pulumi-automation-api

📁 pulumi/agent-skills 📅 Jan 28, 2026
79
总安装量
79
周安装量
#2864
全站排名
安装命令
npx skills add https://github.com/pulumi/agent-skills --skill pulumi-automation-api

Agent 安装分布

opencode 53
github-copilot 51
codex 47
gemini-cli 44
amp 38
claude-code 36

Skill 文档

Pulumi Automation API

When to Use This Skill

Invoke this skill when:

  • Orchestrating deployments across multiple Pulumi stacks
  • Embedding Pulumi operations in custom applications
  • Building self-service infrastructure platforms
  • Replacing fragile Bash/Makefile orchestration scripts
  • Creating custom CLIs for infrastructure management
  • Building web applications that provision infrastructure

What is Automation API

Automation API provides programmatic access to Pulumi operations. Instead of running pulumi up from the CLI, you call functions in your code that perform the same operations.

import * as automation from "@pulumi/pulumi/automation";

// Create or select a stack
const stack = await automation.LocalWorkspace.createOrSelectStack({
    stackName: "dev",
    projectName: "my-project",
    program: async () => {
        // Your Pulumi program here
    },
});

// Run pulumi up programmatically
const upResult = await stack.up({ onOutput: console.log });
console.log(`Update summary: ${JSON.stringify(upResult.summary)}`);

When to Use Automation API

Good Use Cases

Multi-stack orchestration:

When you split infrastructure into multiple focused projects, Automation API helps offset the added complexity by orchestrating operations across stacks:

infrastructure → platform → application
     ↓              ↓            ↓
   (VPC)      (Kubernetes)   (Services)

Automation API ensures correct sequencing without manual intervention.

Self-service platforms:

Build internal tools where developers request infrastructure without learning Pulumi:

  • Web portals for environment provisioning
  • Slack bots that create/destroy resources
  • Custom CLIs tailored to your organization

Embedded infrastructure:

Applications that provision their own infrastructure:

  • SaaS platforms creating per-tenant resources
  • Testing frameworks spinning up test environments
  • CI/CD systems with dynamic infrastructure needs

Replacing fragile scripts:

If you have Bash scripts or Makefiles stitching together multiple pulumi commands, Automation API provides:

  • Proper error handling
  • Type safety
  • Programmatic access to outputs

When NOT to Use

  • Single project with standard deployment needs
  • When you don’t need programmatic control over operations

Architecture Choices

Local Source vs Inline Source

Local Source – Pulumi program in separate files:

const stack = await automation.LocalWorkspace.createOrSelectStack({
    stackName: "dev",
    workDir: "./infrastructure",  // Points to existing Pulumi project
});

When to use:

  • Different teams maintain orchestrator vs Pulumi programs
  • Pulumi programs already exist
  • Want independent version control and release cycles
  • Platform team orchestrating application team’s infrastructure

Inline Source – Pulumi program embedded in orchestrator:

import * as aws from "@pulumi/aws";

const stack = await automation.LocalWorkspace.createOrSelectStack({
    stackName: "dev",
    projectName: "my-project",
    program: async () => {
        const bucket = new aws.s3.Bucket("my-bucket");
        return { bucketName: bucket.id };
    },
});

When to use:

  • Single team owns everything
  • Tight coupling between orchestration and infrastructure is desired
  • Distributing as compiled binary (no source files needed)
  • Simpler deployment artifact

Language Independence

The Automation API program can use a different language than the Pulumi programs it orchestrates:

Orchestrator (Go) → manages → Pulumi Program (TypeScript)

This enables platform teams to use their preferred language while application teams use theirs.

Common Patterns

Multi-Stack Orchestration

Deploy multiple stacks in dependency order:

import * as automation from "@pulumi/pulumi/automation";

async function deploy() {
    const stacks = [
        { name: "infrastructure", dir: "./infra" },
        { name: "platform", dir: "./platform" },
        { name: "application", dir: "./app" },
    ];

    for (const stackInfo of stacks) {
        console.log(`Deploying ${stackInfo.name}...`);

        const stack = await automation.LocalWorkspace.createOrSelectStack({
            stackName: "prod",
            workDir: stackInfo.dir,
        });

        await stack.up({ onOutput: console.log });
        console.log(`${stackInfo.name} deployed successfully`);
    }
}

async function destroy() {
    // Destroy in reverse order
    const stacks = [
        { name: "application", dir: "./app" },
        { name: "platform", dir: "./platform" },
        { name: "infrastructure", dir: "./infra" },
    ];

    for (const stackInfo of stacks) {
        console.log(`Destroying ${stackInfo.name}...`);

        const stack = await automation.LocalWorkspace.selectStack({
            stackName: "prod",
            workDir: stackInfo.dir,
        });

        await stack.destroy({ onOutput: console.log });
    }
}

Passing Configuration

Set stack configuration programmatically:

const stack = await automation.LocalWorkspace.createOrSelectStack({
    stackName: "dev",
    workDir: "./infrastructure",
});

// Set configuration values
await stack.setConfig("aws:region", { value: "us-west-2" });
await stack.setConfig("dbPassword", { value: "secret", secret: true });

// Then deploy
await stack.up();

Reading Outputs

Access stack outputs after deployment:

const upResult = await stack.up();

// Get all outputs
const outputs = await stack.outputs();
console.log(`VPC ID: ${outputs["vpcId"].value}`);

// Or from the up result
console.log(`Outputs: ${JSON.stringify(upResult.outputs)}`);

Error Handling

Handle deployment failures gracefully:

try {
    const result = await stack.up({ onOutput: console.log });

    if (result.summary.result === "failed") {
        console.error("Deployment failed");
        process.exit(1);
    }
} catch (error) {
    console.error(`Deployment error: ${error}`);
    throw error;
}

Parallel Stack Operations

When stacks are independent, deploy in parallel:

const independentStacks = [
    { name: "service-a", dir: "./service-a" },
    { name: "service-b", dir: "./service-b" },
    { name: "service-c", dir: "./service-c" },
];

await Promise.all(independentStacks.map(async (stackInfo) => {
    const stack = await automation.LocalWorkspace.createOrSelectStack({
        stackName: "prod",
        workDir: stackInfo.dir,
    });
    return stack.up({ onOutput: (msg) => console.log(`[${stackInfo.name}] ${msg}`) });
}));

Best Practices

Separate Configuration from Code

Externalize configuration into files or environment variables:

import * as fs from "fs";

interface DeployConfig {
    stacks: Array<{ name: string; dir: string; }>;
    environment: string;
}

const config: DeployConfig = JSON.parse(
    fs.readFileSync("./deploy-config.json", "utf-8")
);

for (const stackInfo of config.stacks) {
    const stack = await automation.LocalWorkspace.createOrSelectStack({
        stackName: config.environment,
        workDir: stackInfo.dir,
    });
    await stack.up();
}

This enables distributing compiled binaries without exposing source code.

Stream Output for Long Operations

Use onOutput callback for real-time feedback:

await stack.up({
    onOutput: (message) => {
        process.stdout.write(message);
        // Or send to logging system, websocket, etc.
    },
});

Quick Reference

Scenario Approach
Existing Pulumi projects Local source with workDir
New embedded infrastructure Inline source with program function
Different teams Local source for independence
Compiled binary distribution Inline source or bundled local
Multi-stack dependencies Sequential deployment in order
Independent stacks Parallel deployment with Promise.all

Related Skills

  • pulumi-best-practices: Code-level patterns for Pulumi programs

References