90 lines
3.4 KiB
Plaintext
90 lines
3.4 KiB
Plaintext
---
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page_title: 'Command: 0.13upgrade'
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description: >-
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The 0.13upgrade subcommand updates existing configurations to use the new
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provider source features from Terraform 0.13.
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---
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# Command: 0.13upgrade
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The `terraform 0.13upgrade` command updates existing configuration to add an
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explicit `source` attribute for each provider used in a given module. The
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provider source settings are stored in a `required_providers` block.
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-> **This command is available only in Terraform v0.13 releases.** For more information, see [the Terraform v0.13 upgrade guide](/language/upgrade-guides/0-13).
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## Usage
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Usage: `terraform 0.13upgrade [options] [dir]`
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The primary purpose of the `0.13upgrade` command is to determine which
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providers are in use for a module, detect the source address for those
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providers where possible, and record this information in a
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[`required_providers` block][required-providers].
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[required-providers]: /language/providers/requirements
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~> Note: the command ignores `.tf.json` files and override files in the module.
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If the module already has a `required_providers` block, the command updates it
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in-place. Otherwise, a new block is added to the `versions.tf` file.
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By default, `0.13upgrade` changes configuration files in the current working
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directory. However, you can provide an explicit path to another directory if
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desired, which may be useful for automating migrations of several modules in
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the same repository.
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When run with no other options, the command will first explain what it is
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going to do and prompt for confirmation:
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```
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$ terraform 0.13upgrade
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This command will update the configuration files in the given directory to use
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the new provider source features from Terraform v0.13. It will also highlight
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any providers for which the source cannot be detected, and advise how to
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proceed.
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We recommend using this command in a clean version control work tree, so that
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you can easily see the proposed changes as a diff against the latest commit.
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If you have uncommited changes already present, we recommend aborting this
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command and dealing with them before running this command again.
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Would you like to upgrade the module in the current directory?
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Only 'yes' will be accepted to confirm.
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Enter a value: yes
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```
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We recommend running this command with a clean version control work tree so
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that you can use VCS tools to review the proposed changes, including any
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`TF-UPGRADE-TODO` comments, and make any revisions required before committing
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the change.
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There is one command-line option:
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* `-yes` - Skip the initial introduction messages and interactive confirmation.
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Use this when running the command in batch from a script.
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## Batch Usage
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After you've experimented with the `0.13upgrade` command in some confined
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situations, if you have a repository containing multiple modules you may
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wish to batch-upgrade them all and review them together. Recursive upgrades
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are not supported by the tool itself, but if you are on a Unix-style system
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you can achieve this using the `find` command as follows:
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```
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$ find . -name '*.tf' | xargs -n1 dirname | uniq | xargs -n1 terraform 0.13upgrade -yes
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```
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On a Windows system with PowerShell, you can use this command:
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```
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Get-Childitem -Recurse -Include *.tf | Split-Path | `
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Select-Object -Unique | ForEach-Object { terraform 0.13upgrade -yes $_.FullName }
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```
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Note that the above commands include the `-yes` option to override the
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interactive prompt, so be sure you have a clean work tree before running it.
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