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<!--- Thanks so much for your contribution! If this is your first time contributing, please ensure that you have read the [CONTRIBUTING](https://github.com/pulumi/pulumi/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md) documentation. --> # Description <!--- Please include a summary of the change and which issue is fixed. Please also include relevant motivation and context. --> Updates Remote Automation API to use the new stable URLs for the Deployments API. Adds support for `inheritSettings` to allow inheriting deployment settings pre-existing on the stack. I've tested this manually by editing the automation-api-examples for remote deployments, but not sure of a great way to add automated tests since automation api doesn't yet have support for setting deployment settings. EDIT: I considered just setting up a static stack for this but abandoned it because of concerns around parallel runs. We can add automated tests for this once we support creating deployment settings with automation api (coming soon). Fixes #12739 Fixes #15518 ## Checklist - [x] I have run `make tidy` to update any new dependencies - [x] I have run `make lint` to verify my code passes the lint check - [x] I have formatted my code using `gofumpt` <!--- Please provide details if the checkbox below is to be left unchecked. --> - [ ] I have added tests that prove my fix is effective or that my feature works <!--- User-facing changes require a CHANGELOG entry. --> - [x] I have run `make changelog` and committed the `changelog/pending/<file>` documenting my change <!-- If the change(s) in this PR is a modification of an existing call to the Pulumi Cloud, then the service should honor older versions of the CLI where this change would not exist. You must then bump the API version in /pkg/backend/httpstate/client/api.go, as well as add it to the service. --> - [ ] Yes, there are changes in this PR that warrants bumping the Pulumi Cloud API version <!-- @Pulumi employees: If yes, you must submit corresponding changes in the service repo. --> |
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README.md
Pulumi Python SDK
The Pulumi Python SDK (pulumi) is the core package used when writing Pulumi programs in Python. It contains everything that you’ll need in order to interact with Pulumi resource providers and express infrastructure using Python code. Pulumi resource providers all depend on this library and express their resources in terms of the types defined in this module.
The Pulumi Python SDK requires a supported version of Python.
note: pip is required to install dependencies. If you installed Python from source, with an installer from python.org, or via Homebrew you should already have pip. If Python is installed using your OS package manager, you may have to install pip separately, see Installing pip/setuptools/wheel with Linux Package Managers. For example, on Debian/Ubuntu you must run sudo apt install python3-venv python3-pip.
Getting Started
The fastest way to get up and running is to choose from one of the following Getting Started guides: -aws -microsoft azure -google cloud -kubernetes
Pulumi Programming Model
The Pulumi programming model defines the core concepts you will use when creating infrastructure as code programs using Pulumi. Architecture & Concepts describes these concepts with examples available in Python. These concepts are made available to you in the Pulumi SDK.
The Pulumi SDK is available to Python developers as a Pip package distributed on PyPI . To learn more, refer to the Pulumi SDK Reference Guide.
The Pulumi programming model includes a core concept of Input and Output values, which are used to track how outputs of one resource flow in as inputs to another resource. This concept is important to understand when getting started with Python and Pulumi, and the [Inputs and Outputs] (https://www.pulumi.com/docs/intro/concepts/inputs-outputs/)documentation is recommended to get a feel for how to work with this core part of Pulumi in common cases.
The Pulumi Python Resource Model
Like most languages usable with Pulumi, Pulumi represents cloud resources as classes and Python programs can instantiate those classes. All classes that can be instantiated to produce actual resources derive from the pulumi.Resource class.