Pulumi Operations: Difference between revisions

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=Internal=
=Internal=
* [[Pulumi#Subjects|Pulumi]]
* [[Pulumi#Subjects|Pulumi]]
=Logout=
=Overview=
 
=Global Options=
==<tt>-s|--stack</tt>==
==<tt>--non-interactive</tt>==
Disable interactive mode for all commands.
 
It seems that if used without <code>--yes</code>, it fails:
 
<font size=-1>
pulumi update --non-interactive --stack my-org/my-project/my-stack
error: --yes must be passed in to proceed when running in non-interactive mode
</font>
 
If both  <code>--non-interactive</code> and  <code>--yes</code> are used together, there seems to be a little less output than if <code>--yes</code> is used alone.
 
==<tt>--yes</tt>==
Automatically approve and perform the update after previewing it. It is sufficient to use it with <code>--non-interactive</code>.
 
=Authentication and Login=
==Identity Info==
Dumps identity, backend [[Pulumi_Concepts#Name|name]] and [[Pulumi_Concepts#URL|URL]], Open Directory groups, etc.
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi logout
pulumi whoami --verbose
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>
=Login=
This reads <code>~/.pulumi/credentials.json</code>.
==Login==
{{External|https://www.pulumi.com/docs/reference/cli/pulumi_login/}}
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi login [--cloud-url https://something.example.com]
pulumi login [--cloud-url https://something.example.com]
Line 19: Line 42:
* For a "gs://" URL, state is maintained in an GCP bucket.
* For a "gs://" URL, state is maintained in an GCP bucket.
* For a "azblob://" URL, state is maintained in an Azure blob.
* For a "azblob://" URL, state is maintained in an Azure blob.
 
===Login Options===
==Login Options==
====<tt>-c|--cloud-url</tt>====
===<tt>-c|--cloud-url</tt>===
<font color=darkkhaki>A cloud URL to log in to. Then, what does <code>pulumi login https:/...</code> mean and how is different from the same command with an extra --cloud-url?</font>
===<tt>--local</tt>===
====<tt>--local</tt>====
<code>--local</code> is a shortcut for:
<code>--local</code> is a shortcut for:
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
Line 28: Line 51:
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


=Info=
==Logout==
Dumps identity, backend [[Pulumi_Concepts#Name|name]] and [[Pulumi_Concepts#URL|URL]], Open Directory groups, etc.
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi logout
</syntaxhighlight>
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi logout --all
</syntaxhighlight>
 
===Options===
====<tt>--all</tt>====  
Logout of all backends.
 
=<span id='about'></span>Environment Info=
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi whoami --verbose
pulumi about
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>
This reads <code>~/.pulumi/credentials.json</code>.
displays information about the current Pulumi environment including the client version, installed [[Pulumi_Concepts#Plugin|plugins]], [[Pulumi_Concepts#Current_Stack|current stack]], [[Pulumi_Concepts#Backend|backend]], etc.
==Log Location==
Displayed in the output of <code>pulumi about</code>. In a location similar to <code>/var/folders/pf/t_bwclcn4mv3kq49ks14_12c0000gn/T/ b</code>.
 
=Organization Operations=
==Organization Info==
==Organization Info==
Display details for a specific organization:
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi org get <org-name>
</syntaxhighlight>
==<span id='org_ls'></span>List Organizations==
List all [[Pulumi_Concepts#Organization|organizations]] visible to the user:
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi org ls  
pulumi org ls  
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>
=Project Operations=
[[Pulumi_Concepts#Project|Projects]] provide namespaces for stacks.
==List Projects for a Given Organization==
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi org get <org-name>  
org=my-org; pulumi stack ls --all -C ~ | grep "^${org}" | sed -e 's/^.*\/\(.*\)\/.*$/\1/' | uniq | sort
</syntaxhighlight>
 
==<span id='New'></span><span id='new'></span>New Project==
{{External|https://www.pulumi.com/docs/reference/cli/pulumi_new/}}
<span id='pulumi_new'></span><syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi new
</syntaxhighlight>
Create a new [[Pulumi_Concepts#Project|project]] and [[Pulumi_Concepts#Stack|stack]] from a [[Pulumi_Concepts#Template|template]], initialize the local metadata and the backend state.
 
If no template is provided, a list of suggested templates will be presented, so they can be selected interactively.
 
The command must be invoked inside an empty directory. The directory will become the root of the project, and will host <code>[[Pulumi_Concepts#Pulumi.yaml|Pulumi.yaml]]</code>, <code>Pulumi.<stack-name>.yaml</code> and language specific artifacts. An interactive command line loop will require the project name, which defaults to the name of the directory, description, stack name in the <code><org-name>/<stack-name></code> format, and then any configuration elements declared in the <code>[[Pulumi.yaml#template|template.config]]</code> subtree of the template's <code>Pulumi.yaml</code> file. The command creates basic scaffolding based on the cloud and language specified.
 
The command will create one [[Pulumi_Concepts#Empty_Stack|empty]] stack, which will automatically become the [[Pulumi_Concepts#Current_.28Active.2C_Default.29_Stack|active]] stack.
 
If Python is used, the command creates a new [[Python_Pulumi#Python_Pulumi_and_Virtual_Environments|virtual environment]] and automatically downloads dependencies. The project layout is similar to [[Python_Pulumi#Project_Layout|this one]].
Full syntax:
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi new [template|url] [flags]
</syntaxhighlight>
Example:
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi new https://github.com/some-org/pulumi-templates/tree/master/datadog-python
</syntaxhighlight>
An AWS Python project:
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi new aws-python
</syntaxhighlight>
 
==<span id='Project_Deployment_Dry_Run'></span><span id='Dry_Run'></span><span id='preview'></span><span id='Stack_Dry_Run'></span>Project Update Dry Run==
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi preview [-s some-stack --non-interactive]
</syntaxhighlight>
Without an <code>-s</code> argument, the command operates on the [[Pulumi_Concepts#Active|active stack]]. The Python stdout output in the program will be sent to the command stdout.
 
==<span id='Apply_Infrastructure'></span><span id='up'></span><span id='Apply_Stack_to_Platform'></span><span id='Project_Deployment'></span>Project Update==
{{External|https://www.pulumi.com/docs/reference/cli/pulumi_up/}}
[[Pulumi_Concepts#Deploying_a_Project|Project deployment]] is initiated with:
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi up|update
</syntaxhighlight>
The command operates on the [[Pulumi_Concepts#Active|active stack]]. The Python stdout output in the program will be sent to the command stdout.
 
Example:
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi up|update -y -s some_stack --non-interactive
</syntaxhighlight>
The command evaluates the program and determines resource updates to make. It first does a preview, and tells the user what is going to happen, from the point of view of creating, updating or deleting [[Pulumi_Concepts#Resource|resources]]. If choosing "details", the user can inspect individual attributes of the resource. For more details see: {{Internal|Pulumi_Architecture#What_Happens_when_Code_is_Applied_to_Platform?|What Happens when Code is Applied to Platform?}}
 
Run, expecting no changes, assuming the logic is idempotent. If there are changes, the command will detect the changes, and it will fail without applying the changes.
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi up|update -y -s some_stack --non-interactive --expect-no-changes
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>
===Options===
====<tt>-s|--stack</tt>====
The name of the stack to operate on. Defaults to the current stack.
====<tt>-y|--yes</tt>====
Automatically approve and perform the update after previewing it.
====<tt>--expect-no-changes</tt>====
Return an error if any changes occur during this update. The changes will not be applied.
====Dry Run====
See [[#preview|<code>pulumi preview</code>]] above.


=Stack Operations=
=Stack Operations=
{{Internal|Pulumi_Concepts#Stack|Pulumi Stacks}}
{{Internal|Pulumi_Concepts#Stack|Pulumi Stacks}}
==List Stacks==
 
<code>pulumi stack <command></code> must be run from a [[Pulumi_Concepts#Project|project directory]], which is a directory that contains a <code>[[Pulumi_Concepts#Pulumi.yaml|Pulumi.yaml]]</code> file. If it not run from a directly containing <code>Pulumi.yaml</code>, it will apply to the [[Pulumi_Concepts#Current_Project|current project]].
==<span id='stack_ls'></span>List Stacks==
Display the list associated with the [[Pulumi_Concepts#Current_Project|current project]].
Display the list associated with the [[Pulumi_Concepts#Current_Project|current project]].
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi stack ls
pulumi stack ls
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>
⚠️ <code>-s <stack-name></code> has no effect when used with <code>pulumi stack ls</code>.
===List the Active Stack for the Project===
Use <code>pulumi stack ls</code>. The [[Pulumi_Concepts#Active|active]] stack is marked with an asterisk in the command output.
===<tt>ls</tt> Options===
====<tt>--j|--json</tt>====
Emit output as JSON.
====<tt>-a|--all</tt>====
List all stacks instead of just stacks for the current project.


==Select a Stack==
====<tt>-o|--organization</tt>====
Filter returned stacks to those in a specific organization.
 
====<tt>-p|--project</tt>====
Filter returned stacks to those with a specific project name.
 
====<tt>-t|--tag</tt>====
Filter returned stacks to those in a specific tag (tag-name or tag-name=tag-value)
 
==Display Stack Resources==
Brief view:
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi stack [-s <org>/<project>/<stack>]
</syntaxhighlight>
JSON dump.
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi stack [-s <org>/<project>/<stack>] export
</syntaxhighlight>
==<span id='select'></span><span id='Select_a_Stack'></span>Switch the Workspace to a Given Stack==
Select the [[Pulumi_Concepts#Current_.28Active.29_Stack|current (active) stack]] for the project.
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi stack select
pulumi stack select
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>
==Display Stack Resources==
Selecting a stack allows you to use commands like <code>config</code>, <code>preview</code>, and <code>update</code> without needing to type the stack name each time. If no stack argument is supplied, you will be prompted to select one interactively. If operating within an organization, the stack name must be prefixed by the organization name.
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi stack select --create --secrets-provider=passphrase <org-name>/<stack-name>
</syntaxhighlight>
Options:
* <code>--create</code>: If selected stack does not exist, create it. <font color=darkkhaki>It probably creates the "desired state" but does not apply anything yet.</font>
* <code>--secrets-provider</code>: Use with <code>--create</code> flag, The type of the provider that should be used to encrypt and decrypt secrets. Possible choices: default, passphrase, awskms, azurekeyvault, gcpkms, hashivault, default "passphrase".
==<span id='stack_init'></span>Create Stack==
A stack may be created "[[Pulumi_Concepts#Empty_Stack|empty]]", when no corresponding infrastructure resources have been created in the backed infrastructure platform, or fully initialized, when the backend infrastructure resources are also created at the time of stack creation.
 
An '''empty stack''' can be created as part of a [[#New_Project|new project creation sequence]], as result of the <code>[[#pulumi_new|pulumi new]]</code> command. <code>[[#new|pulumi new]]</code> command creates a default empty stack, so creating additional stacks makes sense if the [[Pulumi_Concepts#Project|project]] was bootstrapped manually and no default stack was created, or we need more than one stack in the project. For an existing project, an empty stack can be create with the <code>pulumi stack init</code> command, described in detail below. A '''fully initialized stack''' is created as result of the <code>[[#Project_Update|pulumi up]]</code> command. Note that a project may contain multiple stacks, and of those, there is one [[Pulumi_Concepts#Current_.28Active.2C_Default.29_Stack|active stack]] at any moment.
 
===<tt>pulumi stack init</tt>===
<code>pulumi stack init</code> should be used when you need to create an [[Pulumi_Concepts#Empty_Stack|empty stack]] within the context of an already existing project. The name of the stack must be specified as argument:
<font size=-1>
pulumi stack init <[[Pulumi_Concepts#Stack_Name|stack-name]]>
</font>
⚠️ If Pulumi is used within the context of an [[Pulumi_Concepts#Organization|organization]], and without specifying additional information, the stack will be created '''in the user account of the user running the command'''. This may not be something you necessarily want. To create the stack in the organization instead, name the stack using <code><org-name>/<stack-name></code> naming pattern:
<font size=-1>
pulumi stack init <org-name>/<stack-name>
</font>
Example:
<font size=-1>
pulumi stack init my-org/my-stack
</font>
 
The command runs in non-interactive mode, no stdin confirmation is required.
 
The stack, once created, is ready for updates. As mentioned above, the stack is empty, it  has no corresponding infrastructure resources stored in the backend, but it can become a target of a deployment initiated with the <code>[[#update|pulumi update]]</code> command. Stack creation also means creation of a <code>Pulumi.<stack-name>.yaml</code> in the project directory and the initialization of the corresponding empty stack, devoid of resources, in the backend:
<syntaxhighlight lang='json'>
{
    "version": 1,
    "deployment": {
        "manifest": {
            "time": "0001-01-01T00:00:00Z",
            "magic": "",
            "version": ""
        }
    }
}
</syntaxhighlight>
 
The command also initializes the [[Pulumi_Concepts#Workspace|local workspace state]], if not already initialized.
 
===<tt>pulumi stack select --create</tt>===
Alternatively, a stack that does not exist can be created when it is "selected", if the <code>--create</code> option is used:
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi stack select --create --secrets-provider=passphrase <org-name>/<stack-name>
</syntaxhighlight>
 
==Rename Stack==
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi stack rename <org>/<new-stack-name>
</syntaxhighlight>
where the <code><new-stack-name></code> is the simple (not fully qualified) name. Renaming will change the name of the [[Pulumi_Concepts#Stack_Settings_File|stack settings file]] <code>Pulumi.<stack-name>.yaml</code> file accordingly.
 
The stack project can be renamed by passing the fully-qualified stack name.
 
<font color=darkkhaki>Because renaming a stack will change the value of getStack() inside a Pulumi program, if this name is used as part of a resource's name, the next <code>pulumi up</code> will want to delete the old resource and create a new copy. For now, if you don't want these changes to be applied, you should rename your stack back to its previous name.</font>
==<span id='Export'></span>Export a Stack==
The stack metadata in a raw format (JSON) can be displayed with:
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi stack export
</syntaxhighlight>
Exporting a stack is not a [[Pulumi_Concepts#Stack_Import.2FExport|standard workflow]], and it should be used with caution.
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi stack export [--file stack.json] # by default will send the content to stdout
</syntaxhighlight>
 
==Edit Stack State==
Resources and be individually deleted and renamed by manipulating the stack's state. Also, protected resources can be "unprotected":
===Unprotect Resource in Stack State===
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi state unprotect [--stack <org>/<stack-name>] <resource-URN>
</syntaxhighlight>
Example:
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi state unprotect --stack my-org/dd.test.adopted.blue 'urn:pulumi:dd.test.adopted.blue::datadog-dashboards::datadog:index/dashboardJson:DashboardJson::dashboardJson'
</syntaxhighlight>
More details about resource URN are available here: {{Internal|Pulumi_Resource#URN|Pulumi Resource URN}}
==<span id='pulumi_refresh'></span>Refresh Stack State==
Reads the infrastructure platform state and updates the corresponding stack state. The command compares the current stack's resource state with the state known to exist in the actual cloud provider. Any such changes are adopted into the current stack. Note that if the program text isn't updated accordingly, subsequent updates may still appear to be out of synch with respect to the cloud provider's source of truth.
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi refresh
</syntaxhighlight>
 
==<span id='destroy'></span>Destroy a Stack==
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi destroy
</syntaxhighlight>
Without an <code>-s</code> argument, the command operates on the [[Pulumi_Concepts#Active|active stack]].
 
For the difference between deleting and destroying a stack, see: {{Internal|Pulumi_Concepts#Destroying_and_Deleting_a_Stack|Destroying vs. Deleting a Stack}}
===Options===
====<tt>--non-interactive</tt>====
Disables interactive mode. Note that <code>--yes</code> must be passed in to proceed when running in non-interactive mode.
====<tt>--exclude-protected</tt>====
Destroy all unprotected resources and preserve protected resources.
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi destroy --exclude-protected
</syntaxhighlight>
 
==<span id='delete'></span>Remove (Delete) a Stack==
Removes (deletes) a stack and the associated local [[Pulumi_Concepts#Stack_Settings_File|stack settings file]]. You should [[#Destroy_a_Stack|destroy]] the stack first. For the difference between deleting and destroying a stack, see: {{Internal|Pulumi_Concepts#Destroying_and_Deleting_a_Stack|Destroying vs. Deleting a Stack}}
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi stack rm some_org/some_stack
</syntaxhighlight>
<span id='Forced_Deletion'></span>There are situation when Pulumi will refuse to delete the stack because the stack still has resources, but an attempting to destroy the stack fails - maybe because the resources were deleted externally and the stack got out of sync. In that situation, if you are sure there are no infrastructure resources associated with the stack you can force delete the stack:
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi stack rm some_org/some_stack  --force
</syntaxhighlight>
===Remove (Delete) a Stack without Deleting Associated Infrastructure Resources===
There are situations when a stack must be deleted, but not the associated resources. This is the case when external resources are adopted, for example.
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi stack rm --force some_org/some_stack
</syntaxhighlight>
This command does not removes the managed infrastructure resources.
 
==Options==
===<tt>--non-interactive</tt>===
Disables interactive mode. Note that <code>--yes</code> must be passed in to proceed when running in non-interactive mode.
===<tt>-f|--force</tt>===
Forces deletion of the stack, leaving behind any resources managed by the stack. See [[#Forced_Deletion|forced deletion]] above.
 
==<span id='config'></span><span id='Config'></span><span id='Configuration_Operations'></span>Stack Configuration Operations==
<code>pulumi config</code> manages [[Pulumi_Concepts#Stack_Settings_File|stack settings files]]. Without an <code>-s</code> argument, the command operates on the [[Pulumi_Concepts#Active|active stack]].
===List Configuration Values===
Display the configuration value for the current stack. If <code>-s <stack-name></code> is specified, use that stack instead.
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi config [-s <stack-name>]
</syntaxhighlight>
===Set a Configuration Value===
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi config -s some-stack --non-interactive set some_key some_value
</syntaxhighlight>
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi config set --path ... some_value
</syntaxhighlight>
 
==Stack Output Operations==
The concepts behind stack outputs are described here: {{Internal|Pulumi_Concepts_Inputs_and_Outputs#Output|Pulumi Stack Outputs}}
===<span id='stack_output'></span>Show Stack Output Properties===
Show a stack's [[Pulumi_Concepts_Inputs_and_Outputs#Output|output properties]]:
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi stack output [--show-secrets] [--stack <org>/<stack-name>]
</syntaxhighlight>
Some resource properties are considered [[Pulumi_Concepts#Secret_Values|secret]], and not displayed unless <code>--show-secrets</code> is used.
 
To display a specific output:
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi stack output <property-name>
</syntaxhighlight>
 
===Show an Individual Output Property===
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi stack  
pulumi stack output <property-key> --stack <org-name>/<stak-name>| jq
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>
==Display Stack Tags==
===Set an Individual Output Property===
<font color=darkkhaki>It does not seem possible to do from command line, the only way to be done is through program, using <code>pulumi.export()</code> and not modifying any other resource.</font>
 
===Options===
====<tt>--show-secrets</tt>====
====<tt>--json</tt>====
 
==Stack Tags==
{{Internal|Pulumi_Concepts#Stack_Tags|Pulumi Concepts &#124; Tags}}
===<span id='stack_tag_ls'>Display Stack Tags===
{{External|https://www.pulumi.com/docs/reference/cli/pulumi_stack_tag_ls/}}
{{External|https://www.pulumi.com/docs/reference/cli/pulumi_stack_tag_ls/}}
The command displays [[Pulumi_Concepts#Stack_Tags|stack tags]] for the [[Pulumi_Concepts#Active|active stack]]:
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi stack tag ls
pulumi stack tag ls
</syntaxhighlight>
===<span id='stack_tag_set'>Set Custom Tags===
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi stack tag set <name> <value>
</syntaxhighlight>
<font color=darkkhaki>Did not work. COME BACK TO THIS: https://www.pulumi.com/docs/intro/concepts/stack/#stack-tags</font>
===Get Specific Tags===
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi stack tag get <name>
</syntaxhighlight>
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi stack tag get gitHub:owner
</syntaxhighlight>
===Delete Tag===
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi stack tag rm <name>
</syntaxhighlight>
==<span id='Import'></span><span id='Import/Export_Stack'></span><span id='Import_External_Resources_into_a_Stack'></span>Import Individual External Resources into a Stack==
{{External|https://www.pulumi.com/docs/reference/cli/pulumi_import/}}
The <code>import</code> command can be used to adopt individual external resources, not created with Pulumi, to be managed via a Pulumi stack. Importing (adopting) a resource is not a [[Pulumi_Concepts#Stack_Import.2FExport|standard workflow]], and it should be used with caution. The same command can be used to import the JSON representation of the whole stack.
The conceptual aspects of adopting resources are addressed here: {{Internal|Pulumi_Concepts#Importing_Infrastructure_Resources_into_an_Existing_Stack|Importing Infrastructure Resources into an Existing Stack}}
The general form of the command is:
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi stack import [--protect=false] [--generate-code=false] [--out file_path]  \
<resource-type> <new-resource-name> <resource-id> [-s stack-name] [other-flags]
</syntaxhighlight>
The command requires a stack to import into. If <code>-s stack-name</code> is specified, that stack will be used, otherwise the active stack to import into. The stack name must be in the "<code><org-name>/<stack-name></code>" format. <font color=darkkhaki>Does <org-name>/<project-name>/<stack-name> work?</font> An empty stack can be created with <code>[[#pulumi_stack_init|pulumi stack init]]</code> command.
To figure out how to get <code>resource-type</code>, see: {{Internal|Pulumi_Resource#Type|Resource Type}}
<code>new-resource-name</code> is the name the resource will be imported under, into the stack, not the name of existing resource.
<code>resource-id</code> is the ID of the infrastructure resource in the infrastructure platform. This is how the resource is identified.
The process is by default interactive. The command will ask whether to perform the import. To automatically approve, use the <code>--yes</code> option.
A definition for each resource will be printed to stdout in the language used by the project associated with the stack. These definitions should be added to the Pulumi program. For reasons behind this, see [[Pulumi_Programming_Model#Importing_.28Adopting.29_an_Infrastructure_Resource|Pulumi Programming Model &#124; Importing (Adopting) an Infrastructure Resource]].
The resources are protected from deletion by default. Should you want to import your resource(s) without protection, you can pass
<code>--protect=false</code> as an argument to the command. This will leave all resources unprotected.
Example:
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi stack import datadog:index/dashboard:Dashboard 'Adopted Dashboard' 44h-7e6-vaa
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


=Project Operations=
Another import examples:
==New Project==
* [[Managing_Datadog_with_Pulumi#Importing_an_Externally_Created_Dashboard|Import an externally created Datadog Dashboard]]
Create a new [[Pulumi_Concepts#Project|project]] and [[Pulumi_Concepts#Stack|stack]] from [[Pulumi_Concepts#Stack|template]].
* [[Managing_Datadog_with_Pulumi#Importing_an_Externally_Created_DashboardJson|Import an externally created Datadog DashboardJson]]
 
The resources to be imported may be specified into a JSON file instead of command line arguments:
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi stack import --file stack.json
</syntaxhighlight>
 
To see how import fits into the Pulumi programming model see: {{Internal|Pulumi_Programming_Model#Importing_.28Adopting.29_an_Infrastructure_Resource|Pulumi Programming Model &#124; Importing (Adopting) an Infrastructure Resource}}
 
==Import the Entire Stack as JSON==
It is possible to export a stack as JSON, edit it and the import it in bulk:
 
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi new
pulumi stack export --stack my-org/my-stack > ./my-stack.json
# edit ./my-stack.json
cat ./my-stack.json | pulumi stack import --stack my-org/my-stack
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>
=Plugin Operations=
=Plugin Operations=
==List==
==List==
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi plugin ls
pulumi plugin ls
</syntaxhighlight>
=Apply Infrastructure=
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pulumi up
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>

Latest revision as of 22:19, 22 April 2022

External

Internal

Overview

Global Options

-s|--stack

--non-interactive

Disable interactive mode for all commands.

It seems that if used without --yes, it fails:

pulumi update --non-interactive --stack my-org/my-project/my-stack
error: --yes must be passed in to proceed when running in non-interactive mode

If both --non-interactive and --yes are used together, there seems to be a little less output than if --yes is used alone.

--yes

Automatically approve and perform the update after previewing it. It is sufficient to use it with --non-interactive.

Authentication and Login

Identity Info

Dumps identity, backend name and URL, Open Directory groups, etc.

pulumi whoami --verbose

This reads ~/.pulumi/credentials.json.

Login

https://www.pulumi.com/docs/reference/cli/pulumi_login/
pulumi login [--cloud-url https://something.example.com]

Without argument, logs into the Pulumi-managed backend. Credentials are cached locally and can be viewed with ~/.pulumi/credentials.json.

State can be maintained in different places, as follows:

  • For a "https://" URL, the command line process will access the remote backend via REST.
  • For a "file://" URL, the state is managed locally.
  • For a "s3://" URL, state is maintained in an S3 bucket.
  • For a "gs://" URL, state is maintained in an GCP bucket.
  • For a "azblob://" URL, state is maintained in an Azure blob.

Login Options

-c|--cloud-url

A cloud URL to log in to. Then, what does pulumi login https:/... mean and how is different from the same command with an extra --cloud-url?

--local

--local is a shortcut for:

pulumi login file://~

Logout

pulumi logout
pulumi logout --all

Options

--all

Logout of all backends.

Environment Info

pulumi about

displays information about the current Pulumi environment including the client version, installed plugins, current stack, backend, etc.

Log Location

Displayed in the output of pulumi about. In a location similar to /var/folders/pf/t_bwclcn4mv3kq49ks14_12c0000gn/T/ b.

Organization Operations

Organization Info

Display details for a specific organization:

pulumi org get <org-name>

List Organizations

List all organizations visible to the user:

pulumi org ls

Project Operations

Projects provide namespaces for stacks.

List Projects for a Given Organization

org=my-org; pulumi stack ls --all -C ~ | grep "^${org}" | sed -e 's/^.*\/\(.*\)\/.*$/\1/' | uniq | sort

New Project

https://www.pulumi.com/docs/reference/cli/pulumi_new/

pulumi new

Create a new project and stack from a template, initialize the local metadata and the backend state.

If no template is provided, a list of suggested templates will be presented, so they can be selected interactively.

The command must be invoked inside an empty directory. The directory will become the root of the project, and will host Pulumi.yaml, Pulumi.<stack-name>.yaml and language specific artifacts. An interactive command line loop will require the project name, which defaults to the name of the directory, description, stack name in the <org-name>/<stack-name> format, and then any configuration elements declared in the template.config subtree of the template's Pulumi.yaml file. The command creates basic scaffolding based on the cloud and language specified.

The command will create one empty stack, which will automatically become the active stack.

If Python is used, the command creates a new virtual environment and automatically downloads dependencies. The project layout is similar to this one. Full syntax:

pulumi new [template|url] [flags]

Example:

pulumi new https://github.com/some-org/pulumi-templates/tree/master/datadog-python

An AWS Python project:

pulumi new aws-python

Project Update Dry Run

pulumi preview [-s some-stack --non-interactive]

Without an -s argument, the command operates on the active stack. The Python stdout output in the program will be sent to the command stdout.

Project Update

https://www.pulumi.com/docs/reference/cli/pulumi_up/

Project deployment is initiated with:

pulumi up|update

The command operates on the active stack. The Python stdout output in the program will be sent to the command stdout.

Example:

pulumi up|update -y -s some_stack --non-interactive

The command evaluates the program and determines resource updates to make. It first does a preview, and tells the user what is going to happen, from the point of view of creating, updating or deleting resources. If choosing "details", the user can inspect individual attributes of the resource. For more details see:

What Happens when Code is Applied to Platform?

Run, expecting no changes, assuming the logic is idempotent. If there are changes, the command will detect the changes, and it will fail without applying the changes.

pulumi up|update -y -s some_stack --non-interactive --expect-no-changes

Options

-s|--stack

The name of the stack to operate on. Defaults to the current stack.

-y|--yes

Automatically approve and perform the update after previewing it.

--expect-no-changes

Return an error if any changes occur during this update. The changes will not be applied.

Dry Run

See pulumi preview above.

Stack Operations

Pulumi Stacks

pulumi stack <command> must be run from a project directory, which is a directory that contains a Pulumi.yaml file. If it not run from a directly containing Pulumi.yaml, it will apply to the current project.

List Stacks

Display the list associated with the current project.

pulumi stack ls

⚠️ -s <stack-name> has no effect when used with pulumi stack ls.

List the Active Stack for the Project

Use pulumi stack ls. The active stack is marked with an asterisk in the command output.

ls Options

--j|--json

Emit output as JSON.

-a|--all

List all stacks instead of just stacks for the current project.

-o|--organization

Filter returned stacks to those in a specific organization.

-p|--project

Filter returned stacks to those with a specific project name.

-t|--tag

Filter returned stacks to those in a specific tag (tag-name or tag-name=tag-value)

Display Stack Resources

Brief view:

pulumi stack [-s <org>/<project>/<stack>]

JSON dump.

pulumi stack [-s <org>/<project>/<stack>] export

Switch the Workspace to a Given Stack

Select the current (active) stack for the project.

pulumi stack select

Selecting a stack allows you to use commands like config, preview, and update without needing to type the stack name each time. If no stack argument is supplied, you will be prompted to select one interactively. If operating within an organization, the stack name must be prefixed by the organization name.

pulumi stack select --create --secrets-provider=passphrase <org-name>/<stack-name>

Options:

  • --create: If selected stack does not exist, create it. It probably creates the "desired state" but does not apply anything yet.
  • --secrets-provider: Use with --create flag, The type of the provider that should be used to encrypt and decrypt secrets. Possible choices: default, passphrase, awskms, azurekeyvault, gcpkms, hashivault, default "passphrase".

Create Stack

A stack may be created "empty", when no corresponding infrastructure resources have been created in the backed infrastructure platform, or fully initialized, when the backend infrastructure resources are also created at the time of stack creation.

An empty stack can be created as part of a new project creation sequence, as result of the pulumi new command. pulumi new command creates a default empty stack, so creating additional stacks makes sense if the project was bootstrapped manually and no default stack was created, or we need more than one stack in the project. For an existing project, an empty stack can be create with the pulumi stack init command, described in detail below. A fully initialized stack is created as result of the pulumi up command. Note that a project may contain multiple stacks, and of those, there is one active stack at any moment.

pulumi stack init

pulumi stack init should be used when you need to create an empty stack within the context of an already existing project. The name of the stack must be specified as argument:

pulumi stack init <stack-name>

⚠️ If Pulumi is used within the context of an organization, and without specifying additional information, the stack will be created in the user account of the user running the command. This may not be something you necessarily want. To create the stack in the organization instead, name the stack using <org-name>/<stack-name> naming pattern:

pulumi stack init <org-name>/<stack-name>

Example:

pulumi stack init my-org/my-stack

The command runs in non-interactive mode, no stdin confirmation is required.

The stack, once created, is ready for updates. As mentioned above, the stack is empty, it has no corresponding infrastructure resources stored in the backend, but it can become a target of a deployment initiated with the pulumi update command. Stack creation also means creation of a Pulumi.<stack-name>.yaml in the project directory and the initialization of the corresponding empty stack, devoid of resources, in the backend:

{
    "version": 1,
    "deployment": {
        "manifest": {
            "time": "0001-01-01T00:00:00Z",
            "magic": "",
            "version": ""
        }
    }
}

The command also initializes the local workspace state, if not already initialized.

pulumi stack select --create

Alternatively, a stack that does not exist can be created when it is "selected", if the --create option is used:

pulumi stack select --create --secrets-provider=passphrase <org-name>/<stack-name>

Rename Stack

pulumi stack rename <org>/<new-stack-name>

where the <new-stack-name> is the simple (not fully qualified) name. Renaming will change the name of the stack settings file Pulumi.<stack-name>.yaml file accordingly.

The stack project can be renamed by passing the fully-qualified stack name.

Because renaming a stack will change the value of getStack() inside a Pulumi program, if this name is used as part of a resource's name, the next pulumi up will want to delete the old resource and create a new copy. For now, if you don't want these changes to be applied, you should rename your stack back to its previous name.

Export a Stack

The stack metadata in a raw format (JSON) can be displayed with:

pulumi stack export

Exporting a stack is not a standard workflow, and it should be used with caution.

pulumi stack export [--file stack.json] # by default will send the content to stdout

Edit Stack State

Resources and be individually deleted and renamed by manipulating the stack's state. Also, protected resources can be "unprotected":

Unprotect Resource in Stack State

pulumi state unprotect [--stack <org>/<stack-name>] <resource-URN>

Example:

pulumi state unprotect --stack my-org/dd.test.adopted.blue 'urn:pulumi:dd.test.adopted.blue::datadog-dashboards::datadog:index/dashboardJson:DashboardJson::dashboardJson'

More details about resource URN are available here:

Pulumi Resource URN

Refresh Stack State

Reads the infrastructure platform state and updates the corresponding stack state. The command compares the current stack's resource state with the state known to exist in the actual cloud provider. Any such changes are adopted into the current stack. Note that if the program text isn't updated accordingly, subsequent updates may still appear to be out of synch with respect to the cloud provider's source of truth.

pulumi refresh

Destroy a Stack

pulumi destroy

Without an -s argument, the command operates on the active stack.

For the difference between deleting and destroying a stack, see:

Destroying vs. Deleting a Stack

Options

--non-interactive

Disables interactive mode. Note that --yes must be passed in to proceed when running in non-interactive mode.

--exclude-protected

Destroy all unprotected resources and preserve protected resources.

pulumi destroy --exclude-protected

Remove (Delete) a Stack

Removes (deletes) a stack and the associated local stack settings file. You should destroy the stack first. For the difference between deleting and destroying a stack, see:

Destroying vs. Deleting a Stack
pulumi stack rm some_org/some_stack

There are situation when Pulumi will refuse to delete the stack because the stack still has resources, but an attempting to destroy the stack fails - maybe because the resources were deleted externally and the stack got out of sync. In that situation, if you are sure there are no infrastructure resources associated with the stack you can force delete the stack:

 
pulumi stack rm some_org/some_stack  --force

Remove (Delete) a Stack without Deleting Associated Infrastructure Resources

There are situations when a stack must be deleted, but not the associated resources. This is the case when external resources are adopted, for example.

pulumi stack rm --force some_org/some_stack

This command does not removes the managed infrastructure resources.

Options

--non-interactive

Disables interactive mode. Note that --yes must be passed in to proceed when running in non-interactive mode.

-f|--force

Forces deletion of the stack, leaving behind any resources managed by the stack. See forced deletion above.

Stack Configuration Operations

pulumi config manages stack settings files. Without an -s argument, the command operates on the active stack.

List Configuration Values

Display the configuration value for the current stack. If -s <stack-name> is specified, use that stack instead.

pulumi config [-s <stack-name>]

Set a Configuration Value

pulumi config -s some-stack --non-interactive set some_key some_value
pulumi config set --path ... some_value

Stack Output Operations

The concepts behind stack outputs are described here:

Pulumi Stack Outputs

Show Stack Output Properties

Show a stack's output properties:

pulumi stack output [--show-secrets] [--stack <org>/<stack-name>]

Some resource properties are considered secret, and not displayed unless --show-secrets is used.

To display a specific output:

pulumi stack output <property-name>

Show an Individual Output Property

pulumi stack output <property-key> --stack <org-name>/<stak-name>| jq

Set an Individual Output Property

It does not seem possible to do from command line, the only way to be done is through program, using pulumi.export() and not modifying any other resource.

Options

--show-secrets

--json

Stack Tags

Pulumi Concepts | Tags

Display Stack Tags

https://www.pulumi.com/docs/reference/cli/pulumi_stack_tag_ls/

The command displays stack tags for the active stack:

pulumi stack tag ls

Set Custom Tags

pulumi stack tag set <name> <value>

Did not work. COME BACK TO THIS: https://www.pulumi.com/docs/intro/concepts/stack/#stack-tags

Get Specific Tags

pulumi stack tag get <name>
pulumi stack tag get gitHub:owner

Delete Tag

pulumi stack tag rm <name>

Import Individual External Resources into a Stack

https://www.pulumi.com/docs/reference/cli/pulumi_import/

The import command can be used to adopt individual external resources, not created with Pulumi, to be managed via a Pulumi stack. Importing (adopting) a resource is not a standard workflow, and it should be used with caution. The same command can be used to import the JSON representation of the whole stack.

The conceptual aspects of adopting resources are addressed here:

Importing Infrastructure Resources into an Existing Stack

The general form of the command is:

pulumi stack import [--protect=false] [--generate-code=false] [--out file_path]  \
 <resource-type> <new-resource-name> <resource-id> [-s stack-name] [other-flags]

The command requires a stack to import into. If -s stack-name is specified, that stack will be used, otherwise the active stack to import into. The stack name must be in the "<org-name>/<stack-name>" format. Does <org-name>/<project-name>/<stack-name> work? An empty stack can be created with pulumi stack init command.

To figure out how to get resource-type, see:

Resource Type

new-resource-name is the name the resource will be imported under, into the stack, not the name of existing resource.

resource-id is the ID of the infrastructure resource in the infrastructure platform. This is how the resource is identified.

The process is by default interactive. The command will ask whether to perform the import. To automatically approve, use the --yes option.

A definition for each resource will be printed to stdout in the language used by the project associated with the stack. These definitions should be added to the Pulumi program. For reasons behind this, see Pulumi Programming Model | Importing (Adopting) an Infrastructure Resource.

The resources are protected from deletion by default. Should you want to import your resource(s) without protection, you can pass --protect=false as an argument to the command. This will leave all resources unprotected.

Example:

pulumi stack import datadog:index/dashboard:Dashboard 'Adopted Dashboard' 44h-7e6-vaa

Another import examples:

The resources to be imported may be specified into a JSON file instead of command line arguments:

pulumi stack import --file stack.json

To see how import fits into the Pulumi programming model see:

Pulumi Programming Model | Importing (Adopting) an Infrastructure Resource

Import the Entire Stack as JSON

It is possible to export a stack as JSON, edit it and the import it in bulk:

pulumi stack export --stack my-org/my-stack > ./my-stack.json
# edit ./my-stack.json
cat ./my-stack.json | pulumi stack import --stack my-org/my-stack

Plugin Operations

List

pulumi plugin ls