## 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
There were two functions related to loading a bundle configuration file;
one as a package function and one as a member function on the
configuration type. Loading the same configuration object twice doesn't
make sense and therefore we can consolidate to only using the package
function.
The package function would scan for known file names if the specified
path was a directory. This functionality was not in use because the
top-level bundle loader figures out the filename itself as of #580.
## Tests
Pass.
## Changes
The jobs backend propagates job tags to the underlying cloud provider's
resources. As such, they need to match the constraints a cloud provider
places on tag values. The display name can contain anything. With this
change, we modify the tag value to equal the short name as used in the
name prefix.
Additionally, we leverage tag normalization as introduced in #819 to
make sure characters that aren't accepted are removed before using the
value as a tag value.
This is a new stab at #810 and should completely eliminate this class of
problems.
## Tests
Tests pass.
## 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
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
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
* Add support for using `databricks.yml` as config file. If
`databricks.yml` is not found then falling back to `bundle.yml` for
backwards compatibility.
* Add support for `.yaml` extension.
* Give an error when more than one config file is found
## Tests
* added unit test
* manual testing the different cases
---------
Co-authored-by: Pieter Noordhuis <pieter.noordhuis@databricks.com>
## Changes
Add DATABRICKS_BUNDLE_TMP env variable. It allows using a temporary
directory instead of writing to `$CWD/.databricks/bundle`
## Tests
I added unit tests
---------
Co-authored-by: Pieter Noordhuis <pieter.noordhuis@databricks.com>
## 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
If a configuration file is located in a subdirectory of the bundle root,
files referenced from that configuration file should be relative to its
configuration file's directory instead of the bundle root.
## Tests
* New tests in `bundle/config/mutator/translate_paths_test.go`.
* Existing tests under `bundle/tests` pass and are augmented to assert
on paths.
---------
Co-authored-by: shreyas-goenka <88374338+shreyas-goenka@users.noreply.github.com>
## 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).
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.
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)
```
Used to inspect the bundle configuration after loading and merging all
files.
Once we add variable interpolation this command could show the result
after interpolation as well.
Each of the mutations to this configuration is observable, so we could
add a mode that writes each of the intermediate versions to disk for
even more fine grained introspection.
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.