# It's redundant to write an expression that is just a single template # interpolation with another expression inside, like "${foo}", but it # was required before Terraform v0.12 and so there are lots of existing # examples out there using that style. # # We are generating warnings for that situation in order to guide those # who are following old examples toward the new idiom. variable "triggers" { type = "map" # WARNING: Quoted type constraints are deprecated } provider "null" { foo = "${var.triggers["foo"]}" # WARNING: Interpolation-only expressions are deprecated } resource "null_resource" "a" { triggers = "${var.triggers}" # WARNING: Interpolation-only expressions are deprecated connection { type = "ssh" host = "${var.triggers["host"]}" # WARNING: Interpolation-only expressions are deprecated } provisioner "local-exec" { single = "${var.triggers["greeting"]}" # WARNING: Interpolation-only expressions are deprecated # No warning for this one, because there's more than just one interpolation # in the template. template = " ${var.triggers["greeting"]} " wrapped = ["${var.triggers["greeting"]}"] # WARNING: Interpolation-only expressions are deprecated } } module "foo" { source = "./foo" foo = "${var.foo}" # WARNING: Interpolation-only expressions are deprecated } data "null_data_source" "b" { inputs = { host = "${var.triggers["host"]}" # WARNING: Interpolation-only expressions are deprecated } has_computed_default = "${var.foo}" # WARNING: Interpolation-only expressions are deprecated } output "output" { value = "${var.foo}" # WARNING: Interpolation-only expressions are deprecated } locals { foo = "${var.foo}" # WARNING: Interpolation-only expressions are deprecated }