--- layout: "language" page_title: "Backend Type: gcs" sidebar_current: "docs-backends-types-standard-gcs" description: |- Terraform can store the state remotely, making it easier to version and work with in a team. --- # gcs Stores the state as an object in a configurable prefix in a pre-existing bucket on [Google Cloud Storage](https://cloud.google.com/storage/) (GCS). The bucket must exist prior to configuring the backend. This backend supports [state locking](/docs/language/state/locking.html). ~> **Warning!** It is highly recommended that you enable [Object Versioning](https://cloud.google.com/storage/docs/object-versioning) on the GCS bucket to allow for state recovery in the case of accidental deletions and human error. ## Example Configuration ```hcl terraform { backend "gcs" { bucket = "tf-state-prod" prefix = "terraform/state" } } ``` ## Data Source Configuration ```hcl data "terraform_remote_state" "foo" { backend = "gcs" config = { bucket = "terraform-state" prefix = "prod" } } resource "template_file" "bar" { template = "${greeting}" vars { greeting = "${data.terraform_remote_state.foo.greeting}" } } ``` ## Authentication IAM Changes to buckets are [eventually consistent](https://cloud.google.com/storage/docs/consistency#eventually_consistent_operations) and may take upto a few minutes to take effect. Terraform will return 403 errors till it is eventually consistent. ### Running Terraform on your workstation. If you are using terraform on your workstation, you will need to install the Google Cloud SDK and authenticate using [User Application Default Credentials](https://cloud.google.com/sdk/gcloud/reference/auth/application-default). User ADCs do [expire](https://developers.google.com/identity/protocols/oauth2#expiration) and you can refresh them by running `gcloud auth application-default login`. ### Running Terraform on Google Cloud If you are running terraform on Google Cloud, you can configure that instance or cluster to use a [Google Service Account](https://cloud.google.com/compute/docs/authentication). This will allow Terraform to authenticate to Google Cloud without having to bake in a separate credential/authentication file. Make sure that the scope of the VM/Cluster is set to cloud-platform. ### Running Terraform outside of Google Cloud If you are running terraform outside of Google Cloud, generate a service account key and set the `GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS` environment variable to the path of the service account key. Terraform will use that key for authentication. ### Impersonating Service Accounts Terraform can impersonate a Google Service Account as described [here](https://cloud.google.com/iam/docs/creating-short-lived-service-account-credentials). A valid credential must be provided as mentioned in the earlier section and that identity must have the `roles/iam.serviceAccountTokenCreator` role on the service account you are impersonating. ## Configuration variables The following configuration options are supported: * `bucket` - (Required) The name of the GCS bucket. This name must be globally unique. For more information, see [Bucket Naming Guidelines](https://cloud.google.com/storage/docs/bucketnaming.html#requirements). * `credentials` / `GOOGLE_BACKEND_CREDENTIALS` / `GOOGLE_CREDENTIALS` - (Optional) Local path to Google Cloud Platform account credentials in JSON format. If unset, [Google Application Default Credentials](https://developers.google.com/identity/protocols/application-default-credentials) are used. The provided credentials must have Storage Object Admin role on the bucket. **Warning**: if using the Google Cloud Platform provider as well, it will also pick up the `GOOGLE_CREDENTIALS` environment variable. * `impersonate_service_account` - (Optional) The service account to impersonate for accessing the State Bucket. You must have `roles/iam.serviceAccountTokenCreator` role on that account for the impersonation to succeed. If you are using a delegation chain, you can specify that using the `impersonate_service_account_delegates` field. Alternatively, this can be specified using the `GOOGLE_IMPERSONATE_SERVICE_ACCOUNT` environment variable. * `impersonate_service_account_delegates` - (Optional) The delegation chain for an impersonating a service account as described [here](https://cloud.google.com/iam/docs/creating-short-lived-service-account-credentials#sa-credentials-delegated). * `access_token` - (Optional) A temporary [OAuth 2.0 access token] obtained from the Google Authorization server, i.e. the `Authorization: Bearer` token used to authenticate HTTP requests to GCP APIs. This is an alternative to `credentials`. If both are specified, `access_token` will be used over the `credentials` field. * `prefix` - (Optional) GCS prefix inside the bucket. Named states for workspaces are stored in an object called `/.tfstate`. * `encryption_key` / `GOOGLE_ENCRYPTION_KEY` - (Optional) A 32 byte base64 encoded 'customer supplied encryption key' used to encrypt all state. For more information see [Customer Supplied Encryption Keys](https://cloud.google.com/storage/docs/encryption#customer-supplied).