--- layout: "docs" page_title: "Command: push" sidebar_current: "docs-commands-push" description: |- The `terraform push` command is used to upload the Terraform configuration to HashiCorp's Atlas service for automatically managing your infrastructure in the cloud. --- # Command: push The `terraform push` command uploads your Terraform configuration to be managed by HashiCorp's [Atlas](https://atlas.hashicorp.com). By uploading your configuration to Atlas, Atlas can automatically run Terraform for you, will save all state transitions, will save plans, and will keep a history of all Terraform runs. This makes it significantly easier to use Terraform as a team: team members modify the Terraform configurations locally and continue to use normal version control. When the Terraform configurations are ready to be run, they are pushed to Atlas, and any member of your team can run Terraform with the push of a button. Atlas can also be used to set ACLs on who can run Terraform, and a future update of Atlas will allow parallel Terraform runs and automatically perform infrastructure locking so only one run is modifying the same infrastructure at a time. ## Usage Usage: `terraform push [options] [path]` The `path` argument is the same as for the [apply](/docs/commands/apply.html) command. The command-line flags are all optional. The list of available flags are: * `-module-upload=true` - If true (default), then the [modules](/docs/modules/index.html) being used are all locked at their current checkout and uploaded completely to Atlas. This prevents Atlas from running `terraform get` for you. * `-name=` - Name of the infrastructure configuration in Atlas. The format of this is: "username/name" so that you can upload configurations not just to your account but to other accounts and organizations. This setting can also be set in the configuration in the [Atlas section](/docs/configuration/atlas.html). * `-no-color` - Disables output with coloring * `-token=` - Atlas API token to use to authorize the upload. If blank or unspecified, the `ATLAS_TOKEN` environmental variable will be used. * `-vcs=true` - If true (default), then Terraform will detect if a VCS is in use, such as Git, and will only upload files that are comitted to version control. If no version control system is detected, Terraform will upload all files in `path` (parameter to the command). ## Packaged Files The files that are uploaded and packaged with a `push` are all the files in the `path` given as the parameter to the command, recursively. By default (unless `-vcs=false` is specified), Terraform will automatically detect when a VCS such as Git is being used, and in that case will only upload the files that are comitted. Because of this built-in intelligence, you don't have to worry about excluding folders such as ".git" or ".hg" usually. If Terraform doesn't detect a VCS, it will upload all files. The reason Terraform uploads all of these files is because Terraform cannot know what is and isn't being used for provisioning, so it uploads all the files to be safe. To exclude certain files, specify the `-exclude` flag when pushing, or specify the `exclude` parameter in the [Atlas configuration section](/docs/configuration/atlas.html). ## Remote State Requirement `terraform push` requires that [remote state](/docs/commands/remote-config.html) is enabled. The reasoning for this is simple: `terraform push` sends your configuration to be managed remotely. For it to keep the state in sync and for you to be able to easily access that state, remote state must be enabled instead of juggling local files. While `terraform push` sends your configuration to be managed by Atlas, the remote state backend _does not_ have to be Atlas. It can be anything as long as it is accessible by the public internet, since Atlas will need to be able to communicate to it. **Warning:** The credentials for accessing the remote state will be sent up to Atlas as well. Therefore, we recommend you use access keys that are restricted if possible.