terraform-provider-aws
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terraform-provider-aws | zeal | |
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98 | 100 | |
9,410 | 11,007 | |
2.5% | 1.0% | |
10.0 | 8.1 | |
1 day ago | 13 days ago | |
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Mozilla Public License 2.0 | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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terraform-provider-aws
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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
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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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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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Converting Full Terraform Programs to Pulumi
> We're coming up on 10000 resources in our main Terraform repository and while there is definitely some friction, it's overall much better than having to hit the cloud API's to gather each of those states which would probably take at least an order of magnitude longer.
I don't think that's necessary true. Most cloud API's actually can return hundreds of records with 1 API calls, e.g. https://docs.aws.amazon.com/elasticloadbalancing/latest/APIR... has a maximum page size of 400.
If I manage the cloud resources via some custom tools and/or with some ansible-fu, I can decide to batch the API calls when it makes sense.
With terraform, it is not possible to do so (https://github.com/hashicorp/terraform-plugin-sdk/issues/66, https://github.com/hashicorp/terraform-provider-aws/issues/2...).
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HEADS UP: Terraform AWS Provider 5.0.0
Release notes - https://github.com/hashicorp/terraform-provider-aws/releases/tag/v5.0.0
The only footgun I know of is changing the behavior of RDS instances created from snapshots. Force replacement on snapshot_identifier change for DB cluster resources will fuck up your world if you use a data source for snapshot_identifier since yesterday it would ignore any updates and today it will happily destroy your database (and, because AWS, all of the automated snapshots thereof) when the data identifier changes out from under it. š
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Any tools out there, or better ways, to unit test IAM policy documents?
A while back I wrote a PR for the AWS provider to expose the policy simulator directly inside Terraform: https://github.com/hashicorp/terraform-provider-aws/pull/25569
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Weird warning after running pulumi preview
The reason you see that is because the AWS Classic provider (pulumi_aws) is built on top of the open-source terraform-provider-aws (via the Terraform bridge you identified), and terraform-provider-aws is emitting that notice at runtime. Not all Pulumi providers are built from Terraform providers, however, but some, like this one, still are. (There's a notice at the bottom of the page for each resource where this is the case.) It works like this:
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Script or software that automatically populate specific profile in ~/.aws/credentials
See: * https://github.com/hashicorp/terraform-provider-aws/issues/10491 * https://github.com/Sceptre/sceptre/issues/674
zeal
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DevDocs
There is already open source dash (https://zealdocs.or) although they don't provide Mac build because of an agreement to use some of dash's lists.
But you can build it on mac (https://github.com/zealdocs/zeal/wiki/Build-Instructions-for...)
There's also Zeal (https://zealdocs.org/) which is basically the same as Dash but open source and runs on non-Mac devices.
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How would you work effectively with an extremely slow 56Kbps connection?
For offline tech documentation you can use Zeal. Must have tool for poor internet connection places. Present in ubuntu repos. https://zealdocs.org/
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Simple Mobile Tools suite to be acquired by Israeli adware company
ads don't have to proprietary
here's one example of ads in FOSS https://github.com/zealdocs/zeal/issues/779
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Ask HN: How do I code offline for a week?
Thereās stuff like https://zealdocs.org/ that allow you to take all relevant documentation with you so offline coding will work.
If you just want to be productive, you could also bring a lot of books or downloaded tutorials on a drive.
Btw, make sure your drive is encrypted and you think of a way to backup your data so you donāt lose the offline progress.
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Memex is already here, itās just not evenly distributed
Iād suggest you look into KiwixĀ¹ and also ZealĀ².
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What's the Difference Between `ruby-doc.org` and `docs.ruby-lang.org`?
For offline documentation, I use Zeal (called Dash on macos) which looks/works almost identically to rubydoc.info but much faster since it's offline, has a standard interface for all installed language documentations, and only 1 global hotkey away while programming.
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Googling for answers costs you time
I highly recommend using local solutions to this local issue: Zeal[1] (aka Dash[2] on MacOS)
Load up the "docsets" of your languages (lightly edited HTML docs for indexing purposes) and use a global keyboard shortcut (F8 for me) to pull up Python/Postgres/Terraform docs, searching for the right function without internet query.
This isn't straight up applicable to all questions of course, but "How do I search regular expressions in Python again?" is now as easy as "re"
Note that the docsets can be converted from normal HTML ones via doc2dash[3], especially useful to load up custom docs like private providers.
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Zeal is an offline documentation browser for software developers
Here is the github discussion created by dash author explaining the deal https://github.com/zealdocs/zeal/issues/24#issue-17915169
Itās not widely advertised (probably this is the deal) but Zeal works fine on macOS, see this: https://github.com/zealdocs/zeal/wiki/Build-Instructions-for...
You donāt need to build it yourself, there is a brew formula.
What are some alternatives?
devdocs - API Documentation Browser
dash.nvim - ššØ Search Dash.app from your Neovim fuzzy finder. Built with Rust š¦ and Lua
crossplane - The Cloud Native Control Plane
terraform-provider-lastpass - Terraform Lastpass provider
dash-contrib-docset-feeds - A collection of Dash's user contributed docset feed for using with Zeal
cognito-custom-email-sender-lambda - AWS Cognito custom email sender Lambda trigger
rover - Interactive Terraform visualization. State and configuration explorer.
zeavim.vim - Zeal for Vim
terraform-provider-opsgenie - Terraform OpsGenie provider
Dash-iOS - Dash for iOS was discontinued. Please check out Dash for macOS instead.
terraform-docs-as-pdf - Complete Terraform documentation (core + all official providers) as PDF files. Updating nightly.
terraform-provider-snowflake - Terraform provider for managing Snowflake accounts