pulumi/tests/testdata/codegen/nested-module/go/foo/provider.go

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// Code generated by test DO NOT EDIT.
// *** WARNING: Do not edit by hand unless you're certain you know what you are doing! ***
package foo
import (
"context"
"reflect"
"github.com/pulumi/pulumi/sdk/v3/go/pulumi"
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"nested-module/foo/internal"
)
type Provider struct {
pulumi.ProviderResourceState
}
// NewProvider registers a new resource with the given unique name, arguments, and options.
func NewProvider(ctx *pulumi.Context,
name string, args *ProviderArgs, opts ...pulumi.ResourceOption) (*Provider, error) {
if args == nil {
args = &ProviderArgs{}
}
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opts = internal.PkgResourceDefaultOpts(opts)
var resource Provider
err := ctx.RegisterResource("pulumi:providers:foo", name, args, &resource, opts...)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return &resource, nil
}
type providerArgs struct {
}
// The set of arguments for constructing a Provider resource.
type ProviderArgs struct {
}
func (ProviderArgs) ElementType() reflect.Type {
return reflect.TypeOf((*providerArgs)(nil)).Elem()
}
type ProviderInput interface {
pulumi.Input
ToProviderOutput() ProviderOutput
ToProviderOutputWithContext(ctx context.Context) ProviderOutput
}
func (*Provider) ElementType() reflect.Type {
[codegen/go] Remove ResourcePtr input/output types (#8449) These changes remove the `Ptr` variants of input/ouptut types for resources. A `TPtr` input or output is normally generated for `T` if `T` is present in an `optional(input(T))` or `optional(output(T))` and if the Go representation for `T` is not nilable. The generation of `Ptr` variants for resource types breaks the latter rule: the canonical representation of a resource type named `Foo` is a pointer to a struct type named `Foo` (i.e. `*Foo`). `Foo` itself is not a resource, as it does not implement the Go `Resource` interface. Because this representation already accommodates `nil` to indicate the lack of a value, we need not generate `FooPtr{Input,Output}` types. Besides being unnecessary, the implementation of `Ptr` types for resources was incorrect. Rather than using `**Foo` as their element type, these types use `*Foo`--identical to the element type used for the normal input/output types. Furthermore, the generated code for at least `FooOutput.ToFooPtrOutputWithContext` and `FooPtrOutput.Elem` was incorrect, making these types virtually unusable in practice. Finally, these `Ptr` types should never appear on input/output properties in practice, as the logic we use to generate input and output type references never generates them for `optional({input,output}(T)). Instead, it generates references to the standard input/output types. Though this is _technically_ a breaking change--it changes the set of exported types for any package that defines resources--I believe that in practice it will be invisible to users for the reasons stated above. These types are not usable, and were never referenced. This is preparatory work for #7943.
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return reflect.TypeOf((**Provider)(nil)).Elem()
}
func (i *Provider) ToProviderOutput() ProviderOutput {
return i.ToProviderOutputWithContext(context.Background())
}
func (i *Provider) ToProviderOutputWithContext(ctx context.Context) ProviderOutput {
return pulumi.ToOutputWithContext(ctx, i).(ProviderOutput)
}
type ProviderOutput struct{ *pulumi.OutputState }
func (ProviderOutput) ElementType() reflect.Type {
[codegen/go] Remove ResourcePtr input/output types (#8449) These changes remove the `Ptr` variants of input/ouptut types for resources. A `TPtr` input or output is normally generated for `T` if `T` is present in an `optional(input(T))` or `optional(output(T))` and if the Go representation for `T` is not nilable. The generation of `Ptr` variants for resource types breaks the latter rule: the canonical representation of a resource type named `Foo` is a pointer to a struct type named `Foo` (i.e. `*Foo`). `Foo` itself is not a resource, as it does not implement the Go `Resource` interface. Because this representation already accommodates `nil` to indicate the lack of a value, we need not generate `FooPtr{Input,Output}` types. Besides being unnecessary, the implementation of `Ptr` types for resources was incorrect. Rather than using `**Foo` as their element type, these types use `*Foo`--identical to the element type used for the normal input/output types. Furthermore, the generated code for at least `FooOutput.ToFooPtrOutputWithContext` and `FooPtrOutput.Elem` was incorrect, making these types virtually unusable in practice. Finally, these `Ptr` types should never appear on input/output properties in practice, as the logic we use to generate input and output type references never generates them for `optional({input,output}(T)). Instead, it generates references to the standard input/output types. Though this is _technically_ a breaking change--it changes the set of exported types for any package that defines resources--I believe that in practice it will be invisible to users for the reasons stated above. These types are not usable, and were never referenced. This is preparatory work for #7943.
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return reflect.TypeOf((**Provider)(nil)).Elem()
}
func (o ProviderOutput) ToProviderOutput() ProviderOutput {
return o
}
func (o ProviderOutput) ToProviderOutputWithContext(ctx context.Context) ProviderOutput {
return o
}
func init() {
pulumi.RegisterInputType(reflect.TypeOf((*ProviderInput)(nil)).Elem(), &Provider{})
pulumi.RegisterOutputType(ProviderOutput{})
}