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Terraform Provider for Azure DevOps (Devops Resource Manager)

Gitter Go Report Card

The AzureRM Provider supports Terraform 0.12.x and later.

Usage Example

# Make sure to set the following environment variables:
#   AZDO_PERSONAL_ACCESS_TOKEN
#   AZDO_ORG_SERVICE_URL
provider "azuredevops" {
  version = ">= 0.0.1"
}

resource "azuredevops_project" "project" {
  project_name = "My Awesome Project"
  description  = "All of my awesomee things"
}

resource "azuredevops_git_repository" "repository" {
  project_id = azuredevops_project.project.id
  name       = "My Awesome Repo"
  initialization {
    init_type = "Clean"
  }
}

resource "azuredevops_build_definition" "build_definition" {
  project_id = azuredevops_project.project.id
  name       = "My Awesome Build Pipeline"
  path       = "\\"

  repository {
    repo_type   = "TfsGit"
    repo_id     = azuredevops_git_repository.repository.id
    branch_name = azuredevops_git_repository.repository.default_branch
    yml_path    = "azure-pipelines.yml"
  }
}

Developer Requirements

  • Terraform version 0.12.x +
  • Go version 1.13.x (to build the provider plugin)

If you're on Windows you'll also need:

If you what to use the makefile build strategy on Windows it's required to install

For GNU32 Make, make sure its bin path is added to PATH environment variable.*

For Git Bash for Windows, at the step of "Adjusting your PATH environment", please choose "Use Git and optional Unix tools from Windows Command Prompt".*

As described below we provide some PowerShell scripts to build the provider on Windows, without the requiremet to install any Unix based tools aside Go.

Developing the Provider

If you wish to work on the provider, you'll first need Go installed on your machine (version 1.13+ is required). You'll also need to correctly setup a GOPATH, as well as adding $GOPATH/bin to your $PATH.

Using the GOPATH model

First clone the repository to: $GOPATH/src/github.com/terraform-providers/terraform-provider-azuredevops

$ mkdir -p $GOPATH/src/github.com/terraform-providers && cd "$_"
$ git clone git@github.com:microsoft/terraform-provider-azuredevops.git
$ cd terraform-provider-azuredevops

Once you've cloned, run the ./scripts/build.sh and ./scripts/local-install.sh, as recommended here. These commands will sideload the plugin for Terraform.

Using a directory separate from GOPATH

The infrastructure supports building and testing the provider outside GOPATH in an arbitrary directory. In this scenario all required packages of the provider during build will be managed via the pkg in $GOPATH. As with the GOPATH Model, you can redefine the GOPATH environment variable to prevent existing packages in the current GOPATH directory from being changed.

Build using make

Once inside the provider directory, you can run make tools to install the dependent tooling required to compile the provider.

At this point you can compile the provider by running make build, which will build the provider and put the provider binary in the $GOPATH/bin directory.

$ make build
...
$ $GOPATH/bin/terraform-provider-azuredevops
...

You can also cross-compile if necessary:

GOOS=windows GOARCH=amd64 make build

In order to run the Unit Tests for the provider, you can run:

$ make test

The majority of tests in the provider are Acceptance Tests - which provisions real resources in Azure. It's possible to run the entire acceptance test suite by running make testacc - however it's likely you'll want to run a subset, which you can do using a prefix, by running:

make testacc SERVICE='resource' TESTARGS='-run=TestAccAzureRMResourceGroup' TESTTIMEOUT='60m'

Build using PowerShell scripts

If you like to develop on Windows, we provide a set of PowerShell scripts to build and test the provider. They don't offer the luxury of a Makefile environment but are quite sufficient to develop on Windows.

scripts\build.ps1

The build.ps1is used to build the provider. Aside this the script runs (if not skipped) the defined unit tests and is able to install the compiled provider locally.

Parameter Description
-SkipTests Skip running unit tests during build
-Install Install the provider locally, after a successful build
-DebugBuild Build the provider with extra debugging information
-GoMod Control the -mod build parameter: Valid values: '' (Empty string), 'vendor', 'readonly'

scripts\unittest.ps1

The script is used to execute unit tests. The script is also executed by build.ps1 if the -SkipTest are not specified.

Parameter Description
-TestFilter A GO regular expression which filters the test functions to be executed
-Tag Tests in the provider project are organized with GO build tags. The parameter accepts a list of tag names which should be tested.
-GoMod Control the -mod build parameter: Valid values: '' (Empty string), 'vendor', 'readonly'

scripts\acctest.ps1

The script is used to execute unit tests.

Parameter Description
-TestFilter A GO regular expression which filters the test functions to be executed
-Tag Tests in the provider project are organized with GO build tags. The parameter accepts a list of tag names which should be tested.
-GoMod Control the -mod build parameter: Valid values: '' (Empty string), 'vendor', 'readonly'

scripts\gofmtcheck.ps1

To validate if all .go files adhere to the required formatting rules, execute gofmtcheck.ps1

Parameter Description
-Fix Fix any formatting rule deviations automatically. If the parameter is not set, the script runs in report mode.

scripts\lint-check-go.ps1

Like with gofmtcheck.ps1 the script validate if all .go files adhere to the required formatting rules and if any style mistakes exist. In difference to gofmtcheck.ps1 the script uses Golint instead of Gofmt.

Environment variables for acceptance tests

The following Environment Variables must be set in your shell prior to running acceptance tests:

  • AZDO_ORG_SERVICE_URL
  • AZDO_PERSONAL_ACCESS_TOKEN
  • AZDO_DOCKERHUB_SERVICE_CONNECTION_EMAIL
  • AZDO_DOCKERHUB_SERVICE_CONNECTION_PASSWORD
  • AZDO_DOCKERHUB_SERVICE_CONNECTION_USERNAME
  • AZDO_GITHUB_SERVICE_CONNECTION_PAT
  • AZDO_TEST_AAD_USER_EMAIL

Note: Acceptance tests create real resources in Azure DevOps which often cost money to run.

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