speakeasy
terraform-provider-aws
speakeasy | terraform-provider-aws | |
---|---|---|
7 | 101 | |
140 | 9,467 | |
12.9% | 0.5% | |
9.8 | 10.0 | |
1 day ago | 1 day ago | |
Go | Go | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | Mozilla Public License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
speakeasy
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Generating Code Without Generating Technical Debt?
I’ve built conviction that code generation only gets useful in the long term when it is entirely deterministic, or filtered through humans. Otherwise it is almost always technical debt. Hence LLM code generation products are a cool toy, but no sensible teams will use them without an amazing “Day 2” workflow.
As an example, in my day job (https://speakeasyapi.dev), we sell code generation products using the OpenAPI specification to generate downstream artefacts (language SDKs, terraform providers, markdown documentation). The determinism makes it useful — API updates propagate continuously from server code, to specifications, then to the SDKs / providers / docs site. There are no breaking changes because the pipeline is deterministic and humans are in control of the API at the start. The code generation itself is just a means to an end : removing boilerplate effort and language differences by driving it from a source of truth (server api routes/types). Continuously generated, it is not debt.
We’ve put a lot of effort into trying to make an LLM agent useful in this context. However giving them control of generated code directly means it’s hard to keep the “no breaking changes”, and “consistency” restrictions that’s needed to make code generation useful.
The trick we’ve landed on to get utility out of an LLM in a code generation task, is to restrict it to manipulating a strictly typed interface document, such that it can only do non-breaking things to code (e.g. adjust comments / descriptions / examples) by making changes through this interface.
- Show HN: OpenAPI to Terraform Provider Code Generation
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HashiCorp silently amend Terraform Registry TOS
In my mind the analagous behaviour would be if the golang checksum database added in license terms that stated "you need to abide by a BSL to use data from this service". What that actually would mean is so nebulous that it feels threatening.
[0] Source: https://registry.terraform.io/v1/providers/airbytehq/airbyte...
[1] Source: https://github.com/airbytehq/terraform-provider-airbyte/tree... gzipped : ~300 resources, ~300 data sources
(NB: in airbyte's case the TF Provider was generated from a ~150Kb OpenAPI spec via https://speakeasyapi.dev: implying docs could be compressed even more)
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OpenAPI v4 Proposal
I'm working on a company https://speakeasyapi.dev/ with the goal helping companies in this ecosystem get great production quality client sdks, terraform providers, cli(s) and all the developer surfaces you may want supported for our API. We also manage the spec and publishing workflow for you so all you have to do is build your API and we'll do the rest.
Feel free to email me at [email protected] or join our slack (https://join.slack.com/t/speakeasy-dev/shared_invite/zt-1cwb...) . We're in open beta and working with a few great companies already and we'd be happy for you to try out the platform for free!
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Idiomatic Golang Client SDK Generation for OpenAPI APIs
Hi all I am a founding engineer for a API Experience company called Speakeasy - speakeasyapi.dev and we have recently released a Client SDK Generator for APIs using OpenAPI 3.0.X documents (soon to support 3.1). The generator will generate idiomatic Golang SDKs (along with other languages) that feel natural to use, easy to mock, and just work. The generator is free to use and can be run via a standalone golang built CLI with no external dependencies that can be easily installed as a binary or via homebrew (mac & linux). Check it out here https://github.com/speakeasy-api/speakeasy. If you have any questions or want to get in touch to see how Speakeasy can help you improve your APIs, just let me know!
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Idiomatic SDKs for OpenAPI
The generator has been battle tested on thousands of APIs and we are sharing the results in our github repo. If you want to try it out on your own, download the CLI or brew install and get started in minutes:
terraform-provider-aws
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How To Manage an Amazon Bedrock Agent Using Terraform
In this blog post, we will automate the deployment of the basic forex rate assistant in Terraform using the resources that were recently released in v5.47.0 of the Terraform AWS Provider. Let's start by looking at the AWS resources in the AWS Management Console.
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How To Manage Amazon GuardDuty in AWS Organizations Using Terraform
⚠ There is currently an issue where the additional_configuration block order causes differences when applying the Terraform configuration without making any changes.
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AWS EKS: From IRSA to Pod Identity With Terraform
For Terraform, instead, a new version of the AWS module supports a dedicated resource.
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Authorization and Amazon Verified Permissions - A New Way to Manage Permissions Part XII: Terraform
If we check the support for the Terraform AWS Provider here (state for the date of publishing this article), we will see that the service is not yet fully supported. Last week, after more than half a year, support for creating a policy store was added. Additionally, we have the configuration to add template policies. However, the identity source is in the form of a PR draft, and there is no PR yet for the ability to create policies.
- 10 Ways for Kubernetes Declarative Configuration Management
- obsidian terraform code support (hcl)
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HashiCorp silently amend Terraform Registry TOS
https://github.com/hashicorp/terraform-provider-aws/issues/3...
The size is what you get when you add every single AWS Go client into one binary.
Each service client like 1-2MB. But when you have 200 services....
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Unveiling the Speed Mystery: Investigating Slow S3 Uploads from AWS EKS Pods
Issue with EC2 Instance Metadata running inside Container
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A Cloud Development Troubleshooting Treasure Hunt
Well, at least we now have a promising lead. Some diligent googling and browsing through Github issues in the AWS provider project yielded no directly related findings. However, I did come across a few recent bug reports about the recent change AWS made regarding the treatment of public buckets. And interestingly, they described precisely the behavior I was encountering.
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Changing VPC flow Log parameters plan also shows VPC nacls changing multiple values to null
Latest version of TF but seems to be same Issue as this which has already been submitted : https://github.com/hashicorp/terraform-provider-aws/issues/10611
What are some alternatives?
fern - 🌿 Stripe-level SDKs and Docs for your API
crossplane - The Cloud Native Control Plane
openapi-codegen - A tool for generating code base on an OpenAPI schema.
terraform-provider-lastpass - Terraform Lastpass provider
terraform-provider-stateful - Generic abstract stateful resources to manage arbitrary objects by executing arbitrary commands
cognito-custom-email-sender-lambda - AWS Cognito custom email sender Lambda trigger
taxilang - Taxi is a language for describing APIs, data models, and how everything relates
rover - Interactive Terraform visualization. State and configuration explorer.
para - Para - community plugin manager and a "swiss army knife" for Terraform/Terragrunt - just 1 tool to facilitate all your workflows.
terraform-provider-opsgenie - Terraform OpsGenie provider
oatx - Generator-less JSONSchema types straight from OpenAPI spec
terraform-provider-snowflake - Terraform provider for managing Snowflake accounts