## Changes
- Instead of constructing chains of mutators and then executing them,
execute them directly.
- Remove functionality related to chain-building: Seq, If, Defer,
newPhase, logString.
- Phases become functions that apply the changes directly rather than
construct mutator chains that will be called later.
- Add a helper ApplySeq to call multiple mutators, use it where
Apply+Seq were used before.
This is intended to be a refactoring without functional changes, but
there are a few behaviour changes:
- Since defer() is used to call unlock instead of bundle.Defer()
unlocking will now happen even in case of panics.
- In --debug, the phase names are are still logged once before start of
the phase but each entry no longer has 'seq' or phase name in it.
- The message "Deployment complete!" was printed even if
terraform.Apply() mutator had an error. It no longer does that.
## Motivation
The use of the chains was necessary when mutators were returning a list
of other mutators instead of calling them directly. But that has since
been removed, so now the chain machinery have no purpose anymore.
Use of direct functions simplifies the logic and makes bugs more
apparent and easy to fix.
Other improvements that this unlocks:
- Simpler stacktraces/debugging (breakpoints).
- Use of functions with narrowly scoped API: instead of mutators that
receive full bundle config, we can use focused functions that only deal
with sections they care about prepareGitSettings(currentGitSection) ->
updatedGitSection. This makes the data flow more apparent.
- Parallel computations across mutators (within phase): launch
goroutines fetching data from APIs at the beggining, process them once
they are ready.
## Tests
Existing tests.
This will require API call when run inside a workspace, which will
require workspace client (we don't have one at the current point). We
want to keep Load phase quick, since it's common across all commands.
## Changes
This PR:
1. Uses dynamic walking (via the `dyn.MapByPattern` func) to validate no
two resources have the same resource key. The allows us to remove this
validation at merge time.
2. Modifies `dyn.Mapping` to always return a sorted slice of pairs. This
makes traversal functions like `dyn.Walk` or `dyn.MapByPattern`
deterministic.
## Tests
Unit tests. Also manually.
## Changes
Replace stdin/stdout with files in `PythonMutator`. Files are created in
a temporary directory.
Rename `ApplyPythonMutator` to `PythonMutator`.
Add test for `dyn.Location` behavior during the "load" stage.
## Tests
Unit tests
## Changes
Add ApplyPythonMutator, which will fork the Python subprocess and
process pipe bundle configuration through it.
It's enabled through `experimental` section, for example:
```yaml
experimental:
pydabs:
enable: true
venv_path: .venv
```
For now, it's limited to two phases in the mutator pipeline:
- `load`: adds new jobs
- `init`: adds new jobs, or modifies existing ones
It's enforced that no jobs are modified in `load` and not jobs are
deleted in `load/init`, because, otherwise, it will break existing
assumptions.
## Tests
Unit tests
## Changes
1. Removes `DefaultMutatorsForTarget` which is no longer used anywhere
2. Makes SnapshotPath a private field. It's no longer needed by data
structures outside its package.
FYI, I also tried finding other instances of dead code but I could not
find anything else that was safe to remove. I used
https://go.dev/blog/deadcode to search for them, and the other instances
either implemented an interface, increased test coverage for some of our
other code paths or there was some other reason I could not remove them
(like autogenerated functions or used in tests).
Good sign our codebase is mostly clean (at least superficially).
## Changes
`preinit` script needs to be executed before processing configuration
files to allow the script to modify the configuration or add own
configuration files.
## Changes
Allow specifying CLI version constraints required to run the bundle
Example of configuration:
#### only allow specific version
```
bundle:
name: my-bundle
databricks_cli_version: "0.210.0"
```
#### allow all patch releases
```
bundle:
name: my-bundle
databricks_cli_version: "0.210.*"
```
#### constrain minimum version
```
bundle:
name: my-bundle
databricks_cli_version: ">= 0.210.0"
```
#### constrain range
```
bundle:
name: my-bundle
databricks_cli_version: ">= 0.210.0, <= 1.0.0"
```
For other examples see:
https://github.com/Masterminds/semver?tab=readme-ov-file#checking-version-constraints
Example error
```
sh-3.2$ databricks bundle validate
Error: Databricks CLI version constraint not satisfied. Required: >= 1.0.0, current: 0.216.0
```
## Tests
Added unit test cover all possible configuration permutations
---------
Co-authored-by: Lennart Kats (databricks) <lennart.kats@databricks.com>
## Changes
Prior to this change, the bundle configuration entry point was loaded
from the function `bundle.Load`. Other configuration files were only
loaded once the caller applied the first set of mutators. This
separation was unnecessary and not ideal in light of gathering
diagnostics while loading _any_ configuration file, not just the ones
from the includes.
This change:
* Updates `bundle.Load` to only verify that the specified path is a
valid bundle root.
* Moves mutators that perform loading to `bundle/config/loader`.
* Adds a "load" phase that takes the place of applying
`DefaultMutators`.
Follow ups:
* Rename `bundle.Load` -> `bundle.Find` (because it no longer performs
loading)
This change depends on #1316 and #1317.
## Tests
Tests pass.
## 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 can debate whether or not variable definitions without properties are
valid, but in no case should this panic the CLI.
Fixes#934.
## Tests
Unit.
## 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
Before this PR we would load all yaml files matching * and \*/\*.yml
files as bundle configurations. This was problematic since this would
also load yaml files that were not meant to be a part of the bundle
## Tests
Manually, now files are no longer included unless manually specified
## 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
This config block contains commit, branch and remote_url which will be
automatically loaded if specified in the repo, and can also be specified
by the user
## Tests
Unit and black-box tests
While working on artifact upload and workspace interrogation I realized
this mutator interface needs to:
1. Operate at the whole bundle level so it can apply to both
configuration and internal state
2. Include a `context.Context` parameter for a) long running operations
and b) progress reporting
Previous interface:
```
Apply(*config.Root) ([]Mutator, error)
```
New interface:
```
Apply(context.Context, *Bundle) ([]Mutator, error)
```
Load a tree of configuration files anchored at `bundle.yml` into the
`config.Root` struct.
All mutations (from setting defaults to merging files) are observable
through the `mutator.Mutator` interface.