuleInstance) InputVariable ¶
func (m ModuleInstance) InputVariable(name string) AbsInputVariableInstance
InputVariable returns the absolute address of the input variable of the given name inside the receiving module instance.
func (ModuleInstance) IsAncestor ¶
func (m ModuleInstance) IsAncestor(o ModuleInstance) bool
IsAncestor returns true if the receiver is an ancestor of the given other value.
func (ModuleInstance) IsDeclaredByCall ¶
func (m ModuleInstance) IsDeclaredByCall(other AbsModuleCall) bool
IsDeclaredByCall returns true if the receiver is an instance of the given AbsModuleCall.
func (ModuleInstance) IsRoot ¶
func (m ModuleInstance) IsRoot() bool
IsRoot returns true if the receiver is the address of the root module instance, or false otherwise.
func (ModuleInstance) Less ¶
func (m ModuleInstance) Less(o ModuleInstance) bool
Less returns true if the receiver should sort before the given other value in a sorted list of addresses.
func (ModuleInstance) LocalValue ¶
func (m ModuleInstance) LocalValue(name string) AbsLocalValue
LocalValue returns the absolute address of a local value of the given name within the receiving module instance.
func (ModuleInstance) Module ¶
func (m ModuleInstance) Module() Module
Module returns the address of the module that this instance is an instance of.
func (ModuleInstance) MoveDestination ¶
func (m ModuleInstance) MoveDestination(fromMatch, toMatch *MoveEndpointInModule) (ModuleInstance, bool)
MoveDestination considers a an address representing a module instance in the context of source and destination move endpoints and then, if the module address matches the from endpoint, returns the corresponding new module address that the object should move to.
MoveDestination will return false in its second return value if the receiver doesn't match fromMatch, indicating that the given move statement doesn't apply to this object.
Both of the given endpoints must be from the same move statement and thus must have matching object types. If not, MoveDestination will panic.
func (ModuleInstance) OutputValue ¶
func (m ModuleInstance) OutputValue(name string) AbsOutputValue
OutputValue returns the absolute address of an output value of the given name within the receiving module instance.
func (ModuleInstance) Parent ¶
func (m ModuleInstance) Parent() ModuleInstance
Parent returns the address of the parent module instance of the receiver, or the receiver itself if there is no parent (if it's the root module address).
func (ModuleInstance) ProviderConfigAliased ¶
func (m ModuleInstance) ProviderConfigAliased(provider Provider, alias string) AbsProviderConfig
ProviderConfigAliased returns the address of an aliased provider config of the given type and alias inside the recieving module instance.
func (ModuleInstance) ProviderConfigDefault ¶
func (m ModuleInstance) ProviderConfigDefault(provider Provider) AbsProviderConfig
ProviderConfigDefault returns the address of the default provider config of the given type inside the recieving module instance.
func (ModuleInstance) Resource ¶
func (m ModuleInstance) Resource(mode ResourceMode, typeName string, name string) AbsResource
Resource returns the address of a particular resource within the receiver.
func (ModuleInstance) ResourceInstance ¶
func (m ModuleInstance) ResourceInstance(mode ResourceMode, typeName string, name string, key InstanceKey) AbsResourceInstance
ResourceInstance returns the address of a particular resource instance within the receiver.
func (ModuleInstance) String ¶
func (m ModuleInstance) String() string
String returns a string representation of the receiver, in the format used within e.g. user-provided resource addresses.
The address of the root module has the empty string as its representation.
func (ModuleInstance) TargetContains ¶
func (m ModuleInstance) TargetContains(other Targetable) bool
TargetContains implements Targetable by returning true if the given other address either matches the receiver, is a sub-module-instance of the receiver, or is a targetable absolute address within a module that is contained within the reciever.
func (ModuleInstance) UniqueKey ¶
func (m ModuleInstance) UniqueKey() UniqueKey
type ModuleInstanceStep ¶
type ModuleInstanceStep struct { Name string InstanceKey InstanceKey }
ModuleInstanceStep is a single traversal step through the dynamic module tree. It is used only as part of ModuleInstance.
func (ModuleInstanceStep) String ¶
func (s ModuleInstanceStep) String() string
type ModulePackage ¶
type ModulePackage string
A ModulePackage represents a physical location where Durgaform can retrieve a module package, which is an archive, repository, or other similar container which delivers the source code for one or more Durgaform modules.
A ModulePackage is a string in go-getter's address syntax. By convention, we use ModulePackage-typed values only for the result of successfully running the go-getter "detectors", which produces an address string which includes an explicit installation method prefix along with an address string in the format expected by that installation method.
Note that although the "detector" phase of go-getter does do some simple normalization in certain cases, it isn't generally possible to compare two ModulePackage values to decide if they refer to the same package. Two equal ModulePackage values represent the same package, but there might be other non-equal ModulePackage values that also refer to that package, and there is no reliable way to determine that.
Don't convert a user-provided string directly to ModulePackage. Instead, use ParseModuleSource with a remote module address and then access the ModulePackage value from the result, making sure to also handle the selected subdirectory if any. You should convert directly to ModulePackage only for a string that is hard-coded into the program (e.g. in a unit test) where you've ensured that it's already in the expected syntax.
func (ModulePackage) String ¶
func (p ModulePackage) String() string
type ModuleRegistryPackage ¶
type ModuleRegistryPackage = tfaddr.ModulePackage
A ModuleRegistryPackage is an extra indirection over a ModulePackage where we use a module registry to translate a more symbolic address (and associated version constraint given out of band) into a physical source location.
ModuleRegistryPackage is distinct from ModulePackage because they have disjoint use-cases: registry package addresses are only used to query a registry in order to find a real module package address. These being distinct is intended to help future maintainers more easily follow the series of steps in the module installer, with the help of the type checker.
type ModuleSource ¶
type ModuleSource interface { // String returns a full representation of the address, including any // additional components that are typically implied by omission in // user-written addresses. // // We typically use this longer representation in error message, in case // the inclusion of normally-omitted components is helpful in debugging // unexpected behavior. String() string // ForDisplay is similar to String but instead returns a representation of // the idiomatic way to write the address in configuration, omitting // components that are commonly just implied in addresses written by // users. // // We typically use this shorter representation in informational messages, // such as the note that we're about to start downloading a package. ForDisplay() string // contains filtered or unexported methods }
ModuleSource is the general type for all three of the possible module source address types. The concrete implementations of this are ModuleSourceLocal, ModuleSourceRegistry, and ModuleSourceRemote.
func ParseModuleSource ¶
func ParseModuleSource(raw string) (ModuleSource, error)
ParseModuleSource parses a module source address as given in the "source" argument inside a "module" block in the configuration.
For historical reasons this syntax is a bit overloaded, supporting three different address types:
- Local paths starting with either ./ or ../, which are special because Durgaform considers them to belong to the same "package" as the caller.
- Module registry addresses, given as either NAMESPACE/NAME/SYSTEM or HOST/NAMESPACE/NAME/SYSTEM, in which case the remote registry serves as an indirection over the third address type that follows.
- Various URL-like and other heuristically-recognized strings which we currently delegate to the external library go-getter.
There is some ambiguity between the module registry addresses and go-getter's very liberal heuristics and so this particular function will typically treat an invalid registry address as some other sort of remote source address rather than returning an error. If you know that you're expecting a registry address in particular, use ParseModuleSourceRegistry instead, which can therefore expose more detailed error messages about registry address parsing in particular.
func ParseModuleSourceRegistry ¶
func ParseModuleSourceRegistry(raw string) (ModuleSource, error)
ParseModuleSourceRegistry is a variant of ParseModuleSource which only accepts module registry addresses, and will reject any other address type.
Use this instead of ParseModuleSource if you know from some other surrounding context that an address is intended to be a registry address rather than some other address type, which will then allow for better error reporting due to the additional information about user intent.
type ModuleSourceLocal ¶
type ModuleSourceLocal string
ModuleSourceLocal is a ModuleSource representing a local path reference from the caller's directory to the callee's directory within the same module package.
A "module package" here means a set of modules distributed together in the same archive, repository, or similar. That's a significant distinction because we always download and cache entire module packages at once, and then create relative references within the same directory in order to ensure all modules in the package are looking at a consistent filesystem layout. We also assume that modules within a package are maintained together, which means that cross-cutting maintenence across all of them would be possible.
The actual value of a ModuleSourceLocal is a normalized relative path using forward slashes, even on operating systems that have other conventions, because we're representing traversal within the logical filesystem represented by the containing package, not actually within the physical filesystem we unpacked the package into. We should typically not construct ModuleSourceLocal values directly, except in tests where we can ensure the value meets our assumptions. Use ParseModuleSource instead if the input string is not hard-coded in the program.
func (ModuleSourceLocal) ForDisplay ¶
func (s ModuleSourceLocal) ForDisplay() string
func (ModuleSourceLocal) String ¶
func (s ModuleSourceLocal) String() string
type ModuleSourceRegistry ¶
ModuleSourceRegistry is a ModuleSource representing a module listed in a Durgaform module registry.
A registry source isn't a direct source location but rather an indirection over a ModuleSourceRemote. The job of a registry is to translate the combination of a ModuleSourceRegistry and a module version number into a concrete ModuleSourceRemote that Durgaform will then download and install.
func (ModuleSourceRegistry) ForDisplay ¶
func (s ModuleSourceRegistry) ForDisplay() string
func (ModuleSourceRegistry) String ¶
func (s ModuleSourceRegistry) String() string
type ModuleSourceRemote ¶
type ModuleSourceRemote struct { // Package is the address of the remote package that the requested // module belongs to. Package ModulePackage // If Subdir is non-empty then it represents a sub-directory within the // remote package which will serve as the entry-point for the package. // // Subdir uses a normalized forward-slash-based path syntax within the // virtual filesystem represented by the final package. It will never // include `../` or `./` sequences. Subdir string }
ModuleSourceRemote is a ModuleSource representing a remote location from which we can retrieve a module package.
A ModuleSourceRemote can optionally include a "subdirectory" path, which means that it's selecting a sub-directory of the given package to use as the entry point into the package.
func (ModuleSourceRemote) ForDisplay ¶
func (s ModuleSourceRemote) ForDisplay() string
func (ModuleSourceRemote) FromRegistry ¶
func (s ModuleSourceRemote) FromRegistry(given ModuleSourceRegistry) ModuleSourceRemote
FromRegistry can be called on a remote source address that was returned from a module registry, passing in the original registry source address that the registry was asked about, in order to get the effective final remote source address.
Specifically, this method handles the situations where one or both of the two addresses contain subdirectory paths, combining both when necessary in order to ensure that both the registry's given path and the user's given path are both respected.
This will return nonsense if given a registry address other than the one that generated the reciever via a registry lookup.
func (ModuleSourceRemote) String ¶
func (s ModuleSourceRemote) String() string
type MoveEndpoint ¶
type MoveEndpoint struct { // SourceRange is the location of the physical endpoint address // in configuration, if this MoveEndpoint was decoded from a // configuration expresson. SourceRange tfdiags.SourceRange // contains filtered or unexported fields }
MoveEndpoint is to AbsMoveable and ConfigMoveable what Target is to Targetable: a wrapping struct that captures the result of decoding an HCL traversal representing a relative path from the current module to a moveable object.
Its name reflects that its primary purpose is for the "from" and "to" addresses in a "moved" statement in the configuration, but it's also valid to use MoveEndpoint for other similar mechanisms that give Durgaform hints about historical configuration changes that might prompt creating a different plan than Durgaform would by default.
To obtain a full address from a MoveEndpoint you must use either the package function UnifyMoveEndpoints (to get an AbsMoveable) or the method ConfigMoveable (to get a ConfigMoveable).
func ParseMoveEndpoint ¶
func ParseMoveEndpoint(traversal hcl.Traversal) (*MoveEndpoint, tfdiags.Diagnostics)
ParseMoveEndpoint attempts to interpret the given traversal as a "move endpoint" address, which is a relative path from the module containing the traversal to a movable object in either the same module or in some child module.
This deals only with the syntactic element of a move endpoint expression in configuration. Before the result will be useful you'll need to combine it with the address of the module where it was declared in order to get an absolute address relative to the root module.
func (*MoveEndpoint) ConfigMoveable ¶
func (e *MoveEndpoint) ConfigMoveable(baseModule Module) ConfigMoveable
ConfigMovable transforms the reciever into a ConfigMovable by resolving it relative to the given base module, which should be the module where the MoveEndpoint expression was found.
The result is useful for finding the target object in the configuration, but it's not sufficient for fully interpreting a move statement because it lacks the specific module and resource instance keys.
func (*MoveEndpoint) Equal ¶
func (e *MoveEndpoint) Equal(other *MoveEndpoint) bool
func (*MoveEndpoint) MightUnifyWith ¶
func (e *MoveEndpoint) MightUnifyWith(other *MoveEndpoint) bool
MightUnifyWith returns true if it is possible that a later call to UnifyMoveEndpoints might succeed if given the reciever and the other given endpoint.
This is intended for early static validation of obviously-wrong situations, although there are still various semantic errors that this cannot catch.
func (*MoveEndpoint) ObjectKind ¶
func (e *MoveEndpoint) ObjectKind() MoveEndpointKind
func (*MoveEndpoint) String ¶
func (e *MoveEndpoint) String() string
type MoveEndpointInModule ¶
type MoveEndpointInModule struct { // SourceRange is the location of the physical endpoint address // in configuration, if this MoveEndpoint was decoded from a // configuration expresson. SourceRange tfdiags.SourceRange // contains filtered or unexported fields }
MoveEndpointInModule annotates a MoveEndpoint with the address of the module where it was declared, which is the form we use for resolving whether move statements chain from or are nested within other move statements.
func ImpliedMoveStatementEndpoint ¶
func ImpliedMoveStatementEndpoint(addr AbsResourceInstance, rng tfdiags.SourceRange) *MoveEndpointInModule
ImpliedMoveStatementEndpoint is a special constructor for MoveEndpointInModule which is suitable only for constructing "implied" move statements, which means that we inferred the statement automatically rather than building it from an explicit block in the configuration.
Implied move endpoints, just as for the statements they are embedded in, have somewhat-related-but-imprecise source ranges, typically referring to some general configuration construct that implied the statement, because by definition there is no explicit move endpoint expression in this case.
func UnifyMoveEndpoints ¶
func UnifyMoveEndpoints(moduleAddr Module, relFrom, relTo *MoveEndpoint) (modFrom, modTo *MoveEndpointInModule)
UnifyMoveEndpoints takes a pair of MoveEndpoint objects representing the "from" and "to" addresses in a moved block, and returns a pair of MoveEndpointInModule addresses guaranteed to be of the same dynamic type that represent what the two MoveEndpoint addresses refer to.
moduleAddr must be the address of the module where the move was declared.
This function deals both with the conversion from relative to absolute addresses and with resolving the ambiguity between no-key instance addresses and whole-object addresses, returning the least specific address type possible.
Not all combinations of addresses are unifyable: the two addresses must either both include resources or both just be modules. If the two given addresses are incompatible then UnifyMoveEndpoints returns (nil, nil), in which case the caller should typically report an error to the user stating the unification constraints.
func (*MoveEndpointInModule) CanChainFrom ¶
func (e *MoveEndpointInModule) CanChainFrom(other *MoveEndpointInModule) bool
CanChainFrom returns true if the reciever describes an address that could potentially select an object that the other given address could select.
In other words, this decides whether the move chaining rule applies, if the reciever is the "to" from one statement and the other given address is the "from" of another statement.
func (*MoveEndpointInModule) Equal ¶
func (e *MoveEndpointInModule) Equal(other *MoveEndpointInModule) bool
Equal returns true if the reciever represents the same matching pattern as the other given endpoint, ignoring the source location information.
This is not an optimized function and is here primarily to help with writing concise assertions in test code.
func (*MoveEndpointInModule) InModuleInstance ¶
func (e *MoveEndpointInModule) InModuleInstance(modInst ModuleInstance) AbsMoveable
InModuleInstance returns an AbsMoveable address which concatenates the given module instance address with the receiver's relative object selection to produce one example of an instance that might be affected by this move statement.
The result is meaningful only if the given module instance is an instance of the same module returned by the method Module. InModuleInstance doesn't fully verify that (aside from some cheap/easy checks), but it will produce meaningless garbage if not.
func (*MoveEndpointInModule) IsModuleReIndex ¶
func (from *MoveEndpointInModule) IsModuleReIndex(to *MoveEndpointInModule) bool
IsModuleReIndex takes the From and To endpoints from a single move statement, and returns true if the only changes are to module indexes, and all non-absolute paths remain the same.
func (*MoveEndpointInModule) Module ¶
func (e *MoveEndpointInModule) Module() Module
Module returns the address of the module where the receiving address was declared.
func (*MoveEndpointInModule) ModuleCallTraversals ¶
func (e *MoveEndpointInModule) ModuleCallTraversals() (Module, []ModuleCall)
ModuleCallTraversals returns both the address of the module where the receiver was declared and any other module calls it traverses through while selecting a particular object to move.
This is a rather special-purpose function here mainly to support our validation rule that a module can only traverse down into child modules that belong to the same module package.
func (*MoveEndpointInModule) NestedWithin ¶
func (e *MoveEndpointInModule) NestedWithin(other *MoveEndpointInModule) bool
NestedWithin returns true if the receiver describes an address that is contained within one of the objects that the given other address could select.
func (*MoveEndpointInModule) ObjectKind ¶
func (e *MoveEndpointInModule) ObjectKind() MoveEndpointKind
func (*MoveEndpointInModule) SelectsModule ¶
func (e *MoveEndpointInModule) SelectsModule(addr ModuleInstance) bool
SelectsModule returns true if the reciever directly selects either the given module or a resource nested directly inside that module.
This is a good function to use to decide which modules in a state to consider when processing a particular move statement. For a module move the given module itself is what will move, while a resource move indicates that we should search each of the resources in the given module to see if they match.
func (*MoveEndpointInModule) SelectsResource ¶
func (e *MoveEndpointInModule) SelectsResource(addr AbsResource) bool
SelectsResource returns true if the receiver directly selects either the given resource or one of its instances.
func (*MoveEndpointInModule) String ¶
func (e *MoveEndpointInModule) String() string
String produces a string representation of the object matching pattern represented by the reciever.
Since there is no direct syntax for representing such an object matching pattern, this function uses a splat-operator-like representation to stand in for the wildcard instance keys.
type MoveEndpointKind ¶
type MoveEndpointKind rune
MoveEndpointKind represents the different kinds of object that a movable address can refer to.
const ( // MoveEndpointModule indicates that a move endpoint either refers to // an individual module instance or to all instances of a particular // module call. MoveEndpointModule MoveEndpointKind = 'M' // MoveEndpointResource indicates that a move endpoint either refers to // an individual resource instance or to all instances of a particular // resource. MoveEndpointResource MoveEndpointKind = 'R' )
func (MoveEndpointKind) String ¶
func (i MoveEndpointKind) String() string
type OutputValue ¶
type OutputValue struct {
Name string
}
OutputValue is the address of an output value, in the context of the module that is defining it.
This is related to but separate from ModuleCallOutput, which represents a module output from the perspective of its parent module. Since output values cannot be represented from the module where they are defined, OutputValue is not Referenceable, while ModuleCallOutput is.
func (OutputValue) Absolute ¶
func (v OutputValue) Absolute(m ModuleInstance) AbsOutputValue
Absolute converts the receiver into an absolute address within the given module instance.
func (OutputValue) String ¶
func (v OutputValue) String() string
type PathAttr ¶
type PathAttr struct { Name string // contains filtered or unexported fields }
PathAttr is the address of an attribute of the "path" object in the interpolation scope, like "path.module".
type Provider ¶
Provider encapsulates a single provider type. In the future this will be extended to include additional fields including Namespace and SourceHost
func ImpliedProviderForUnqualifiedType ¶
ImpliedProviderForUnqualifiedType represents the rules for inferring what provider FQN a user intended when only a naked type name is available.
For all except the type name "durgaform" this returns a so-called "default" provider, which is under the registry.durgaform.io/hashicorp/ namespace.
As a special case, the string "durgaform" maps to "durgaform.io/builtin/terraform" because that is the more likely user intent than the now-unmaintained "registry.durgaform.io/hashicorp/terraform" which remains only for compatibility with older Durgaform versions.
func MustParseProviderSourceString ¶
MustParseProviderSourceString is a wrapper around ParseProviderSourceString that panics if it returns an error.
func NewBuiltInProvider ¶
NewBuiltInProvider returns the address of a "built-in" provider. See the docs for Provider.IsBuiltIn for more information.
func NewDefaultProvider ¶
NewDefaultProvider returns the default address of a HashiCorp-maintained, Registry-hosted provider.
func NewLegacyProvider ¶
NewLegacyProvider returns a mock address for a provider. This will be removed when ProviderType is fully integrated.
func NewProvider ¶
NewProvider constructs a provider address from its parts, and normalizes the namespace and type parts to lowercase using unicode case folding rules so that resulting addrs.Provider values can be compared using standard Go equality rules (==).
The hostname is given as a svchost.Hostname, which is required by the contract of that type to have already been normalized for equality testing.
This function will panic if the given namespace or type name are not valid. When accepting namespace or type values from outside the program, use ParseProviderPart first to check that the given value is valid.
type ProviderConfig ¶
type ProviderConfig interface {
// contains filtered or unexported methods
}
ProviderConfig is an interface type whose dynamic type can be either LocalProviderConfig or AbsProviderConfig, in order to represent situations where a value might either be module-local or absolute but the decision cannot be made until runtime.
Where possible, use either LocalProviderConfig or AbsProviderConfig directly instead, to make intent more clear. ProviderConfig can be used only in situations where the recipient of the value has some out-of-band way to determine a "current module" to use if the value turns out to be a LocalProviderConfig.
Recipients of non-nil ProviderConfig values that actually need AbsProviderConfig values should call ResolveAbsProviderAddr on the *configs.Config value representing the root module configuration, which handles the translation from local to fully-qualified using mapping tables defined in the configuration.
Recipients of a ProviderConfig value can assume it can contain only a LocalProviderConfig value, an AbsProviderConfigValue, or nil to represent the absense of a provider config in situations where that is meaningful.
type Reference ¶
type Reference struct { Subject Referenceable SourceRange tfdiags.SourceRange Remaining hcl.Traversal }
Reference describes a reference to an address with source location information.
func ParseRef ¶
func ParseRef(traversal hcl.Traversal) (*Reference, tfdiags.Diagnostics)
ParseRef attempts to extract a referencable address from the prefix of the given traversal, which must be an absolute traversal or this function will panic.
If no error diagnostics are returned, the returned reference includes the address that was extracted, the source range it was extracted from, and any remaining relative traversal that was not consumed as part of the reference.
If error diagnostics are returned then the Reference value is invalid and must not be used.
func ParseRefStr ¶
func ParseRefStr(str string) (*Reference, tfdiags.Diagnostics)
ParseRefStr is a helper wrapper around ParseRef that takes a string and parses it with the HCL native syntax traversal parser before interpreting it.
This should be used only in specialized situations since it will cause the created references to not have any meaningful source location information. If a reference string is coming from a source that should be identified in error messages then the caller should instead parse it directly using a suitable function from the HCL API and pass the traversal itself to ParseRef.
Error diagnostics are returned if either the parsing fails or the analysis of the traversal fails. There is no way for the caller to distinguish the two kinds of diagnostics programmatically. If error diagnostics are returned the returned reference may be nil or incomplete.
func (*Reference) DisplayString ¶
DisplayString returns a string that approximates the subject and remaining traversal of the reciever in a way that resembles the Durgaform language syntax that could've produced it.
It's not guaranteed to actually be a valid Durgaform language expression, since the intended use here is primarily for UI messages such as diagnostics.
type Referenceable ¶
type Referenceable interface { // All Referenceable address types must have unique keys. UniqueKeyer // String produces a string representation of the address that could be // parsed as a HCL traversal and passed to ParseRef to produce an identical // result. String() string // contains filtered or unexported methods }
Referenceable is an interface implemented by all address types that can appear as references in configuration language expressions.
type Resource ¶
type Resource struct { Mode ResourceMode Type string Name string // contains filtered or unexported fields }
Resource is an address for a resource block within configuration, which contains potentially-multiple resource instances if that configuration block uses "count" or "for_each".
func (Resource) Absolute ¶
func (r Resource) Absolute(module ModuleInstance) AbsResource
Absolute returns an AbsResource from the receiver and the given module instance address.
func (Resource) ImpliedProvider ¶
ImpliedProvider returns the implied provider type name, for e.g. the "aws" in "aws_instance"
func (Resource) InModule ¶
func (r Resource) InModule(module Module) ConfigResource
InModule returns a ConfigResource from the receiver and the given module address.
func (Resource) Instance ¶
func (r Resource) Instance(key InstanceKey) ResourceInstance
Instance produces the address for a specific instance of the receiver that is idenfied by the given key.
func (Resource) Phase ¶
func (r Resource) Phase(rpt ResourceInstancePhaseType) ResourcePhase
Phase returns a special "phase address" for the receving instance. See the documentation of ResourceInstancePhase for the limited situations where this is intended to be used.
type ResourceInstance ¶
type ResourceInstance struct { Resource Resource Key InstanceKey // contains filtered or unexported fields }
ResourceInstance is an address for a specific instance of a resource. When a resource is defined in configuration with "count" or "for_each" it produces zero or more instances, which can be addressed using this type.
func (ResourceInstance) Absolute ¶
func (r ResourceInstance) Absolute(module ModuleInstance) AbsResourceInstance
Absolute returns an AbsResourceInstance from the receiver and the given module instance address.
func (ResourceInstance) ContainingResource ¶
func (r ResourceInstance) ContainingResource() Resource
func (ResourceInstance) Equal ¶
func (r ResourceInstance) Equal(o ResourceInstance) bool
func (ResourceInstance) Phase ¶
func (r ResourceInstance) Phase(rpt ResourceInstancePhaseType) ResourceInstancePhase
Phase returns a special "phase address" for the receving instance. See the documentation of ResourceInstancePhase for the limited situations where this is intended to be used.
func (ResourceInstance) String ¶
func (r ResourceInstance) String() string
func (ResourceInstance) UniqueKey ¶
func (r ResourceInstance) UniqueKey() UniqueKey
type ResourceInstancePhase ¶
type ResourceInstancePhase struct { ResourceInstance ResourceInstance Phase ResourceInstancePhaseType // contains filtered or unexported fields }
ResourceInstancePhase is a special kind of reference used only internally during graph building to represent resource instances that are in a non-primary state.
Graph nodes can declare themselves referenceable via an instance phase or can declare that they reference an instance phase in order to accomodate secondary graph nodes dealing with, for example, destroy actions.
This special reference type cannot be accessed directly by end-users, and should never be shown in the UI.
func (ResourceInstancePhase) ContainingResource ¶
func (rp ResourceInstancePhase) ContainingResource() ResourcePhase
ContainingResource returns an address for the same phase of the resource that this instance belongs to.
func (ResourceInstancePhase) String ¶
func (rp ResourceInstancePhase) String() string
func (ResourceInstancePhase) UniqueKey ¶
func (rp ResourceInstancePhase) UniqueKey() UniqueKey
type ResourceInstancePhaseType ¶
type ResourceInstancePhaseType string
ResourceInstancePhaseType is an enumeration used with ResourceInstancePhase.
const ( // ResourceInstancePhaseDestroy represents the "destroy" phase of a // resource instance. ResourceInstancePhaseDestroy ResourceInstancePhaseType = "destroy" // ResourceInstancePhaseDestroyCBD is similar to ResourceInstancePhaseDestroy // but is used for resources that have "create_before_destroy" set, thus // requiring a different dependency ordering. ResourceInstancePhaseDestroyCBD ResourceInstancePhaseType = "destroy-cbd" )
func (ResourceInstancePhaseType) String ¶
func (rpt ResourceInstancePhaseType) String() string
type ResourceMode ¶
type ResourceMode rune
ResourceMode defines which lifecycle applies to a given resource. Each resource lifecycle has a slightly different address format.
const ( // InvalidResourceMode is the zero value of ResourceMode and is not // a valid resource mode. InvalidResourceMode ResourceMode = 0 // ManagedResourceMode indicates a managed resource, as defined by // "resource" blocks in configuration. ManagedResourceMode ResourceMode = 'M' // DataResourceMode indicates a data resource, as defined by // "data" blocks in configuration. DataResourceMode ResourceMode = 'D' )
func (ResourceMode) String ¶
func (i ResourceMode) String() string
type ResourcePhase ¶
type ResourcePhase struct { Resource Resource Phase ResourceInstancePhaseType // contains filtered or unexported fields }
ResourcePhase is a special kind of reference used only internally during graph building to represent resources that are in a non-primary state.
Graph nodes can declare themselves referenceable via a resource phase or can declare that they reference a resource phase in order to accomodate secondary graph nodes dealing with, for example, destroy actions.
Since resources (as opposed to instances) aren't actually phased, this address type is used only as an approximation during initial construction of the resource-oriented plan graph, under the assumption that resource instances with ResourceInstancePhase addresses will be created in dynamic subgraphs during the graph walk.
This special reference type cannot be accessed directly by end-users, and should never be shown in the UI.
func (ResourcePhase) String ¶
func (rp ResourcePhase) String() string
func (ResourcePhase) UniqueKey ¶
func (rp ResourcePhase) UniqueKey() UniqueKey
type Set ¶
type Set[T UniqueKeyer] map[UniqueKey]T
Set represents a set of addresses of types that implement UniqueKeyer.
Modify the set only by the methods on this type. This type exposes its internals for convenience during reading, such as iterating over set elements by ranging over the map values, but making direct modifications could potentially make the set data invalid or inconsistent, leading to undefined behavior elsewhere.
func (Set[T]) Add ¶
func (s Set[T]) Add(addr T)
Add inserts the given address into the set, if not already present. If an equivalent address is already in the set, this replaces that address with the new value.
func (Set[T]) Intersection ¶
Intersection returns a new set which contains the intersection of all of the elements of both the reciever and the given other set.
type StringKey ¶
type StringKey string
StringKey is the InstanceKey representation representing string indices, as used when the "for_each" argument is specified with a map or object type.
type Target ¶
type Target struct { Subject Targetable SourceRange tfdiags.SourceRange }
Target describes a targeted address with source location information.
func ParseTarget ¶
func ParseTarget(traversal hcl.Traversal) (*Target, tfdiags.Diagnostics)
ParseTarget attempts to interpret the given traversal as a targetable address. The given traversal must be absolute, or this function will panic.
If no error diagnostics are returned, the returned target includes the address that was extracted and the source range it was extracted from.
If error diagnostics are returned then the Target value is invalid and must not be used.
func ParseTargetStr ¶
func ParseTargetStr(str string) (*Target, tfdiags.Diagnostics)
ParseTargetStr is a helper wrapper around ParseTarget that takes a string and parses it with the HCL native syntax traversal parser before interpreting it.
This should be used only in specialized situations since it will cause the created references to not have any meaningful source location information. If a target string is coming from a source that should be identified in error messages then the caller should instead parse it directly using a suitable function from the HCL API and pass the traversal itself to ParseTarget.
Error diagnostics are returned if either the parsing fails or the analysis of the traversal fails. There is no way for the caller to distinguish the two kinds of diagnostics programmatically. If error diagnostics are returned the returned target may be nil or incomplete.
func (*Target) ModuleAddr ¶
func (t *Target) ModuleAddr() ModuleInstance
ModuleAddr returns the module address portion of the subject of the recieving target.
Regardless of specific address type, all targets always include a module address. They might also include something in that module, which this method always discards if so.
type Targetable ¶
type Targetable interface { // TargetContains returns true if the receiver is considered to contain // the given other address. Containment, for the purpose of targeting, // means that if a container address is targeted then all of the // addresses within it are also implicitly targeted. // // A targetable address always contains at least itself. TargetContains(other Targetable) bool // AddrType returns the address type for comparison with other Targetable // addresses. AddrType() TargetableAddrType // String produces a string representation of the address that could be // parsed as a HCL traversal and passed to ParseTarget to produce an // identical result. String() string // contains filtered or unexported methods }
Targetable is an interface implemented by all address types that can be used as "targets" for selecting sub-graphs of a graph.
type TargetableAddrType ¶
type TargetableAddrType int
const ( ConfigResourceAddrType TargetableAddrType = iota AbsResourceInstanceAddrType AbsResourceAddrType ModuleAddrType ModuleInstanceAddrType )
type UniqueKey ¶
type UniqueKey interface {
// contains filtered or unexported methods
}
UniqueKey is an interface implemented by values that serve as unique map keys for particular addresses.
All implementations of UniqueKey are comparable and can thus be used as map keys. Unique keys generated from different address types are always distinct. All functionally-equivalent keys for the same address type always compare equal, and likewise functionally-different values do not.
type UniqueKeyer ¶
type UniqueKeyer interface {
UniqueKey() UniqueKey
}
UniqueKeyer is an interface implemented by types that can be represented by a unique key.
Some address types naturally comply with the expectations of a UniqueKey and may thus be their own unique key type. However, address types that are not naturally comparable can implement this interface by returning proxy values.
Source Files ¶
- check.go
- checktype_string.go
- count_attr.go
- doc.go
- durgaform_attr.go
- for_each_attr.go
- input_variable.go
- instance_key.go
- local_value.go
- map.go
- module.go
- module_call.go
- module_instance.go
- module_package.go
- module_source.go
- move_endpoint.go
- move_endpoint_kind.go
- move_endpoint_module.go
- moveable.go
- moveendpointkind_string.go
- output_value.go
- parse_ref.go
- parse_target.go
- path_attr.go
- provider.go
- provider_config.go
- referenceable.go
- resource.go
- resource_phase.go
- resourcemode_string.go
- self.go
- set.go
- targetable.go
- unique_key.go