`terraform show -json` (`terraform.Show()`) fails if the state file
contains resources with fields that non longer conform to the provider
schemas.
This can happen when you deploy a bundle with one version of the CLI,
then updated the CLI to a version that uses different databricks
terraform provider, and try to run `bundle run` or `bundle summary`.
Those commands don't recreate local terraform state (only `terraform
apply` or `plan` do) and terraform itself fails while parsing it.
[Terraform
docs](https://developer.hashicorp.com/terraform/language/state#format)
point out that it's best to use `terraform show` after successful
`apply` or `plan`.
Here we parse the state ourselves. The state file format is internal to
terraform, but it's more stable than our resource schemas. We only parse
a subset of fields from the state, and only update ID and ModifiedStatus
of bundle resources in the `terraform.Load` mutator.
## Changes
The main changes are:
1. Don't link artifacts to libraries anymore and instead just iterate
over all jobs and tasks when uploading artifacts and update local path
to remote
2. Iterating over `jobs.environments` to check if there are any local
libraries and checking that they exist locally
3. Added tests to check environments are handled correctly
End-to-end test will follow up
## Tests
Added regression test, existing tests (including integration one) pass
## Changes
I spotted a few call sites where the path of a test file was synthesized
multiple times. It is easier to capture the path as a variable and reuse
it.
## Changes
The sync struct initialization would recreate the deleted `file_path`.
This PR moves to not initializing the sync object to delete the
snapshot, thus fixing the lingering `file_path` after `bundle destroy`.
## Tests
Manually, and a integration test to prevent regression.
## Changes
This PR:
1. Uses bash to run the setup.sh script instead of the native busybox sh
shipped with alpine.
2. Verifies the checksums of the installed terraform CLI binaries.
## Tests
Manually. The docker image successfully builds.
---------
Co-authored-by: Pieter Noordhuis <pieter.noordhuis@databricks.com>
## Changes
All these validators will return warnings as part of `bundle validate`
run
Added 2 mutators:
1. To check that if tasks use job_cluster_key it is actually defined
2. To check if there are any files to sync as part of deployment
Also added `bundle.Parallel` to run them in parallel
To make sure mutators under bundle.Parallel do not mutate config,
introduced new `ReadOnlyMutator`, `ReadOnlyBundle` and `ReadOnlyConfig`.
Example
```
databricks bundle validate -p deco-staging
Warning: unknown field: new_cluster
at resources.jobs.my_job
in bundle.yml:24:7
Warning: job_cluster_key high_cpu_workload_job_cluster is not defined
at resources.jobs.my_job.tasks[0].job_cluster_key
in bundle.yml:35:28
Warning: There are no files to sync, please check your your .gitignore and sync.exclude configuration
at sync.exclude
in bundle.yml:18:5
Name: test
Target: default
Workspace:
Host: https://acme.databricks.com
User: andrew.nester@databricks.com
Path: /Users/andrew.nester@databricks.com/.bundle/test/default
Found 3 warnings
```
## Tests
Added unit tests
## Changes
This PR makes changes to support creating a docker image for the CLI
with the `terraform` dependencies built in. This is useful for customers
that operate in a network-restricted environment. Normally DABs makes
API calls to registry.terraform.io to setup the terraform dependencies,
with this setup the CLI/DABs will rely on the provider binaries bundled
in the docker image.
### Specifically this PR makes the following changes:
----------------
Modifies the CLI release workflow to publish the docker images in the
Github Container Registry. URL:
https://github.com/databricks/cli/pkgs/container/cli.
We use docker support in `goreleaser` to build and publish the images.
Using goreleaser ensures the CLI packaged in the docker image is the
same release artifact as the normal releases. For more information see:
1. https://goreleaser.com/cookbooks/multi-platform-docker-images
2. https://goreleaser.com/customization/docker/
Other choices made include:
1. Using `alpine` as the base image. The reason is `alpine` is a small
and lightweight linux distribution (~5MB) and an industry standard.
2. Not using [docker
manifest](https://docs.docker.com/reference/cli/docker/manifest) to
create a multi-arch build. This is because the functionality is still
experimental.
------------------
Make the `DATABRICKS_TF_VERSION` and `DATABRICKS_TF_PROVIDER_VERSION`
environment variables optional for using the terraform file mirror.
While it's not strictly necessary to make the docker image work, it's
the "right" behaviour and reduces complexity. The rationale is:
- These environment variables here are needed so the Databricks CLI does
not accidentally use the file mirror bundled with VSCode if it's
incompatible. This does not require the env vars to be mandatory.
context: https://github.com/databricks/cli/pull/1294
- This makes the `Dockerfile` and `setup.sh` simpler. We don't need an
[entrypoint.sh script to set the version environment
variables](https://medium.com/@leonardo5621_66451/learn-how-to-use-entrypoint-scripts-in-docker-images-fede010f172d).
This also makes using an interactive terminal with `docker run -it ...`
work out of the box.
## Tests
Tested manually.
--------------------
To test the release pipeline I triggered a couple of dummy releases and
verified that the images are built successfully and uploaded to Github.
1. https://github.com/databricks/cli/pkgs/container/cli
3. workflow for release:
https://github.com/databricks/cli/actions/runs/8646106333
--------------------
I tested the docker container itself by setting up
[Charles](https://www.charlesproxy.com/) as an HTTP proxy and verifying
that no HTTP requests are made to `registry.terraform.io`
Before:
FYI, The Charles web proxy is hosted at localhost:8888.
```
shreyas.goenka@THW32HFW6T bundle-playground % rm -r .databricks
shreyas.goenka@THW32HFW6T bundle-playground % HTTP_PROXY="http://localhost:8888" HTTPS_PROXY="http://localhost:8888" cli bundle deploy
Uploading bundle files to /Users/shreyas.goenka@databricks.com/.bundle/bundle-playground/default/files...
Deploying resources...
Updating deployment state...
Deployment complete!
```
<img width="1275" alt="Screenshot 2024-04-11 at 3 21 45 PM"
src="https://github.com/databricks/cli/assets/88374338/15f37324-afbd-47c0-a40e-330ab232656b">
After:
This time bundle deploy is run from inside the docker container. We use
`host.docker.internal` to map to localhost on the host machine, and -v
to mount the host file system as a volume.
```
shreyas.goenka@THW32HFW6T bundle-playground % docker run -v ~/projects/bundle-playground:/bundle -v ~/.databrickscfg:/root/.databrickscfg -it --entrypoint /bin/sh -e HTTP_PROXY="http://host.docker.internal:8888" -e HTTPS_PROXY="http://host.docker.internal:8888" --network host ghcr.io/databricks/cli:latest-arm64
/ # cd /bundle/
/bundle # rm -r .databricks/
/bundle # databricks bundle deploy
Uploading bundle files to /Users/shreyas.goenka@databricks.com/.bundle/bundle-playground/default/files...
Deploying resources...
Updating deployment state...
Deployment complete!
```
<img width="1275" alt="Screenshot 2024-04-11 at 3 22 54 PM"
src="https://github.com/databricks/cli/assets/88374338/2a8f097e-734b-4b3e-8075-c02e98a1b275">
[![Dependabot compatibility
score](https://dependabot-badges.githubapp.com/badges/compatibility_score?dependency-name=github.com/databricks/databricks-sdk-go&package-manager=go_modules&previous-version=0.36.0&new-version=0.37.0)](https://docs.github.com/en/github/managing-security-vulnerabilities/about-dependabot-security-updates#about-compatibility-scores)
Dependabot will resolve any conflicts with this PR as long as you don't
alter it yourself. You can also trigger a rebase manually by commenting
`@dependabot rebase`.
[//]: # (dependabot-automerge-start)
[//]: # (dependabot-automerge-end)
---
<details>
<summary>Dependabot commands and options</summary>
<br />
You can trigger Dependabot actions by commenting on this PR:
- `@dependabot rebase` will rebase this PR
- `@dependabot recreate` will recreate this PR, overwriting any edits
that have been made to it
- `@dependabot merge` will merge this PR after your CI passes on it
- `@dependabot squash and merge` will squash and merge this PR after
your CI passes on it
- `@dependabot cancel merge` will cancel a previously requested merge
and block automerging
- `@dependabot reopen` will reopen this PR if it is closed
- `@dependabot close` will close this PR and stop Dependabot recreating
it. You can achieve the same result by closing it manually
- `@dependabot show <dependency name> ignore conditions` will show all
of the ignore conditions of the specified dependency
- `@dependabot ignore this major version` will close this PR and stop
Dependabot creating any more for this major version (unless you reopen
the PR or upgrade to it yourself)
- `@dependabot ignore this minor version` will close this PR and stop
Dependabot creating any more for this minor version (unless you reopen
the PR or upgrade to it yourself)
- `@dependabot ignore this dependency` will close this PR and stop
Dependabot creating any more for this dependency (unless you reopen the
PR or upgrade to it yourself)
</details>
---------
Signed-off-by: dependabot[bot] <support@github.com>
Co-authored-by: dependabot[bot] <49699333+dependabot[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Andrew Nester <andrew.nester@databricks.com>
- Add `bundle debug terraform` command. It prints versions of the
Terraform and the Databricks Terraform provider. In the text mode it
also explains how to setup the CLI in environments with restricted
internet access.
- Use `DATABRICKS_TF_EXEC_PATH` env var to point Databricks CLI to the
Terraform binary. The CLI only uses it if `DATABRICKS_TF_VERSION`
matches the currently used terraform version.
- Use `DATABRICKS_TF_CLI_CONFIG_FILE` env var to point Terraform CLI
config that points to the filesystem mirror for the Databricks provider.
The CLI only uses it if `DATABRICKS_TF_PROVIDER_VERSION` matches the
currently used provider version.
Relevant PR on the VSCode extension side:
https://github.com/databricks/databricks-vscode/pull/1147
Example output of the `databricks bundle debug terraform`:
```
Terraform version: 1.5.5
Terraform URL: https://releases.hashicorp.com/terraform/1.5.5
Databricks Terraform Provider version: 1.38.0
Databricks Terraform Provider URL: https://github.com/databricks/terraform-provider-databricks/releases/tag/v1.38.0
Databricks CLI downloads its Terraform dependencies automatically.
If you run the CLI in an air-gapped environment, you can download the dependencies manually and set these environment variables:
DATABRICKS_TF_VERSION=1.5.5
DATABRICKS_TF_EXEC_PATH=/path/to/terraform/binary
DATABRICKS_TF_PROVIDER_VERSION=1.38.0
DATABRICKS_TF_CLI_CONFIG_FILE=/path/to/terraform/cli/config.tfrc
Here is an example *.tfrc configuration file:
disable_checkpoint = true
provider_installation {
filesystem_mirror {
path = "/path/to/a/folder/with/databricks/terraform/provider"
}
}
The filesystem mirror path should point to the folder with the Databricks Terraform Provider. The folder should have this structure: /registry.terraform.io/databricks/databricks/terraform-provider-databricks_1.38.0_ARCH.zip
For more information about filesystem mirrors, see the Terraform documentation: https://developer.hashicorp.com/terraform/cli/config/config-file#filesystem_mirror
```
---------
Co-authored-by: shreyas-goenka <88374338+shreyas-goenka@users.noreply.github.com>
## Changes
The bundle path was previously stored on the `config.Root` type under
the assumption that the first configuration file being loaded would set
it. This is slightly counterintuitive and we know what the path is upon
construction of the bundle. The new location for this property reflects
this.
## Tests
Unit tests pass.
## Changes
This diagnostics type allows us to capture multiple warnings as well as
errors in the return value. This is a preparation for returning
additional warnings from mutators in case we detect non-fatal problems.
* All return statements that previously returned an error now return
`diag.FromErr`
* All return statements that previously returned `fmt.Errorf` now return
`diag.Errorf`
* All `err != nil` checks now use `diags.HasError()` or `diags.Error()`
## Tests
* Existing tests pass.
* I confirmed no call site under `./bundle` or `./cmd/bundle` uses
`errors.Is` on the return value from mutators. This is relevant because
we cannot wrap errors with `%w` when calling `diag.Errorf` (like
`fmt.Errorf`; context in https://github.com/golang/go/issues/47641).
## Changes
This PR introduces new structure (and a file) being used locally and
synced remotely to Databricks workspace to track bundle deployment
related metadata.
The state is pulled from remote, updated and pushed back remotely as
part of `bundle deploy` command.
This state can be used for deployment sequencing as it's `Version` field
is monotonically increasing on each deployment.
Currently, it only tracks files being synced as part of the deployment.
This helps fix the issue with files not being removed during deployments
on CI/CD as sync snapshot was never present there.
Fixes#943
## Tests
Added E2E (regression) test for files removal on CI/CD
---------
Co-authored-by: Pieter Noordhuis <pieter.noordhuis@databricks.com>
## Changes
This change means the callback supplied to `dyn.Foreach` can introspect
the path of the value it is being called for. It also prepares for
allowing visiting path patterns where the exact path is not known
upfront.
## Tests
Unit tests.
Check if `bundle.tf.json` doesn't exist and create it before executing
`terraform init` (inside `terraform.Load`)
Fixes a problem when during `terraform.Load` it fails with:
```
Error: Failed to load plugin schemas
Error while loading schemas for plugin components: Failed to obtain provider
schema: Could not load the schema for provider
registry.terraform.io/databricks/databricks: failed to instantiate provider
"registry.terraform.io/databricks/databricks" to obtain schema: unavailable
provider "registry.terraform.io/databricks/databricks"..
```
## Changes
This builds on #1098 and uses the `dyn.Value` representation of the
bundle configuration to generate the Terraform JSON definition of
resources in the bundle.
The existing code (in `BundleToTerraform`) was not great and in an
effort to slightly improve this, I added a package `tfdyn` that includes
dedicated files for each resource type. Every resource type has its own
conversion type that takes the `dyn.Value` of the bundle-side resource
and converts it into Terraform resources (e.g. a job and optionally its
permissions).
Because we now use a `dyn.Value` as input, we can represent and emit
zero-values that have so far been omitted. For example, setting
`num_workers: 0` in your bundle configuration now propagates all the way
to the Terraform JSON definition.
## Tests
* Unit tests for every converter. I reused the test inputs from
`convert_test.go`.
* Equivalence tests in every existing test case checks that the
resulting JSON is identical.
* I manually compared the TF JSON file generated by the CLI from the
main branch and from this PR on all of our bundles and bundle examples
(internal and external) and found the output doesn't change (with the
exception of the odd zero-value being included by the version in this
PR).
## Changes
This is a fundamental change to how we load and process bundle
configuration. We now depend on the configuration being represented as a
`dyn.Value`. This representation is functionally equivalent to Go's
`any` (it is variadic) and allows us to capture metadata associated with
a value, such as where it was defined (e.g. file, line, and column). It
also allows us to represent Go's zero values properly (e.g. empty
string, integer equal to 0, or boolean false).
Using this representation allows us to let the configuration model
deviate from the typed structure we have been relying on so far
(`config.Root`). We need to deviate from these types when using
variables for fields that are not a string themselves. For example,
using `${var.num_workers}` for an integer `workers` field was impossible
until now (though not implemented in this change).
The loader for a `dyn.Value` includes functionality to capture any and
all type mismatches between the user-defined configuration and the
expected types. These mismatches can be surfaced as validation errors in
future PRs.
Given that many mutators expect the typed struct to be the source of
truth, this change converts between the dynamic representation and the
typed representation on mutator entry and exit. Existing mutators can
continue to modify the typed representation and these modifications are
reflected in the dynamic representation (see `MarkMutatorEntry` and
`MarkMutatorExit` in `bundle/config/root.go`).
Required changes included in this change:
* The existing interpolation package is removed in favor of
`libs/dyn/dynvar`.
* Functionality to merge job clusters, job tasks, and pipeline clusters
are now all broken out into their own mutators.
To be implemented later:
* Allow variable references for non-string types.
* Surface diagnostics about the configuration provided by the user in
the validation output.
* Some mutators use a resource's configuration file path to resolve
related relative paths. These depend on `bundle/config/paths.Path` being
set and populated through `ConfigureConfigFilePath`. Instead, they
should interact with the dynamically typed configuration directly. Doing
this also unlocks being able to differentiate different base paths used
within a job (e.g. a task override with a relative path defined in a
directory other than the base job).
## Tests
* Existing unit tests pass (some have been modified to accommodate)
* Integration tests pass
## Changes
We plan to use the any-equivalent of a `dyn.Value` such that we can use
variable references for non-string fields (e.g.
`${databricks_job.some_job.id}` where an integer is expected), as well
as properly emit zero values for primitive types (e.g. 0 for integers or
false for booleans).
This change is in preparation for the above.
## Tests
Unit tests.
## Changes
Added `bundle deployment bind` and `unbind` command.
This command allows to bind bundle-defined resources to existing
resources in Databricks workspace so they become DABs-managed.
## Tests
Manually + added E2E test
## Changes
Deploying bundle when there are bundle resources running at the same
time can be disruptive for jobs and pipelines in progress.
With this change during deployment phase (before uploading any
resources) if there is `--fail-if-running` specified DABs will check if
there are any resources running and if so, will fail the deployment
## Tests
Manual + add tests
The plan is to use the new command in the Databricks VSCode extension to
render "modified" UI state in the bundle resource tree elements, plus
use resource IDs to generate links for the resources
### New revision
- Renamed `remote-state` to `summary`
- Added "modified statuses" to all resources. Currently we don't set
"updated" status - it's either nothing, or created/deleted
- Added tests for the `TerraformToBundle` command
## Changes
This improves the error when deploying to a bundle root that the current
user doesn't have write access to. This can come up slightly more often
since the change of https://github.com/databricks/cli/pull/1091.
Before this change:
```
$ databricks bundle deploy --target prod
Building my_project...
Error: no such directory: /Users/lennart.kats@databricks.com/.bundle/my_project/prod/state
```
After this change:
```
$ databricks bundle deploy --target prod
Building my_project...
Error: cannot write to deployment root (this can indicate a previous deploy was done with a different identity): /Users/lennart.kats@databricks.com/.bundle/my_project/prod
```
Note that this change uses the "no such directory" error returned from
the filer.
## Changes
Update the output of the `deploy` command to be more concise and
consistent:
```
$ databricks bundle deploy
Building my_project...
Uploading my_project-0.0.1+20231207.205106-py3-none-any.whl...
Uploading bundle files to /Users/lennart.kats@databricks.com/.bundle/my_project/dev/files...
Deploying resources...
Updating deployment state...
Deployment complete!
```
This does away with the intermediate success messages, makes consistent
use of `...`, and only prints the success message at the very end after
everything is completed.
Below is the original output for comparison:
```
$ databricks bundle deploy
Detecting Python wheel project...
Found Python wheel project at /tmp/output/my_project
Building my_project...
Build succeeded
Uploading my_project-0.0.1+20231207.205134-py3-none-any.whl...
Upload succeeded
Starting upload of bundle files
Uploaded bundle files at /Users/lennart.kats@databricks.com/.bundle/my_project/dev/files!
Starting resource deployment
Resource deployment completed!
```
## Changes
This PR sets the following fields for all jobs that are deployed from a
DAB
1. `deployment`: This provides the platform with the path to a file to
read the metadata from.
2. `edit_mode`: This tells the platform to display the break-glass UI
for jobs deployed from a DAB. Setting this is required to re-lock the UI
after a user clicks "disconnect from source".
3. `format = MULTI_TASK`. This makes the Terraform provider always use
jobs API 2.1 for creating/updating the job. Required because
`deployment` and `edit_mode` are only available in API 2.1.
## Tests
Unit test and manually. Manually verified that deployments trigger the
break glass UI. Manually verified there is no Terraform drift when all
three fields are set.
---------
Co-authored-by: Pieter Noordhuis <pieter.noordhuis@databricks.com>
## Changes
Notifications weren't passed along because of a plural vs singular
mismatch.
## Tests
* Added unit test coverage.
* Manually confirmed it now works in an example bundle.
## Changes
A bug in the code that pulls the remote state could cause the local
state to be empty instead of a copy of the remote state. This happened
only if the local state was present and stale when compared to the
remote version.
We correctly checked for the state serial to see if the local state had
to be replaced but didn't seek back on the remote state before writing
it out. Because the staleness check would read the remote state in full,
copying from the same reader would immediately yield an EOF.
## Tests
* Unit tests for state pull and push mutators that rely on a mocked
filer.
* An integration test that deploys the same bundle from multiple paths,
triggering the staleness logic.
Both failed prior to the fix and now pass.
## Changes
It appears that `USERPROFILE` env variable indicates where Azure CLI
stores configuration data (aka `.azure` folder).
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/cli/azure/azure-cli-configuration#cli-configuration-file
Passing it to terraform executable allows it to correctly authenticate
using Azure CLI.
Fixes#983
## Tests
Ran deployment on Window VM before and after the fix.
## Changes
Some test call sites called directly into the mutator's `Apply` function
instead of `bundle.Apply`. Calling into `bundle.Apply` is preferred
because that's where we can run pre/post logic common across all
mutators.
## Tests
Pass.
## Changes
All calls to apply a mutator must go through `bundle.Apply`. This
conflicts with the existing use of the variable `bundle`. This change
un-aliases the variable from the package name by renaming all variables
to `b`.
## Tests
Pass.
## Changes
This PR:
1. Renames `FilesPath` -> `FilePath` and `ArtifactsPath` ->
`ArtifactPath` in the bundle and metadata configuration to make them
consistant with the json tags.
2. Fixes development / production mode error messages to point to
`file_path` and `artifact_path`
## Tests
Existing unit tests. This is a strightforward renaming of the fields.
## Changes
This PR fixes metadata computation for empty bundle. Before we would
error because the `terraform.Load()` mutator errors on a empty / no
state file.
## Tests
Failing integration tests now pass.
## Changes
This PR introduces a metadata struct that stores a subset of bundle
configuration that we wish to expose to other Databricks services that
wish to integrate with bundles.
This metadata file is uploaded to a file
`${bundle.workspace.state_path}/metadata.json` in the WSFS destination
of the bundle deployment.
Documentation for emitted metadata fields:
* `version`: Version for the metadata file schema
* `config.bundle.git.branch`: Name of the git branch the bundle was
deployed from.
* `config.bundle.git.origin_url`: URL for git remote "origin"
* `config.bundle.git.bundle_root_path`: Relative path of the bundle root
from the root of the git repository. Is set to "." if they are the same.
* `config.bundle.git.commit`: SHA-1 commit hash of the exact commit this
bundle was deployed from. Note, the deployment might not exactly match
this commit version if there are changes that have not been committed to
git at deploy time,
* `file_path`: Path in workspace where we sync bundle files to.
* `resources.jobs.[job-ref].id`: Id of the job
* `resources.jobs.[job-ref].relative_path`: Relative path of the yaml
config file from the bundle root where this job was defined.
Example metadata object when bundle root and git root are the same:
```json
{
"version": 1,
"config": {
"bundle": {
"lock": {},
"git": {
"branch": "master",
"origin_url": "www.host.com",
"commit": "7af8e5d3f5dceffff9295d42d21606ccf056dce0",
"bundle_root_path": "."
}
},
"workspace": {
"file_path": "/Users/shreyas.goenka@databricks.com/.bundle/pipeline-progress/default/files"
},
"resources": {
"jobs": {
"bar": {
"id": "245921165354846",
"relative_path": "databricks.yml"
}
}
},
"sync": {}
}
}
```
Example metadata when the git root is one level above the bundle repo:
```json
{
"version": 1,
"config": {
"bundle": {
"lock": {},
"git": {
"branch": "dev-branch",
"origin_url": "www.my-repo.com",
"commit": "3db46ef750998952b00a2b3e7991e31787e4b98b",
"bundle_root_path": "pipeline-progress"
}
},
"workspace": {
"file_path": "/Users/shreyas.goenka@databricks.com/.bundle/pipeline-progress/default/files"
},
"resources": {
"jobs": {
"bar": {
"id": "245921165354846",
"relative_path": "databricks.yml"
}
}
},
"sync": {}
}
}
```
This unblocks integration to the jobs break glass UI for bundles.
## Tests
Unit tests and integration tests.
## Changes
This PR sets "resource" to nil in the terraform representation if no
resources are defined in the bundle configuration. This solves two
problems:
1. Makes bundle deploy work without any resources specified.
2. Previously if a `resources` block was removed after a deployment,
that would fail with an error. Now the resources would get destroyed as
expected.
Also removes `TerraformHasNoResources` which is no longer needed.
## Tests
New e2e tests.
## Changes
There are a couple places throughout the code base where interaction
with environment variables takes place. Moreover, more than one of these
would try to read a value from more than one environment variable as
fallback (for backwards compatibility). This change consolidates those
accesses.
The majority of diffs in this change are mechanical (i.e. add an
argument or replace a call).
This change:
* Moves common environment variable lookups for bundles to
`bundles/env`.
* Adds a `libs/env` package that wraps `os.LookupEnv` and `os.Getenv`
and allows for overrides to take place in a `context.Context`. By
scoping overrides to a `context.Context` we can avoid `t.Setenv` in
testing and unlock parallel test execution for integration tests.
* Updates call sites to pass through a `context.Context` where needed.
* For bundles, introduces `DATABRICKS_BUNDLE_ROOT` as new primary
variable instead of `BUNDLE_ROOT`. This was the last environment
variable that did not use the `DATABRICKS_` prefix.
## Tests
Unit tests pass.
## Changes
Close local Terraform state file when pushing to remote
Should help fix E2E test cleanup
```
testing.go:1225: TempDir RemoveAll cleanup: remove
C:\Users\RUNNER~1\AppData\Local\Temp\TestAccPythonWheelTaskDeployAndRun1395546390\001\.databricks\bundle\default\terraform\terraform.tfstate:
The process cannot access the file because it is being used by another process.
```
## Changes
Added end-to-end test for deploying and running Python wheel task
## Tests
Test successfully passed on all environments, takes about 9-10 minutes
to pass.
```
Deleted snapshot file at /var/folders/nt/xjv68qzs45319w4k36dhpylc0000gp/T/TestAccPythonWheelTaskDeployAndRun1845899209/002/.databricks/bundle/default/sync-snapshots/1f7cc766ffe038d6.json
Successfully deleted files!
2023/09/06 17:50:50 INFO Releasing deployment lock mutator=destroy mutator=seq mutator=seq mutator=deferred mutator=lock:release
--- PASS: TestAccPythonWheelTaskDeployAndRun (508.16s)
PASS
coverage: 77.9% of statements in ./...
ok github.com/databricks/cli/internal/bundle 508.810s coverage: 77.9% of statements in ./...
```
---------
Co-authored-by: Pieter Noordhuis <pieter.noordhuis@databricks.com>
## Changes
Another example of singular/plural conversion.
Longer term solution is we do a full sweep of the type using reflection
to make sure we cover all fields.
## Tests
Unit test passes.
## Changes
This follows up on https://github.com/databricks/cli/pull/686. This PR
makes our stubs optional + it adds DLT stubs:
```
$ databricks bundle init
Template to use [default-python]: default-python
Unique name for this project [my_project]: my_project
Include a stub (sample) notebook in 'my_project/src' [yes]: yes
Include a stub (sample) DLT pipeline in 'my_project/src' [yes]: yes
Include a stub (sample) Python package 'my_project/src' [yes]: yes
✨ Successfully initialized template
```
## Tests
Manual testing, matrix tests.
---------
Co-authored-by: Andrew Nester <andrew.nester@databricks.com>
Co-authored-by: PaulCornellDB <paul.cornell@databricks.com>
Co-authored-by: Pieter Noordhuis <pieter.noordhuis@databricks.com>
## Changes
This is necessary to ensure that our Terraform provider can use the same
auxiliary programs (e.g. `az`, or `gcloud`) as the CLI.
## Tests
Unit test and manual verification.
## Changes
The installer doesn't respect the version constraints if they are
specified.
Source: [the vc argument is not
used](850464c601/releases/latest_version.go (L158-L177)).
## Tests
Confirmed manually.
## Changes
Renamed Environments to Targets in bundle.yml.
The change is backward-compatible and customers can continue to use
`environments` in the time being.
## Tests
Added tests which checks that both `environments` and `targets` sections
in bundle.yml works correctly
## Changes
Prompt UI glitches often. We are switching to a custom implementation of
a simple prompter which is much more stable.
This also allows new lines in prompts which has been an ask by the
mlflow team.
## Tests
Tested manually
## Changes
This adds `mode: production` option. This mode doesn't do any
transformations but verifies that an environment is configured correctly
for production:
```
environments:
prod:
mode: production
# paths should not be scoped to a user (unless a service principal is used)
root_path: /Shared/non_user_path/...
# run_as and permissions should be set at the resource level (or at the top level when that is implemented)
run_as:
user_name: Alice
permissions:
- level: CAN_MANAGE
user_name: Alice
```
Additionally, this extends the existing `mode: development` option,
* now prefixing deployed assets with `[dev your.user]` instead of just
`[dev`]
* validating that development deployments _are_ scoped to a user
## Related
https://github.com/databricks/cli/pull/578/files (in draft)
## Tests
Manual testing to validate the experience, error messages, and
functionality with all resource types. Automated unit tests.
---------
Co-authored-by: Fabian Jakobs <fabian.jakobs@databricks.com>
## Changes
Propagate `TF_CLI_CONFIG_FILE` env variable.
From Terraform documentation:
> The location of the Terraform CLI configuration file can also be
specified using the TF_CLI_CONFIG_FILE [environment
variable](https://developer.hashicorp.com/terraform/cli/config/environment-variables)
It allows using custom builds of terraform-provider-databricks, using
config files like:
```tf
provider_installation {
dev_overrides {
"databricks/databricks" = "/Users/gleb.kanterov/terraform-provider-databricks"
}
direct {}
}
```
## Tests
I added unit tests.
## Changes
The pattern `errors.Is(err, fs.ErrNotExist)` is common to check for an
error type.
Errors can implement `Is(error) bool` with a custom equivalence checker.
## Tests
New asserts all pass in the integration test.
## Changes
On Unix systems, the default of `/tmp` always works. No need to
synthesize a path for it.
The custom TMPDIR was causing issues when used from GitHub Actions
runners.
## Tests
Confirmed manually this fixes the issue on GitHub Actions runners.
## Changes
Added support for `bundle.Seq`, simplified `Mutator.Apply` interface by
removing list of mutators from return values/
## Tests
1. Ran `cli bundle deploy` and interrupted it with Cmd + C mid execution
so lock is not released
2. Ran `cli bundle deploy` top make sure that CLI is not trying to
release lock when it fail to acquire it
```
andrew.nester@HFW9Y94129 multiples-tasks % cli bundle deploy
Starting upload of bundle files
Uploaded bundle files at /Users/andrew.nester@databricks.com/.bundle/simple-task/development/files!
^C
andrew.nester@HFW9Y94129 multiples-tasks % cli bundle deploy
Error: deploy lock acquired by andrew.nester@databricks.com at 2023-05-24 12:10:23.050343 +0200 CEST. Use --force to override
```
## Changes
Passes through tmp dir related env vars to the terraform process. Incase
any of them are not set, we assign temp dir inside bundle cache dir as
the location terraform should use.
## Tests
Manually checked that these env vars do override location where
os.CreateTemp files are created
## Changes
Rename all instances of "bricks" to "databricks".
## Tests
* Confirmed the goreleaser build works, uses the correct new binary
name, and produces the right archives.
* Help output is confirmed to be correct.
* Output of `git grep -w bricks` is minimal with a couple changes
remaining for after the repository rename.
## Changes
When local state file exists it won't be override by remote state file
## Tests
Running `bricks bundle deploy` after state push failed does not override
local state file
Use cases verified:
1. Local state file is newer than remote
2. Local state file is older than remote
3. Local state file does not exist
4. Local state file corrupted
## Changes
Improved error message when 'bricks bundle run' is executed before
'bricks bundle deploy'
The error happens when we attempt to load terraform state when it does
not exist.
The best way to check if terraform state actually exists is to call
`terraform show -json` and that's what already happens here
https://github.com/databricks/bricks/compare/main...error-before-deploy#diff-8c50f8c04e568397bc865b7e02d1f4ec5b18379d8d32daddfeb041035d804f5fL28
Absence of `state.Values` indicates that there is no state and likely
bundle was just never deployed.
## Tests
Ran `bricks bundle run test_job` on a new non-deployed bundle.
**Output:**
`Error: terraform show: No state. Did you forget to run 'bricks bundle
deploy'?`
Running `bricks bundle deploy && bricks bundle run test_job` succeeds.
---------
Co-authored-by: Pieter Noordhuis <pieter.noordhuis@databricks.com>
## Changes
Adds a IsInplaceSupported() function to the event interface. Any event
that now uses the progress logger has to declare whether they support in
place logging
## Tests
Manually
## Changes
These are unlikely to ever be DBFS paths so we can remove this level of indirection to simplify.
**Note:** this is a breaking change. Downstream usage of these fields must be updated.
## Tests
Existing tests pass.
## Changes
This PR changes the files.Delete() mutator to delete the sync snapshots
file on destroy. This ensures that files will be uploaded when the
bundle is uploaded again.
## Tests
- [x] Manual test: Ran `bricks bundle destroy`, observed that the sync
snapshots file was deleted.
## Changes
This is useful when developing the Databricks Terraform provider where
you keep a local-only build of the provider and refer to it using $HOME
from `~/.terraformrc`, for example like this:
```
plugin_cache_dir = "$HOME/.terraform.d/plugin-cache"
```
## Tests
That $HOME is passed through cannot be tested as is because the
`tfexec.Terraform` struct doesn't expose it through public fields or
methods. What can be tested is a successful run of the initialize
mutator and this is included in this commit.
## Changes
Pull state before deploying and push state after deploying.
Note: the run command was missing mutators to initialize Terraform. This
is necessary if the cache directory is removed between running "deploy"
and "run" (which is valid now that we synchronize state).
## Tests
Manually.
## Changes
The databricks_permissions resource may be generated if a bundle
resource includes a `permissions` block. There's no need to incorporate
details from the materialization into the bundle configuration struct.
## Tests
Confirmed that this fixes `bricks bundle run` when dealing with a bundle
with permission configuration.
## Changes
Auth relied on setting a profile. In this change we enumerate all
configuration properties and export all non-empty ones as a map with
environment variables. We then pass this map to the Terraform execution
wrapper.
This results in Terraform using the bundle's authentication
configuration.
This change is needed to make #287 work.
## Tests
Manually.
Add configuration:
```
bundle:
lock:
enabled: true
force: false
```
The force field can be set by passing the `--force` argument to `bricks
bundle deploy`. Doing so means the deployment lock is acquired even if
it is currently held. This should only be used in exceptional cases
(e.g. a previous deployment has failed to release the lock).
1. Perform file synchronization on deploy
2. Update notebook file path translation logic to point to the
synchronization target rather than treating the notebook as an artifact
and uploading it separately.
Users can opt out and use the system-installed version with the
following configuration:
```
bundle:
terraform:
exec_path: terraform
```
This will find the binary in $PATH and replace it with the found value.
If this is not set, the initialize phase will install Terraform in the
bundle's cache directory.
This includes 3 mutators:
* Interpolate resources references to TF compatible format
* Convert resources struct to TF JSON format and write it to disk
* Run TF apply