## Changes
Currently, when the CLI run a list API call (like list jobs), it uses
the `List*All` methods from the SDK, which list all resources in the
collection. This is very slow for large collections: if you need to list
all jobs from a workspace that has 10,000+ jobs, you'll be waiting for
at least 100 RPCs to complete before seeing any output.
Instead of using List*All() methods, the SDK recently added an iterator
data structure that allows traversing the collection without needing to
completely list it first. New pages are fetched lazily if the next
requested item belongs to the next page. Using the List() methods that
return these iterators, the CLI can proactively print out some of the
response before the complete collection has been fetched.
This involves a pretty major rewrite of the rendering logic in `cmdio`.
The idea there is to define custom rendering logic based on the type of
the provided resource. There are three renderer interfaces:
1. textRenderer: supports printing something in a textual format (i.e.
not JSON, and not templated).
2. jsonRenderer: supports printing something in a pretty-printed JSON
format.
3. templateRenderer: supports printing something using a text template.
There are also three renderer implementations:
1. readerRenderer: supports printing a reader. This only implements the
textRenderer interface.
2. iteratorRenderer: supports printing a `listing.Iterator` from the Go
SDK. This implements jsonRenderer and templateRenderer, buffering 20
resources at a time before writing them to the output.
3. defaultRenderer: supports printing arbitrary resources (the previous
implementation).
Callers will either use `cmdio.Render()` for rendering individual
resources or `io.Reader` or `cmdio.RenderIterator()` for rendering an
iterator. This separate method is needed to safely be able to match on
the type of the iterator, since Go does not allow runtime type matches
on generic types with an existential type parameter.
One other change that needs to happen is to split the templates used for
text representation of list resources into a header template and a row
template. The template is now executed multiple times for List API
calls, but the header should only be printed once. To support this, I
have added `headerTemplate` to `cmdIO`, and I have also changed
`RenderWithTemplate` to include a `headerTemplate` parameter everywhere.
## Tests
- [x] Unit tests for text rendering logic
- [x] Unit test for reflection-based iterator construction.
---------
Co-authored-by: Andrew Nester <andrew.nester@databricks.com>
## Changes
This PR adds documentation for positional arguments in commands that are
generated from the openapi spec.
Note: the changes to `.gitattributes` will be revert / properly fixed in
https://github.com/databricks/cli/pull/1012
## Changes
* Update Go SDK to v0.19.0
* Update commands per OpenAPI spec from Go SDK
* Incorporate `client.Do()` signature change to include a (nil) header
map
* Update `workspace.WorkspaceService` mock with permissions methods
* Skip `files` service in codegen; already implemented under the `fs`
command
## Tests
Unit and integration tests pass.
## Changes
Generated commands relied on global variables for flags and request
payloads. This is difficult to test if a sequence of tests tries to run
the same command with various arguments because the global state causes
test interference. Moreover, it is impossible to run tests in parallel.
This change modifies the approach and turns every command group and
command itself into a function that returns a `*cobra.Command`. All
flags and request payloads are variables scoped to the command's
initialization function. This means it is possible to construct
independent copies of the CLI structure and fixes the test isolation
issue.
The scope of this change is only the generated commands. The other
commands will be changed accordingly in subsequent changes.
## Tests
Unit and integration tests pass.
## Changes
When there are positional required parameters in the command which can't
be unmarshalled from JSON, we should require them despite the fact
`--json` flag is provided.
The reason is that for some of the command, for example, `databricks
groups patch ID` these arguments are actually path arguments in API and
can't be set as part of `--json` body provided.
Original change which introduced this ignore logic is here:
https://github.com/databricks/cli/pull/405
Fixes https://github.com/databricks/cli/issues/533,
https://github.com/databricks/cli/issues/537
Note: Code generation is based on the change in this PR:
https://github.com/databricks/databricks-sdk-go/pull/536
## Tests
1. Running `cli groups patch 123 --json {...}` works correctly
Backward compatibility tests with previous changes from
https://github.com/databricks/cli/pull/405
1. `cli clusters events --json '{"cluster_id": "1029-xxxx"}'` - works,
returns list of events
2. `cli clusters events 1029-xxxx` - works, returns list of events
3. `cli clusters events` - works, first prompts for Cluster ID and then
returns the list of events
## Changes
Fixed jobs create command to only accept JSON payload.
Note: relies on this PR from Go SDK
https://github.com/databricks/databricks-sdk-go/pull/522
## Tests
```
andrew.nester@HFW9Y94129 cli % ./cli jobs create -h
Create a new job.
Create a new job.
Usage:
databricks jobs create [flags]
Flags:
-h, --help help for create
--json JSON either inline JSON string or @path/to/file.json with request body (default JSON (0 bytes))
Global Flags:
-e, --environment string bundle environment to use (if applicable)
--log-file file file to write logs to (default stderr)
--log-format type log output format (text or json) (default text)
--log-level format log level (default disabled)
-o, --output type output type: text or json (default text)
-p, --profile string ~/.databrickscfg profile
--progress-format format format for progress logs (append, inplace, json) (default default)
```
## Changes
Some of the command such as `databricks alerts create` require
positional arguments which are not primitive.
Since these arguments are required, we should correctly set ExactArgs
for such commands
Fixes#367
## Tests
Running `databricks alerts create`
Before
```
andrew.nester@HFW9Y94129 cli % ./cli alerts create
panic: runtime error: index out of range [0] with length 0
goroutine 1 [running]:
github.com/databricks/bricks/cmd/workspace/alerts.glob..func1(0x22a1280?, {0x2321638, 0x0, 0x0?})
github.com/databricks/bricks/cmd/workspace/alerts/alerts.go:57 +0x355
github.com/spf13/cobra.(*Command).execute(0x22a1280, {0x2321638, 0x0, 0x0})
github.com/spf13/cobra@v1.7.0/command.go:940 +0x862
github.com/spf13/cobra.(*Command).ExecuteC(0x22a0700)
github.com/spf13/cobra@v1.7.0/command.go:1068 +0x3bd
github.com/spf13/cobra.(*Command).ExecuteContextC(...)
github.com/spf13/cobra@v1.7.0/command.go:1001
github.com/databricks/bricks/cmd/root.Execute()
github.com/databricks/bricks/cmd/root/root.go:80 +0x6a
main.main()
github.com/databricks/bricks/main.go:18 +0x17
```
After
```
andrew.nester@HFW9Y94129 cli % ./cli alerts create
Error: provide command input in JSON format by specifying --json option
```
Acceptance test
```
=== RUN TestAccAlertsCreateErrWhenNoArguments
alerts_test.go:10: gcp
helpers.go:147: Error running command: provide command input in JSON format by specifying --json option
--- PASS: TestAccAlertsCreateErrWhenNoArguments (1.99s)
PASS
```
## Changes
Disable shell completions for generated commands.
Default completion behavior completes local files which never makes
sense.
Automatic contextual completion of required arguments would be super
powerful but a lot of work to get right. Until then, we could do manual
completion functions in `overrides.go` as needed.
This fixes#374.
## Tests
Confirmed manually that commands no longer complete local files.
## Changes
Better error message if can not load prompts
## Tests
Setup 2 jobs with the same name and ran `cli job get`
```
andrew.nester@HFW9Y94129 multiples-tasks % ../../cli/cli jobs get
Error: failed to load names for Jobs drop-down. Please manually specify required arguments. Original error: duplicate .Settings.Name: duplicatejob
```
## 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.
This PR adds the following command groups:
## Workspace-level command groups
* `bricks alerts` - The alerts API can be used to perform CRUD operations on alerts.
* `bricks catalogs` - A catalog is the first layer of Unity Catalog’s three-level namespace.
* `bricks cluster-policies` - Cluster policy limits the ability to configure clusters based on a set of rules.
* `bricks clusters` - The Clusters API allows you to create, start, edit, list, terminate, and delete clusters.
* `bricks current-user` - This API allows retrieving information about currently authenticated user or service principal.
* `bricks dashboards` - In general, there is little need to modify dashboards using the API.
* `bricks data-sources` - This API is provided to assist you in making new query objects.
* `bricks experiments` - MLflow Experiment tracking.
* `bricks external-locations` - An external location is an object that combines a cloud storage path with a storage credential that authorizes access to the cloud storage path.
* `bricks functions` - Functions implement User-Defined Functions (UDFs) in Unity Catalog.
* `bricks git-credentials` - Registers personal access token for Databricks to do operations on behalf of the user.
* `bricks global-init-scripts` - The Global Init Scripts API enables Workspace administrators to configure global initialization scripts for their workspace.
* `bricks grants` - In Unity Catalog, data is secure by default.
* `bricks groups` - Groups simplify identity management, making it easier to assign access to Databricks Workspace, data, and other securable objects.
* `bricks instance-pools` - Instance Pools API are used to create, edit, delete and list instance pools by using ready-to-use cloud instances which reduces a cluster start and auto-scaling times.
* `bricks instance-profiles` - The Instance Profiles API allows admins to add, list, and remove instance profiles that users can launch clusters with.
* `bricks ip-access-lists` - IP Access List enables admins to configure IP access lists.
* `bricks jobs` - The Jobs API allows you to create, edit, and delete jobs.
* `bricks libraries` - The Libraries API allows you to install and uninstall libraries and get the status of libraries on a cluster.
* `bricks metastores` - A metastore is the top-level container of objects in Unity Catalog.
* `bricks model-registry` - MLflow Model Registry commands.
* `bricks permissions` - Permissions API are used to create read, write, edit, update and manage access for various users on different objects and endpoints.
* `bricks pipelines` - The Delta Live Tables API allows you to create, edit, delete, start, and view details about pipelines.
* `bricks policy-families` - View available policy families.
* `bricks providers` - Databricks Providers REST API.
* `bricks queries` - These endpoints are used for CRUD operations on query definitions.
* `bricks query-history` - Access the history of queries through SQL warehouses.
* `bricks recipient-activation` - Databricks Recipient Activation REST API.
* `bricks recipients` - Databricks Recipients REST API.
* `bricks repos` - The Repos API allows users to manage their git repos.
* `bricks schemas` - A schema (also called a database) is the second layer of Unity Catalog’s three-level namespace.
* `bricks secrets` - The Secrets API allows you to manage secrets, secret scopes, and access permissions.
* `bricks service-principals` - Identities for use with jobs, automated tools, and systems such as scripts, apps, and CI/CD platforms.
* `bricks serving-endpoints` - The Serving Endpoints API allows you to create, update, and delete model serving endpoints.
* `bricks shares` - Databricks Shares REST API.
* `bricks storage-credentials` - A storage credential represents an authentication and authorization mechanism for accessing data stored on your cloud tenant.
* `bricks table-constraints` - Primary key and foreign key constraints encode relationships between fields in tables.
* `bricks tables` - A table resides in the third layer of Unity Catalog’s three-level namespace.
* `bricks token-management` - Enables administrators to get all tokens and delete tokens for other users.
* `bricks tokens` - The Token API allows you to create, list, and revoke tokens that can be used to authenticate and access Databricks REST APIs.
* `bricks users` - User identities recognized by Databricks and represented by email addresses.
* `bricks volumes` - Volumes are a Unity Catalog (UC) capability for accessing, storing, governing, organizing and processing files.
* `bricks warehouses` - A SQL warehouse is a compute resource that lets you run SQL commands on data objects within Databricks SQL.
* `bricks workspace` - The Workspace API allows you to list, import, export, and delete notebooks and folders.
* `bricks workspace-conf` - This API allows updating known workspace settings for advanced users.
## Account-level command groups
* `bricks account billable-usage` - This API allows you to download billable usage logs for the specified account and date range.
* `bricks account budgets` - These APIs manage budget configuration including notifications for exceeding a budget for a period.
* `bricks account credentials` - These APIs manage credential configurations for this workspace.
* `bricks account custom-app-integration` - These APIs enable administrators to manage custom oauth app integrations, which is required for adding/using Custom OAuth App Integration like Tableau Cloud for Databricks in AWS cloud.
* `bricks account encryption-keys` - These APIs manage encryption key configurations for this workspace (optional).
* `bricks account groups` - Groups simplify identity management, making it easier to assign access to Databricks Account, data, and other securable objects.
* `bricks account ip-access-lists` - The Accounts IP Access List API enables account admins to configure IP access lists for access to the account console.
* `bricks account log-delivery` - These APIs manage log delivery configurations for this account.
* `bricks account metastore-assignments` - These APIs manage metastore assignments to a workspace.
* `bricks account metastores` - These APIs manage Unity Catalog metastores for an account.
* `bricks account networks` - These APIs manage network configurations for customer-managed VPCs (optional).
* `bricks account o-auth-enrollment` - These APIs enable administrators to enroll OAuth for their accounts, which is required for adding/using any OAuth published/custom application integration.
* `bricks account private-access` - These APIs manage private access settings for this account.
* `bricks account published-app-integration` - These APIs enable administrators to manage published oauth app integrations, which is required for adding/using Published OAuth App Integration like Tableau Cloud for Databricks in AWS cloud.
* `bricks account service-principals` - Identities for use with jobs, automated tools, and systems such as scripts, apps, and CI/CD platforms.
* `bricks account storage` - These APIs manage storage configurations for this workspace.
* `bricks account storage-credentials` - These APIs manage storage credentials for a particular metastore.
* `bricks account users` - User identities recognized by Databricks and represented by email addresses.
* `bricks account vpc-endpoints` - These APIs manage VPC endpoint configurations for this account.
* `bricks account workspace-assignment` - The Workspace Permission Assignment API allows you to manage workspace permissions for principals in your account.
* `bricks account workspaces` - These APIs manage workspaces for this account.