Update our instance template to include metadata_startup_script, to
match our instance resource. Also, we've resolved the diff errors around
metadata.startup-script, and people want to use that to create startup
scripts that don't force a restart when they're changed, so let's stop
disallowing it.
Also, we had a bunch of calls to `schema.ResourceData.Set` that ignored
the errors, so I added error handling for those calls. It's mostly
bundled with this code because I couldn't be sure whether it was the
root of bugs or not, so I took care of it while addressing the startup
script issue.
Update our instance template to include metadata_startup_script, to
match our instance resource. Also, we've resolved the diff errors around
metadata.startup-script, and people want to use that to create startup
scripts that don't force a restart when they're changed, so let's stop
disallowing it.
Also, we had a bunch of calls to `schema.ResourceData.Set` that ignored
the errors, so I added error handling for those calls. It's mostly
bundled with this code because I couldn't be sure whether it was the
root of bugs or not, so I took care of it while addressing the startup
script issue.
This change doesn't make much sense now, as projects are read-only
anyways, so there's not a lot that importing really does for you--you
can already reference pre-existing projects just by defining them in
your config.
But as we discussed #10425, this change made more and more sense. In a
world where projects can be created, we can no longer reference
pre-existing projects just by defining them in config. We get that
ability back by making projects importable.
Google's Backend Services gives users control over the session affinity modes.
Let's allow Terraform users to leverage this option.
We don't change the default value ("NONE", as provided by Google).
Google's Backend Services gives users control over the session affinity modes.
Let's allow Terraform users to leverage this option.
We don't change the default value ("NONE", as provided by Google).