2020-01-03 23:01:14 +01:00
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---
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2021-12-15 03:41:17 +01:00
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page_title: try - Functions - Configuration Language
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2020-01-03 23:01:14 +01:00
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description: |-
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The try function tries to evaluate a sequence of expressions given as
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arguments and returns the result of the first one that does not produce
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any errors.
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---
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# `try` Function
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`try` evaluates all of its argument expressions in turn and returns the result
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of the first one that does not produce any errors.
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This is a special function that is able to catch errors produced when evaluating
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its arguments, which is particularly useful when working with complex data
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structures whose shape is not well-known at implementation time.
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For example, if some data is retrieved from an external system in JSON or YAML
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format and then decoded, the result may have attributes that are not guaranteed
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to be set. We can use `try` to produce a normalized data structure which has
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a predictable type that can therefore be used more conveniently elsewhere in
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the configuration:
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```hcl
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locals {
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raw_value = yamldecode(file("${path.module}/example.yaml"))
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normalized_value = {
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name = tostring(try(local.raw_value.name, null))
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groups = try(local.raw_value.groups, [])
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}
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}
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```
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With the above local value expressions, configuration elsewhere in the module
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can refer to `local.normalized_value` attributes without the need to repeatedly
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check for and handle absent attributes that would otherwise produce errors.
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We can also use `try` to deal with situations where a value might be provided
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in two different forms, allowing us to normalize to the most general form:
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```hcl
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variable "example" {
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type = any
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}
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locals {
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example = try(
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[tostring(var.example)],
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tolist(var.example),
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)
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}
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```
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The above permits `var.example` to be either a list or a single string. If it's
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a single string then it'll be normalized to a single-element list containing
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that string, again allowing expressions elsewhere in the configuration to just
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assume that `local.example` is always a list.
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This second example contains two expressions that can both potentially fail.
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For example, if `var.example` were set to `{}` then it could be converted to
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neither a string nor a list. If `try` exhausts all of the given expressions
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without any succeeding, it will return an error describing all of the problems
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it encountered.
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We strongly suggest using `try` only in special local values whose expressions
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perform normalization, so that the error handling is confined to a single
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location in the module and the rest of the module can just use straightforward
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references to the normalized structure and thus be more readable for future
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maintainers.
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The `try` function can only catch and handle _dynamic_ errors resulting from
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access to data that isn't known until runtime. It will not catch errors
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relating to expressions that can be proven to be invalid for any input, such
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as a malformed resource reference.
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~> **Warning:** The `try` function is intended only for concise testing of the
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presence of and types of object attributes. Although it can technically accept
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any sort of expression, we recommend using it only with simple attribute
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references and type conversion functions as shown in the examples above.
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Overuse of `try` to suppress errors will lead to a configuration that is hard
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to understand and maintain.
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## Examples
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```
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> local.foo
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{
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"bar" = "baz"
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}
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> try(local.foo.bar, "fallback")
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baz
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> try(local.foo.boop, "fallback")
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fallback
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```
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The `try` function will _not_ catch errors relating to constructs that are
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provably invalid even before dynamic expression evaluation, such as a malformed
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reference or a reference to a top-level object that has not been declared:
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```
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> try(local.nonexist, "fallback")
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Error: Reference to undeclared local value
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A local value with the name "nonexist" has not been declared.
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```
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## Related Functions
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2021-12-15 03:41:17 +01:00
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* [`can`](/language/functions/can), which tries evaluating an expression and returns a
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2020-01-03 23:01:14 +01:00
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boolean value indicating whether it succeeded.
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