Documentation ¶
Overview ¶
Package format contains helpers for formatting various Terraform structures for human-readabout output.
This package is used by the official Terraform CLI in formatting any output and is exported to encourage non-official frontends to mimic the output formatting as much as possible so that text formats of Terraform structures have a consistent look and feel.
Index ¶
- func Diagnostic(diag tfdiags.Diagnostic, sources map[string][]byte, ...) string
- func ObjectValueID(obj cty.Value) (k, v string)
- func ObjectValueIDOrName(obj cty.Value) (k, v string)
- func ObjectValueName(obj cty.Value) (k, v string)
- func ResourceChange(change *plans.ResourceInstanceChangeSrc, tainted bool, ...) string
- func State(opts *StateOpts) string
- type StateOpts
Constants ¶
This section is empty.
Variables ¶
This section is empty.
Functions ¶
func Diagnostic ¶
func Diagnostic(diag tfdiags.Diagnostic, sources map[string][]byte, color *colorstring.Colorize, width int) string
Diagnostic formats a single diagnostic message.
The width argument specifies at what column the diagnostic messages will be wrapped. If set to zero, messages will not be wrapped by this function at all. Although the long-form text parts of the message are wrapped, not all aspects of the message are guaranteed to fit within the specified terminal width.
func ObjectValueID ¶
ObjectValueID takes a value that is assumed to be an object representation of some resource instance object and attempts to heuristically find an attribute of it that is likely to be a unique identifier in the remote system that it belongs to which will be useful to the user.
If such an attribute is found, its name and string value intended for display are returned. Both returned strings are empty if no such attribute exists, in which case the caller should assume that the resource instance address within the Terraform configuration is the best available identifier.
This is only a best-effort sort of thing, relying on naming conventions in our resource type schemas. The result is not guaranteed to be unique, but should generally be suitable for display to an end-user anyway.
This function will panic if the given value is not of an object type.
func ObjectValueIDOrName ¶
ObjectValueIDOrName is a convenience wrapper around both ObjectValueID and ObjectValueName (in that preference order) to try to extract some sort of human-friendly descriptive string value for an object as additional context about an object when it is being displayed in a compact way (where not all of the attributes are visible.)
Just as with the two functions it wraps, it is a best-effort and may return two empty strings if no suitable attribute can be found for a given object.
func ObjectValueName ¶
ObjectValueName takes a value that is assumed to be an object representation of some resource instance object and attempts to heuristically find an attribute of it that is likely to be a human-friendly name in the remote system that it belongs to which will be useful to the user.
If such an attribute is found, its name and string value intended for display are returned. Both returned strings are empty if no such attribute exists, in which case the caller should assume that the resource instance address within the Terraform configuration is the best available identifier.
This is only a best-effort sort of thing, relying on naming conventions in our resource type schemas. The result is not guaranteed to be unique, but should generally be suitable for display to an end-user anyway.
Callers that use both ObjectValueName and ObjectValueID at the same time should be prepared to get the same attribute key and value from both in some cases, since there is overlap betweek the id-extraction and name-extraction heuristics.
This function will panic if the given value is not of an object type.
func ResourceChange ¶
func ResourceChange( change *plans.ResourceInstanceChangeSrc, tainted bool, schema *configschema.Block, color *colorstring.Colorize, ) string
ResourceChange returns a string representation of a change to a particular resource, for inclusion in user-facing plan output.
The resource schema must be provided along with the change so that the formatted change can reflect the configuration structure for the associated resource.
If "color" is non-nil, it will be used to color the result. Otherwise, no color codes will be included.
Types ¶
type StateOpts ¶
type StateOpts struct { // State is the state to format. This is required. State *states.State // Schemas are used to decode attributes. This is required. Schemas *terraform.Schemas // Color is the colorizer. This is optional. Color *colorstring.Colorize }
StateOpts are the options for formatting a state.