2014-07-28 19:43:00 +02:00
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---
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page_title: Output Values - Configuration Language
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description: Output values are the return values of a Terraform module.
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2014-07-28 19:43:00 +02:00
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---
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2018-05-06 04:53:38 +02:00
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# Output Values
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2014-07-28 19:43:00 +02:00
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Output values make information about your infrastructure available on the
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command line, and can expose information for other Terraform configurations to
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use. Output values are similar to return values in programming languages.
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2020-12-17 17:53:43 +01:00
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> **Hands-on:** Try the [Output Data From
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> Terraform](https://learn.hashicorp.com/tutorials/terraform/outputs)
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> tutorial on HashiCorp Learn.
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Output values have several uses:
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- A child module can use outputs to expose a subset of its resource attributes
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to a parent module.
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- A root module can use outputs to print certain values in the CLI output after
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running `terraform apply`.
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- When using [remote state](/language/state/remote), root module outputs can be
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accessed by other configurations via a
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[`terraform_remote_state` data source](/language/state/remote-state-data).
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Resource instances managed by Terraform each export attributes whose values
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can be used elsewhere in configuration. Output values are a way to expose some
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of that information to the user of your module.
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2014-07-28 19:43:00 +02:00
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2018-12-11 01:14:33 +01:00
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-> **Note:** For brevity, output values are often referred to as just "outputs"
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when the meaning is clear from context.
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2018-05-06 04:53:38 +02:00
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## Declaring an Output Value
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Each output value exported by a module must be declared using an `output`
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block:
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2017-04-05 17:29:27 +02:00
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```hcl
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output "instance_ip_addr" {
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value = aws_instance.server.private_ip
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}
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```
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The label immediately after the `output` keyword is the name, which must be a
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valid [identifier](/language/syntax/configuration#identifiers). In a root module, this name is
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displayed to the user; in a child module, it can be used to access the output's
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value.
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The `value` argument takes an [expression](/language/expressions)
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whose result is to be returned to the user. In this example, the expression
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refers to the `private_ip` attribute exposed by an `aws_instance` resource
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defined elsewhere in this module (not shown). Any valid expression is allowed
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as an output value.
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2019-12-17 13:33:11 +01:00
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-> **Note:** Outputs are only rendered when Terraform applies your plan. Running
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`terraform plan` will not render outputs.
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2019-03-22 23:08:55 +01:00
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## Accessing Child Module Outputs
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In a parent module, outputs of child modules are available in expressions as
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`module.<MODULE NAME>.<OUTPUT NAME>`. For example, if a child module named
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`web_server` declared an output named `instance_ip_addr`, you could access that
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value as `module.web_server.instance_ip_addr`.
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## Optional Arguments
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`output` blocks can optionally include `description`, `sensitive`, and `depends_on` arguments, which are described in the following sections.
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2020-12-17 00:10:49 +01:00
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<a id="description"></a>
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### `description` — Output Value Documentation
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Because the output values of a module are part of its user interface, you can
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briefly describe the purpose of each value using the optional `description`
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argument:
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```hcl
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output "instance_ip_addr" {
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value = aws_instance.server.private_ip
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description = "The private IP address of the main server instance."
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}
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```
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The description should concisely explain the
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purpose of the output and what kind of value is expected. This description
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string might be included in documentation about the module, and so it should be
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written from the perspective of the user of the module rather than its
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maintainer. For commentary for module maintainers, use comments.
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<a id="sensitive"></a>
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### `sensitive` — Suppressing Values in CLI Output
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An output can be marked as containing sensitive material using the optional
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`sensitive` argument:
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```hcl
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output "db_password" {
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value = aws_db_instance.db.password
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description = "The password for logging in to the database."
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sensitive = true
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}
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```
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2021-04-14 15:04:40 +02:00
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Terraform will hide values marked as sensitive in the messages from
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`terraform plan` and `terraform apply`. In the following scenario, our root
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module has an output declared as sensitive and a module call with a
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sensitive output, which we then use in a resource attribute.
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```hcl
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# main.tf
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module "foo" {
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source = "./mod"
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}
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resource "test_instance" "x" {
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some_attribute = module.mod.a # resource attribute references a sensitive output
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}
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output "out" {
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value = "xyz"
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sensitive = true
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}
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# mod/main.tf, our module containing a sensitive output
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output "a" {
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value = "secret"
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sensitive = true
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}
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```
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When we run a plan or apply, the sensitive value is redacted from output:
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```
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Terraform will perform the following actions:
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# test_instance.x will be created
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+ resource "test_instance" "x" {
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+ some_attribute = (sensitive)
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}
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Plan: 1 to add, 0 to change, 0 to destroy.
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Changes to Outputs:
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+ out = (sensitive value)
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```
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-> **Note:** In Terraform versions prior to Terraform 0.14, setting an output
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value in the root module as sensitive would prevent Terraform from showing its
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value in the list of outputs at the end of `terraform apply`. However, the
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value could still display in the CLI output for other reasons, like if the
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value is referenced in an expression for a resource argument.
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Terraform will still record sensitive values in the [state](/language/state),
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and so anyone who can access the state data will have access to the sensitive
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values in cleartext. For more information, see
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[_Sensitive Data in State_](/language/state/sensitive-data).
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2020-12-17 00:10:49 +01:00
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<a id="depends_on"></a>
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2019-03-22 23:08:55 +01:00
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### `depends_on` — Explicit Output Dependencies
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Since output values are just a means for passing data out of a module, it is
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usually not necessary to worry about their relationships with other nodes in
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the dependency graph.
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However, when a parent module accesses an output value exported by one of its
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child modules, the dependencies of that output value allow Terraform to
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correctly determine the dependencies between resources defined in different
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modules.
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2018-05-06 04:53:38 +02:00
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Just as with
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[resource dependencies](/language/resources/behavior#resource-dependencies),
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Terraform analyzes the `value` expression for an output value and automatically
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determines a set of dependencies, but in less-common cases there are
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dependencies that cannot be recognized implicitly. In these rare cases, the
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`depends_on` argument can be used to create additional explicit dependencies:
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```hcl
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output "instance_ip_addr" {
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value = aws_instance.server.private_ip
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description = "The private IP address of the main server instance."
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depends_on = [
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# Security group rule must be created before this IP address could
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# actually be used, otherwise the services will be unreachable.
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aws_security_group_rule.local_access,
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]
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}
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```
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2018-05-06 04:53:38 +02:00
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The `depends_on` argument should be used only as a last resort. When using it,
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always include a comment explaining why it is being used, to help future
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maintainers understand the purpose of the additional dependency.
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