2019-04-04 20:22:47 +02:00
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---
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layout: "docs"
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page_title: "Attributes as Blocks - Configuration Language"
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sidebar_current: "docs-config-attr-as-blocks"
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description: |-
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For historical reasons, certain arguments within resource blocks can use either
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block or attribute syntax.
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---
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# Attributes as Blocks
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2019-05-06 22:07:54 +02:00
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-> **Note:** This page is an appendix to the Terraform documentation, and is
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outside the normal navigation hierarchy. Most users do not need to know the full
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details of the behavior described below.
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## Summary
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Many resource types use repeatable nested blocks to manage collections of
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sub-objects related to the primary resource.
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Rarely, some resource types _also_ support an argument with the same name as a
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nested block type, and will purge any sub-objects of that type if that argument
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is set to an empty list (`<ATTR> = []`).
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Most users do not need to know any further details of this "nested block or
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empty list" behavior. However, read further if you need to:
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- Use Terraform's [JSON syntax](/docs/configuration/syntax-json.html) with this
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type of resource.
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- Create a reusable module that wraps this type of resource.
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## Details
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2019-04-04 20:22:47 +02:00
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In Terraform v0.12 and later, the language makes a distinction between
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[argument syntax and nested block syntax](/docs/configuration/syntax.html#arguments-and-blocks)
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within blocks:
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* Argument syntax sets a named argument for the containing object. If the
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attribute has a default value then an explicitly-specified value entirely
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overrides that default.
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* Nested block syntax represents a related child object of the container that
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has its own set of arguments. Where multiple such objects are possible, multiple
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blocks of the same type can be present. If the nested attributes themselves
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have default values, they are honored for each nested block separately,
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merging in with any explicitly-defined arguments.
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The distinction between these is particularly important for
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[JSON syntax](/docs/configuration/syntax-json.html)
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because the same primitive JSON constructs (lists and objects) will be
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interpreted differently depending on whether a particular name is an argument
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or a nested block type.
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However, in some cases existing provider features were relying on the
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conflation of these two concepts in the language of Terraform v0.11 and earlier,
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using nested block syntax in most cases but using argument syntax to represent
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explicitly the idea of removing all existing objects of that type, since the
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2019-06-13 16:36:14 +02:00
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absence of any blocks was interpreted as "ignore any existing objects".
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2019-04-04 20:22:47 +02:00
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The information on this page only applies to certain special arguments that
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were relying on this usage pattern prior to Terraform v0.12. The documentation
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for each of those features links to this page for details of the special usage
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patterns that apply. In all other cases, use either argument or nested block
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syntax as directed by the examples in the documentation for a particular
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resource type.
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## Defining a Fixed Object Collection Value
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When working with resource type arguments that behave in this way, it is valid
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and we recommend to use the nested block syntax whenever defining a fixed
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collection of objects:
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```hcl
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example {
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foo = "bar"
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}
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example {
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foo = "baz"
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}
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```
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The above implicitly specifies a two-element list of objects assigned to the
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`example` argument, treating it as if it were a nested block type.
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If you need to explicitly call for zero `example` objects, you must use the
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argument syntax with an empty list:
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```hcl
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example = []
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```
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These two forms cannot be mixed; there cannot be both explicitly zero `example`
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objects and explicit single `example` blocks declared at the same time.
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For true nested blocks where this special behavior does not apply, assigning
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`[]` using argument syntax is not valid. The normal way to specify zero objects
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of a type is to write no nested blocks at all.
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## Arbitrary Expressions with Argument Syntax
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Although we recommend using block syntax for simple cases for readability, the
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names that work in this mode _are_ defined as arguments, and so it is possible
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to use argument syntax to assign arbitrary dynamic expressions to them, as
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long as the expression has the expected result type:
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```hcl
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example = [
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for name in var.names: {
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foo = name
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}
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]
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```
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```hcl
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# Not recommended, but valid: a constant list-of-objects expression
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example = [
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{
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foo = "bar"
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},
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{
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foo = "baz"
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},
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]
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```
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Because of the rule that argument declarations like this fully override any
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default value, when creating a list-of-objects expression directly the usual
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handling of optional arguments does not apply, so all of the arguments must be
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assigned a value, even if it's an explicit `null`:
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```hcl
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example = [
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{
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# Cannot omit foo in this case, even though it would be optional in the
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# nested block syntax.
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foo = null
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},
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]
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```
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If you are writing a reusable module that allows callers to pass in a list of
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objects to assign to such an argument, you may wish to use the `merge` function
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to populate any attributes the user didn't explicitly set, in order to give
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the module user the effect of optional arguments:
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```hcl
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example = [
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for ex in var.examples: merge({
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foo = null # (or any other suitable default value)
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}, ex)
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]
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```
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For the arguments that use the attributes-as-blocks usage mode, the above is
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a better pattern than using
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[`dynamic` blocks](/docs/configuration/expressions.html#dynamic-blocks)
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because the case where the
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caller provides an empty list will result in explicitly assigning an empty
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list value, rather than assigning no value at all and thus retaining and
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ignoring any existing objects. `dynamic` blocks are required for
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dynamically-generating _normal_ nested blocks, though.
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## In JSON syntax
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Arguments that use this special mode are specified in JSON syntax always using
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the [JSON expression mapping](/docs/configuration/syntax-json.html#expression-mapping)
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to produce a list of objects.
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The interpretation of these values in JSON syntax is, therefore, equivalent
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to that described under _Arbitrary Expressions with Argument Syntax_ above,
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but expressed in JSON syntax instead.
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Due to the ambiguity of the JSON syntax, there is no way to distinguish based
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on the input alone between argument and nested block usage, so the JSON syntax
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cannot support the nested block processing mode for these arguments. This is,
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unfortunately, one necessary concession on the equivalence between native syntax
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and JSON syntax made pragmatically for compatibility with existing provider
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design patterns. Providers may phase out such patterns in future major releases.
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