terraform/website/docs/language/modules/sources.mdx

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---
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page_title: Module Sources
description: >-
The source argument tells Terraform where to find child modules's
configurations in locations like GitHub, the Terraform Registry, Bitbucket,
Git, Mercurial, S3, and GCS.
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---
# Module Sources
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The `source` argument in [a `module` block](/language/modules/syntax)
tells Terraform where to find the source code for the desired child module.
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Terraform uses this during the module installation step of `terraform init`
to download the source code to a directory on local disk so that it can be
used by other Terraform commands.
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> **Hands-on:** Try our HashiCorp Learn tutorials to use modules from [the
> registry](https://learn.hashicorp.com/tutorials/terraform/module-use)
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> or [locally](https://learn.hashicorp.com/tutorials/terraform/module-create).
The module installer supports installation from a number of different source
types, as listed below.
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- [Local paths](#local-paths)
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- [Terraform Registry](#terraform-registry)
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- [GitHub](#github)
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- [Bitbucket](#bitbucket)
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- Generic [Git](#generic-git-repository), [Mercurial](#generic-mercurial-repository) repositories
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- [HTTP URLs](#http-urls)
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- [S3 buckets](#s3-bucket)
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- [GCS buckets](#gcs-bucket)
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- [Modules in Package Sub-directories](#modules-in-package-sub-directories)
Each of these is described in the following sections. Module source addresses
use a _URL-like_ syntax, but with extensions to support unambiguous selection
of sources and additional features.
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We recommend using local file paths for closely-related modules used primarily
for the purpose of factoring out repeated code elements, and using a native
Terraform module registry for modules intended to be shared by multiple calling
configurations. We support other sources so that you can potentially distribute
Terraform modules internally with existing infrastructure.
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Many of the source types will make use of "ambient" credentials available
when Terraform is run, such as from environment variables or credentials files
in your home directory. This is covered in more detail in each of the following
sections.
We recommend placing each module that is intended to be re-usable in the root
of its own repository or archive file, but it is also possible to
[reference modules from subdirectories](#modules-in-package-sub-directories).
## Local Paths
Local path references allow for factoring out portions of a configuration
within a single source repository.
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```hcl
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module "consul" {
source = "./consul"
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}
```
A local path must begin with either `./` or `../` to indicate that a local
path is intended, to distinguish from
[a module registry address](#terraform-registry).
Local paths are special in that they are not "installed" in the same sense
that other sources are: the files are already present on local disk (possibly
as a result of installing a parent module) and so can just be used directly.
Their source code is automatically updated if the parent module is upgraded.
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initwd: Error message for local paths escaping module packages Our module installer has a somewhat-informal idea of a "module package", which is some external thing we can go fetch in order to add one or more modules to the current configuration. Our documentation doesn't talk much about it because most users seem to have found the distinction between external and local modules pretty intuitive without us throwing a lot of funny terminology at them, but there are some situations where the distinction between a module and a module package are material to the end-user. One such situation is when using an absolute rather than relative filesystem path: we treat that as an external package in order to make the resulting working directory theoretically "portable" (although users can do various other things to defeat that), and so Terraform will copy the directory into .terraform/modules in the same way as it would download and extract a remote archive package or clone a git repository. A consequence of this, though, is that any relative paths called from inside a module loaded from an absolute path will fail if they try to traverse upward into the parent directory, because at runtime we're actually running from a copy of the directory that's been taking out of its original context. A similar sort of situation can occur in a truly remote module package if the author accidentally writes a "../" source path that traverses up out of the package root, and so this commit introduces a special error message for both situations that tries to be a bit clearer about there being a package boundary and use that to explain why installation failed. We would ideally have made escaping local references like that illegal in the first place, but sadly we did not and so when we rebuilt the module installer for Terraform v0.12 we ended up keeping the previous behavior of just trying it and letting it succeed if there happened to somehow be a matching directory at the given path, in order to remain compatible with situations that had worked by coincidence rather than intention. For that same reason, I've implemented this as a replacement error message we will return only if local module installation was going to fail anyway, and thus it only modifies the error message for some existing error situations rather than introducing new error situations. This also includes some light updates to the documentation to say a little more about how Terraform treats absolute paths, though aiming not to get too much into the weeds about module packages since it's something that most users can get away with never knowing.
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Note that Terraform does not consider an _absolute_ filesystem path (starting
with a slash, a drive letter, or similar) to be a local path. Instead,
Terraform will treat that in a similar way as a remote module and copy it into
the local module cache. An absolute path is a "package" in the sense described
in [Modules in Package Sub-directories](#modules-in-package-sub-directories).
We don't recommend using absolute filesystem paths to refer to Terraform
modules, because it will tend to couple your configuration to the filesystem
layout of a particular computer.
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## Terraform Registry
A module registry is the native way of distributing Terraform modules for use
across multiple configurations, using a Terraform-specific protocol that
has full support for module versioning.
[Terraform Registry](https://registry.terraform.io/) is an index of modules
shared publicly using this protocol. This public registry is the easiest way
to get started with Terraform and find modules created by others in the
community.
You can also use a
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[private registry](/registry/private), either
via the built-in feature from Terraform Cloud, or by running a custom
service that implements
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[the module registry protocol](/registry/api-docs).
Modules on the public Terraform Registry can be referenced using a registry
source address of the form `<NAMESPACE>/<NAME>/<PROVIDER>`, with each
module's information page on the registry site including the exact address
to use.
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```hcl
module "consul" {
source = "hashicorp/consul/aws"
version = "0.1.0"
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}
```
The above example will use the
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[Consul module for AWS](https://registry.terraform.io/modules/hashicorp/consul/aws)
from the public registry.
For modules hosted in other registries, prefix the source address with an
additional `<HOSTNAME>/` portion, giving the hostname of the private registry:
```hcl
module "consul" {
source = "app.terraform.io/example-corp/k8s-cluster/azurerm"
version = "1.1.0"
}
```
If you are using the SaaS version of Terraform Cloud, its private
registry hostname is `app.terraform.io`. If you use a self-hosted Terraform
Enterprise instance, its private registry hostname is the same as the host
where you'd access the web UI and the host you'd use when configuring
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the [Terraform Cloud CLI integration](/cli/cloud).
Registry modules support versioning. You can provide a specific version as shown
in the above examples, or use flexible
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[version constraints](/language/modules/syntax#version).
You can learn more about the registry at the
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[Terraform Registry documentation](/registry/modules/use#using-modules).
To access modules from a private registry, you may need to configure an access
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token [in the CLI config](/cli/config/config-file#credentials). Use the
same hostname as used in the module source string. For a private registry
within Terraform Cloud, use the same authentication token as you would
use with the Enterprise API or command-line clients.
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## GitHub
Terraform will recognize unprefixed `github.com` URLs and interpret them
automatically as Git repository sources.
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```hcl
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module "consul" {
source = "github.com/hashicorp/example"
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}
```
The above address scheme will clone over HTTPS. To clone over SSH, use the
following form:
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```hcl
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module "consul" {
source = "git@github.com:hashicorp/example.git"
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}
```
These GitHub schemes are treated as convenient aliases for
[the general Git repository address scheme](#generic-git-repository), and so
they obtain credentials in the same way and support the `ref` argument for
selecting a specific revision. You will need to configure credentials in
particular to access private repositories.
## Bitbucket
Terraform will recognize unprefixed `bitbucket.org` URLs and interpret them
automatically as BitBucket repositories:
```hcl
module "consul" {
source = "bitbucket.org/hashicorp/terraform-consul-aws"
}
```
This shorthand works only for public repositories, because Terraform must
access the BitBucket API to learn if the given repository uses Git or Mercurial.
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Terraform treats the result either as [a Git source](#generic-git-repository)
or [a Mercurial source](#generic-mercurial-repository) depending on the
repository type. See the sections on each version control type for information
on how to configure credentials for private repositories and how to specify
a specific revision to install.
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## Generic Git Repository
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Arbitrary Git repositories can be used by prefixing the address with the
special `git::` prefix. After this prefix, any valid
[Git URL](https://git-scm.com/docs/git-clone#_git_urls)
can be specified to select one of the protocols supported by Git.
For example, to use HTTPS or SSH:
```hcl
module "vpc" {
source = "git::https://example.com/vpc.git"
}
module "storage" {
source = "git::ssh://username@example.com/storage.git"
}
```
Terraform installs modules from Git repositories by running `git clone`, and
so it will respect any local Git configuration set on your system, including
credentials. To access a non-public Git repository, configure Git with
suitable credentials for that repository.
If you use the SSH protocol then any configured SSH keys will be used
automatically. This is the most common way to access non-public Git
repositories from automated systems because it allows access to private
repositories without interactive prompts.
If using the HTTP/HTTPS protocol, or any other protocol that uses
username/password credentials, configure
[Git Credentials Storage](https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Git-Tools-Credential-Storage)
to select a suitable source of credentials for your environment.
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If your Terraform configuration will be used within [Terraform Cloud](https://www.hashicorp.com/products/terraform),
only SSH key authentication is supported, and
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[keys can be configured on a per-workspace basis](/cloud-docs/workspaces/settings/ssh-keys).
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### Selecting a Revision
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By default, Terraform will clone and use the default branch (referenced by
`HEAD`) in the selected repository. You can override this using the
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`ref` argument. The value of the `ref` argument can be any reference that would be accepted
by the `git checkout` command, such as branch, SHA-1 hash (short or full), or tag names.
For a full list of the possible values, see
[Git Tools - Revision Selection](https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Git-Tools-Revision-Selection#_single_revisions)
in [the Git Book](https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2).
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```hcl
# select a specific tag
module "vpc" {
source = "git::https://example.com/vpc.git?ref=v1.2.0"
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}
# directly select a commit using its SHA-1 hash
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module "storage" {
source = "git::https://example.com/storage.git?ref=51d462976d84fdea54b47d80dcabbf680badcdb8"
}
```
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### Shallow Clone
For larger repositories you may prefer to make only a shallow clone in order
to reduce the time taken to retrieve the remote repository.
The `depth` URL argument corresponds to
[the `--depth` argument to `git clone`](https://git-scm.com/docs/git-clone#Documentation/git-clone.txt---depthltdepthgt),
telling Git to create a shallow clone with the history truncated to only
the specified number of commits.
However, because shallow clone requires different Git protocol behavior,
setting the `depth` argument makes Terraform pass your [`ref` argument](#selecting-a-revision),
if any, to
[the `--branch` argument to `git clone`](https://git-scm.com/docs/git-clone#Documentation/git-clone.txt---branchltnamegt)
instead. That means it must specify a named branch or tag known to the remote
repository, and that raw commit IDs are not acceptable.
Because Terraform only uses the most recent selected commit to find the source
code of your specified module, it is not typically useful to set `depth`
to any value other than `1`.
### "scp-like" address syntax
When using Git over SSH, we recommend using the `ssh://`-prefixed URL form
for consistency with all of the other URL-like git address forms.
You may opt to use the alternative "scp-like" syntax instead, in which case you
must omit the `ssh://` scheme part and include only the `git::` part.
For example:
```hcl
module "storage" {
source = "git::username@example.com:storage.git"
}
```
If you use the `ssh://` URL scheme then Terraform will assume that the colon
marks the beginning of a port number, rather than the beginning of the path.
This matches how Git itself interprets these different forms, aside from
the Terraform-specific `git::` selector prefix.
## Generic Mercurial Repository
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You can use arbitrary Mercurial repositories by prefixing the address with the
special `hg::` prefix. After this prefix, any valid
[Mercurial URL](https://www.mercurial-scm.org/repo/hg/help/urls)
can be specified to select one of the protocols supported by Mercurial.
```hcl
module "vpc" {
source = "hg::http://example.com/vpc.hg"
}
```
Terraform installs modules from Mercurial repositories by running `hg clone`, and
so it will respect any local Mercurial configuration set on your system,
including credentials. To access a non-public repository, configure Mercurial
with suitable credentials for that repository.
If you use the SSH protocol then any configured SSH keys will be used
automatically. This is the most common way to access non-public Mercurial
repositories from automated systems because it allows access to private
repositories without interactive prompts.
If your Terraform configuration will be used within [Terraform Cloud](https://www.hashicorp.com/products/terraform),
only SSH key authentication is supported, and
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[keys can be configured on a per-workspace basis](/cloud-docs/workspaces/settings/ssh-keys).
### Selecting a Revision
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You can select a non-default branch or tag using the optional `ref` argument:
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```hcl
module "vpc" {
source = "hg::http://example.com/vpc.hg?ref=v1.2.0"
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}
```
## HTTP URLs
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When you use an HTTP or HTTPS URL, Terraform will make a `GET` request to
the given URL, which can return _another_ source address. This indirection
allows using HTTP URLs as a sort of "vanity redirect" over a more complicated
module source address.
Terraform will append an additional query string argument `terraform-get=1` to
the given URL before sending the `GET` request, allowing the server to
optionally return a different result when Terraform is requesting it.
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If the response is successful (`200`-range status code), Terraform looks in
the following locations in order for the next address to access:
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- The value of a response header field named `X-Terraform-Get`.
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- If the response is an HTML page, a `meta` element with the name `terraform-get`:
```html
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<meta name="terraform-get" content="github.com/hashicorp/example" />
```
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In either case, the result is interpreted as another module source address
using one of the forms documented elsewhere on this page.
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If an HTTP/HTTPS URL requires authentication credentials, use a `.netrc`
file in your home directory to configure these. For information on this format,
see [the documentation for using it in `curl`](https://everything.curl.dev/usingcurl/netrc).
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### Fetching archives over HTTP
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As a special case, if Terraform detects that the URL has a common file
extension associated with an archive file format then it will bypass the
special `terraform-get=1` redirection described above and instead just use
the contents of the referenced archive as the module source code:
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```hcl
module "vpc" {
source = "https://example.com/vpc-module.zip"
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}
```
The extensions that Terraform recognizes for this special behavior are:
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- `zip`
- `tar.bz2` and `tbz2`
- `tar.gz` and `tgz`
- `tar.xz` and `txz`
If your URL _doesn't_ have one of these extensions but refers to an archive
anyway, use the `archive` argument to force this interpretation:
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```hcl
module "vpc" {
source = "https://example.com/vpc-module?archive=zip"
}
```
-> **Note:** If the content of the archive file is a directory, you will need to
include that directory in the module source. Read the section on
[Modules in Package Sub-directories](#modules-in-package-sub-directories) for more
information.
## S3 Bucket
You can use archives stored in S3 as module sources using the special `s3::`
prefix, followed by
[an S3 bucket object URL](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/userguide/UsingBucket.html).
```hcl
module "consul" {
source = "s3::https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/examplecorp-terraform-modules/vpc.zip"
}
```
-> **Note:** Buckets in AWS's us-east-1 region must use the hostname `s3.amazonaws.com` (instead of `s3-us-east-1.amazonaws.com`).
The `s3::` prefix causes Terraform to use AWS-style authentication when
accessing the given URL. As a result, this scheme may also work for other
services that mimic the S3 API, as long as they handle authentication in the
same way as AWS.
The resulting object must be an archive with one of the same file
extensions as for [archives over standard HTTP](#fetching-archives-over-http).
Terraform will extract the archive to obtain the module source tree.
The module installer looks for AWS credentials in the following locations,
preferring those earlier in the list when multiple are available:
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- The `AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID` and `AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY` environment variables.
- The default profile in the `.aws/credentials` file in your home directory.
- If running on an EC2 instance, temporary credentials associated with the
instance's IAM Instance Profile.
## GCS Bucket
You can use archives stored in Google Cloud Storage as module sources using the special `gcs::`
prefix, followed by
[a GCS bucket object URL](https://cloud.google.com/storage/docs/request-endpoints#typical).
For example
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- `gcs::https://www.googleapis.com/storage/v1/BUCKET_NAME/PATH_TO_MODULE`
- `gcs::https://www.googleapis.com/storage/v1/BUCKET_NAME/PATH/TO/module.zip`
```hcl
module "consul" {
source = "gcs::https://www.googleapis.com/storage/v1/modules/foomodule.zip"
}
```
The module installer uses Google Cloud SDK to authenticate with GCS. You can
use any of the following methods to set Google Cloud Platform credentials:
* Set the `GOOGLE_OAUTH_ACCESS_TOKEN` environment variable to a raw Google Cloud Platform OAuth access token.
* Enter the path of your service account key file in the `GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS` environment variable.
* If you're running Terraform from a GCE instance, default credentials are automatically available. See [Creating and Enabling Service Accounts](https://cloud.google.com/compute/docs/access/create-enable-service-accounts-for-instances) for Instances for more details.
* On your computer, you can make your Google identity available by running `gcloud auth application-default login`.
## Modules in Package Sub-directories
When the source of a module is a version control repository or archive file
(generically, a "package"), the module itself may be in a sub-directory relative
to the root of the package.
A special double-slash syntax is interpreted by Terraform to indicate that
the remaining path after that point is a sub-directory within the package.
For example:
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- `hashicorp/consul/aws//modules/consul-cluster`
- `git::https://example.com/network.git//modules/vpc`
- `https://example.com/network-module.zip//modules/vpc`
- `s3::https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/examplecorp-terraform-modules/network.zip//modules/vpc`
If the source address has arguments, such as the `ref` argument supported for
the version control sources, the sub-directory portion must be _before_ those
arguments:
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- `git::https://example.com/network.git//modules/vpc?ref=v1.2.0`
Terraform will still extract the entire package to local disk, but will read
the module from the subdirectory. As a result, it is safe for a module in
a sub-directory of a package to use [a local path](#local-paths) to another
module as long as it is in the _same_ package.