Files
opentf/command/refresh.go
Alisdair McDiarmid c5a6aa31d3 cli: Add initial command views abstraction
Terraform supports multiple output formats for several sub-commands.
The default format is user-readable text, but many sub-commands support
a `-json` flag to output a machine-readable format for the result. The
output command also supports a `-raw` flag for a simpler, scripting-
focused machine readable format.

This commit adds a "views" abstraction, intended to help ensure
consistency between the various output formats. This extracts the render
specific code from the command package, and moves it into a views
package. Each command is expected to create an interface for its view,
and one or more implementations of that interface.

By doing so, we separate the concerns of generating the sub-command
result from rendering the result in the specified output format. This
should make it easier to ensure that all output formats will be updated
together when changes occur in the result-generating phase.

There are some other consequences of this restructuring:

- Views now directly access the terminal streams, rather than the
  now-redundant cli.Ui instance;
- With the reorganization of commands, parsing CLI arguments is now the
  responsibility of a separate "arguments" package.

For now, views are added only for the output sub-command, as an example.
Because this command uses code which is shared with the apply and
refresh commands, those are also partially updated.
2021-02-11 15:06:39 -05:00

170 lines
4.9 KiB
Go

package command
import (
"fmt"
"strings"
"github.com/hashicorp/terraform/backend"
"github.com/hashicorp/terraform/command/arguments"
"github.com/hashicorp/terraform/command/views"
"github.com/hashicorp/terraform/tfdiags"
)
// RefreshCommand is a cli.Command implementation that refreshes the state
// file.
type RefreshCommand struct {
Meta
}
func (c *RefreshCommand) Run(args []string) int {
args = c.Meta.process(args)
cmdFlags := c.Meta.extendedFlagSet("refresh")
cmdFlags.StringVar(&c.Meta.statePath, "state", "", "path")
cmdFlags.IntVar(&c.Meta.parallelism, "parallelism", DefaultParallelism, "parallelism")
cmdFlags.StringVar(&c.Meta.stateOutPath, "state-out", "", "path")
cmdFlags.StringVar(&c.Meta.backupPath, "backup", "", "path")
cmdFlags.BoolVar(&c.Meta.stateLock, "lock", true, "lock state")
cmdFlags.DurationVar(&c.Meta.stateLockTimeout, "lock-timeout", 0, "lock timeout")
cmdFlags.Usage = func() { c.Ui.Error(c.Help()) }
if err := cmdFlags.Parse(args); err != nil {
c.Ui.Error(fmt.Sprintf("Error parsing command-line flags: %s\n", err.Error()))
return 1
}
diags := c.parseTargetFlags()
if diags.HasErrors() {
c.showDiagnostics(diags)
return 1
}
configPath, err := ModulePath(cmdFlags.Args())
if err != nil {
c.Ui.Error(err.Error())
return 1
}
// Check for user-supplied plugin path
if c.pluginPath, err = c.loadPluginPath(); err != nil {
c.Ui.Error(fmt.Sprintf("Error loading plugin path: %s", err))
return 1
}
backendConfig, configDiags := c.loadBackendConfig(configPath)
diags = diags.Append(configDiags)
if configDiags.HasErrors() {
c.showDiagnostics(diags)
return 1
}
// Load the backend
b, backendDiags := c.Backend(&BackendOpts{
Config: backendConfig,
})
diags = diags.Append(backendDiags)
if backendDiags.HasErrors() {
c.showDiagnostics(diags)
return 1
}
// Before we delegate to the backend, we'll print any warning diagnostics
// we've accumulated here, since the backend will start fresh with its own
// diagnostics.
c.showDiagnostics(diags)
diags = nil
// Build the operation
opReq := c.Operation(b)
opReq.ConfigDir = configPath
opReq.Type = backend.OperationTypeRefresh
opReq.ConfigLoader, err = c.initConfigLoader()
if err != nil {
c.showDiagnostics(err)
return 1
}
{
var moreDiags tfdiags.Diagnostics
opReq.Variables, moreDiags = c.collectVariableValues()
diags = diags.Append(moreDiags)
if moreDiags.HasErrors() {
c.showDiagnostics(diags)
return 1
}
}
op, err := c.RunOperation(b, opReq)
if err != nil {
c.showDiagnostics(err)
return 1
}
if op.Result != backend.OperationSuccess {
return op.Result.ExitStatus()
}
if op.State != nil {
outputValues := op.State.RootModule().OutputValues
if len(outputValues) > 0 {
c.Ui.Output(c.Colorize().Color("[reset][bold][green]\nOutputs:\n\n"))
view := views.NewOutput(arguments.ViewHuman, c.View)
view.Output("", outputValues)
}
}
return op.Result.ExitStatus()
}
func (c *RefreshCommand) Help() string {
helpText := `
Usage: terraform refresh [options]
Update the state file of your infrastructure with metadata that matches
the physical resources they are tracking.
This will not modify your infrastructure, but it can modify your
state file to update metadata. This metadata might cause new changes
to occur when you generate a plan or call apply next.
Options:
-backup=path Path to backup the existing state file before
modifying. Defaults to the "-state-out" path with
".backup" extension. Set to "-" to disable backup.
-compact-warnings If Terraform produces any warnings that are not
accompanied by errors, show them in a more compact form
that includes only the summary messages.
-input=true Ask for input for variables if not directly set.
-lock=true Lock the state file when locking is supported.
-lock-timeout=0s Duration to retry a state lock.
-no-color If specified, output won't contain any color.
-state=path Path to read and save state (unless state-out
is specified). Defaults to "terraform.tfstate".
-state-out=path Path to write updated state file. By default, the
"-state" path will be used.
-target=resource Resource to target. Operation will be limited to this
resource and its dependencies. This flag can be used
multiple times.
-var 'foo=bar' Set a variable in the Terraform configuration. This
flag can be set multiple times.
-var-file=foo Set variables in the Terraform configuration from
a file. If "terraform.tfvars" or any ".auto.tfvars"
files are present, they will be automatically loaded.
`
return strings.TrimSpace(helpText)
}
func (c *RefreshCommand) Synopsis() string {
return "Update the state to match remote systems"
}