456 lines
21 KiB
Plaintext
456 lines
21 KiB
Plaintext
---
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page_title: CLI Configuration
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description: >-
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Learn to use the CLI configuration file to customize your CLI settings,
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including credentials, plugin caching, provider installation methods, etc.
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---
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# CLI Configuration File (`.terraformrc` or `terraform.rc`)
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The CLI configuration file configures per-user settings for CLI behaviors,
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which apply across all Terraform working directories. This is separate from
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[your infrastructure configuration](/language).
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## Locations
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The configuration can be placed in a single file whose location depends
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on the host operating system:
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* On Windows, the file must be named `terraform.rc` and placed
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in the relevant user's `%APPDATA%` directory. The physical location
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of this directory depends on your Windows version and system configuration;
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use `$env:APPDATA` in PowerShell to find its location on your system.
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* On all other systems, the file must be named `.terraformrc` (note
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the leading period) and placed directly in the home directory
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of the relevant user.
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On Windows, beware of Windows Explorer's default behavior of hiding filename
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extensions. Terraform will not recognize a file named `terraform.rc.txt` as a
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CLI configuration file, even though Windows Explorer may _display_ its name
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as just `terraform.rc`. Use `dir` from PowerShell or Command Prompt to
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confirm the filename.
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The location of the Terraform CLI configuration file can also be specified
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using the `TF_CLI_CONFIG_FILE` [environment variable](/cli/config/environment-variables).
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Any such file should follow the naming pattern `*.tfrc`.
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## Configuration File Syntax
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The configuration file uses the same _HCL_ syntax as `.tf` files, but with
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different attributes and blocks. The following example illustrates the
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general syntax; see the following section for information on the meaning
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of each of these settings:
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```hcl
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plugin_cache_dir = "$HOME/.terraform.d/plugin-cache"
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disable_checkpoint = true
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```
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## Available Settings
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The following settings can be set in the CLI configuration file:
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* `credentials` - configures credentials for use with Terraform Cloud or
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Terraform Enterprise. See [Credentials](#credentials) below for more
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information.
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* `credentials_helper` - configures an external helper program for the storage
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and retrieval of credentials for Terraform Cloud or Terraform Enterprise.
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See [Credentials Helpers](#credentials-helpers) below for more information.
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* `disable_checkpoint` — when set to `true`, disables
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[upgrade and security bulletin checks](/cli/commands#upgrade-and-security-bulletin-checks)
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that require reaching out to HashiCorp-provided network services.
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* `disable_checkpoint_signature` — when set to `true`, allows the upgrade and
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security bulletin checks described above but disables the use of an anonymous
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id used to de-duplicate warning messages.
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* `plugin_cache_dir` — enables
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[plugin caching](#provider-plugin-cache)
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and specifies, as a string, the location of the plugin cache directory.
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* `provider_installation` - customizes the installation methods used by
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`terraform init` when installing provider plugins. See
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[Provider Installation](#provider-installation) below for more information.
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## Credentials
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[Terraform Cloud](/cloud) provides a number of remote network
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services for use with Terraform, and
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[Terraform Enterprise](/enterprise) allows hosting those
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services inside your own infrastructure. For example, these systems offer both
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[remote operations](/cloud-docs/run/cli) and a
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[private module registry](/cloud-docs/registry).
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When interacting with Terraform-specific network services, Terraform expects
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to find API tokens in CLI configuration files in `credentials` blocks:
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```hcl
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credentials "app.terraform.io" {
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token = "xxxxxx.atlasv1.zzzzzzzzzzzzz"
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}
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```
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If you are running the Terraform CLI interactively on a computer with a web browser, you can use [the `terraform login` command](/cli/commands/login)
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to get credentials and automatically save them in the CLI configuration. If
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not, you can manually write `credentials` blocks.
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You can have multiple `credentials` blocks if you regularly use services from
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multiple hosts. Many users will configure only one, for either
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Terraform Cloud (at `app.terraform.io`) or for their organization's own
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Terraform Enterprise host. Each `credentials` block contains a `token` argument
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giving the API token to use for that host.
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~> **Important:** If you are using Terraform Cloud or Terraform Enterprise,
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the token provided must be either a
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[user token](/cloud-docs/users-teams-organizations/users#api-tokens)
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or a
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[team token](/cloud-docs/users-teams-organizations/api-tokens#team-api-tokens);
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organization tokens cannot be used for command-line Terraform actions.
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-> **Note:** The credentials hostname must match the hostname in your module
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sources and/or backend configuration. If your Terraform Enterprise instance
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is available at multiple hostnames, use only one of them consistently.
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Terraform Cloud responds to API calls at both its current hostname
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`app.terraform.io`, and its historical hostname `atlas.hashicorp.com`.
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### Credentials Helpers
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If you would prefer not to store your API tokens directly in the CLI
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configuration as described in the previous section, you can optionally instruct
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Terraform to use a different credentials storage mechanism by configuring a
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special kind of plugin program called a _credentials helper_.
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```hcl
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credentials_helper "example" {
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args = []
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}
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```
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`credentials_helper` is a configuration block that can appear at most once
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in the CLI configuration. Its label (`"example"` above) is the name of the
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credentials helper to use. The `args` argument is optional and allows passing
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additional arguments to the helper program, for example if it needs to be
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configured with the address of a remote host to access for credentials.
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A configured credentials helper will be consulted only to retrieve credentials
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for hosts that are _not_ explicitly configured in a `credentials` block as
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described in the previous section.
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Conversely, this means you can override the credentials returned by the helper
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for a specific hostname by writing a `credentials` block alongside the
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`credentials_helper` block.
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Terraform does not include any credentials helpers in the main distribution.
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To learn how to write and install your own credentials helpers to integrate
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with existing in-house credentials management systems, see
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[the guide to Credentials Helper internals](/internals/credentials-helpers).
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## Provider Installation
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The default way to install provider plugins is from a provider registry. The
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origin registry for a provider is encoded in the provider's source address,
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like `registry.terraform.io/hashicorp/aws`. For convenience in the common case,
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Terraform allows omitting the hostname portion for providers on
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`registry.terraform.io`, so you can write shorter public provider addresses like
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`hashicorp/aws`.
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Downloading a plugin directly from its origin registry is not always
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appropriate, though. For example, the system where you are running Terraform
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may not be able to access an origin registry due to firewall restrictions
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within your organization or your locality.
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To allow using Terraform providers in these situations, there are some
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alternative options for making provider plugins available to Terraform which
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we'll describe in the following sections.
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### Explicit Installation Method Configuration
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A `provider_installation` block in the CLI configuration allows overriding
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Terraform's default installation behaviors, so you can force Terraform to use
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a local mirror for some or all of the providers you intend to use.
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The general structure of a `provider_installation` block is as follows:
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```hcl
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provider_installation {
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filesystem_mirror {
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path = "/usr/share/terraform/providers"
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include = ["example.com/*/*"]
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}
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direct {
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exclude = ["example.com/*/*"]
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}
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}
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```
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Each of the nested blocks inside the `provider_installation` block specifies
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one installation method. Each installation method can take both `include`
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and `exclude` patterns that specify which providers a particular installation
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method can be used for. In the example above, we specify that any provider
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whose origin registry is at `example.com` can be installed only from the
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filesystem mirror at `/usr/share/terraform/providers`, while all other
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providers can be installed only directly from their origin registries.
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If you set both `include` and `exclude` for a particular installation
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method, the exclusion patterns take priority. For example, including
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`registry.terraform.io/hashicorp/*` but also excluding
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`registry.terraform.io/hashicorp/dns` will make that installation method apply
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to everything in the `hashicorp` namespace with the exception of
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`hashicorp/dns`.
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As with provider source addresses in the main configuration, you can omit
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the `registry.terraform.io/` prefix for providers distributed through the
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public Terraform registry, even when using wildcards. For example,
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`registry.terraform.io/hashicorp/*` and `hashicorp/*` are equivalent.
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`*/*` is a shorthand for `registry.terraform.io/*/*`, not for
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`*/*/*`.
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The following are the two supported installation method types:
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* `direct`: request information about the provider directly from its origin
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registry and download over the network from the location that registry
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indicates. This method expects no additional arguments.
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* `filesystem_mirror`: consult a directory on the local disk for copies of
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providers. This method requires the additional argument `path` to indicate
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which directory to look in.
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Terraform expects the given directory to contain a nested directory structure
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where the path segments together provide metadata about the available
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providers. The following two directory structures are supported:
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* Packed layout: `HOSTNAME/NAMESPACE/TYPE/terraform-provider-TYPE_VERSION_TARGET.zip`
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is the distribution zip file obtained from the provider's origin registry.
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* Unpacked layout: `HOSTNAME/NAMESPACE/TYPE/VERSION/TARGET` is a directory
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containing the result of extracting the provider's distribution zip file.
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In both layouts, the `VERSION` is a string like `2.0.0` and the `TARGET`
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specifies a particular target platform using a format like `darwin_amd64`,
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`linux_arm`, `windows_amd64`, etc.
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If you use the unpacked layout, Terraform will attempt to create a symbolic
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link to the mirror directory when installing the provider, rather than
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creating a deep copy of the directory. The packed layout prevents this
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because Terraform must extract the zip file during installation.
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You can include multiple `filesystem_mirror` blocks in order to specify
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several different directories to search.
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* `network_mirror`: consult a particular HTTPS server for copies of providers,
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regardless of which registry host they belong to. This method requires the
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additional argument `url` to indicate the mirror base URL, which should
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use the `https:` scheme and end with a trailing slash.
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Terraform expects the given URL to be a base URL for an implementation of
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[the provider network mirror protocol](/internals/provider-network-mirror-protocol),
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which is designed to be relatively easy to implement using typical static
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website hosting mechanisms.
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~> **Warning:** Don't configure `network_mirror` URLs that you do not trust.
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Provider mirror servers are subject to TLS certificate checks to verify
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identity, but a network mirror with a TLS certificate can potentially serve
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modified copies of upstream providers with malicious content.
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Terraform will try all of the specified methods whose include and exclude
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patterns match a given provider, and select the newest version available across
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all of those methods that matches the version constraint given in each
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Terraform configuration. If you have a local mirror of a particular provider
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and intend Terraform to use that local mirror exclusively, you must either
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remove the `direct` installation method altogether or use its `exclude`
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argument to disable its use for specific providers.
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### Implied Local Mirror Directories
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If your CLI configuration does not include a `provider_installation` block at
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all, Terraform produces an _implied_ configuration. The implied configuration
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includes a selection of `filesystem_mirror` methods and then the `direct`
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method.
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The set of directories Terraform can select as filesystem mirrors depends on
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the operating system where you are running Terraform:
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* **Windows:** `%APPDATA%/terraform.d/plugins` and `%APPDATA%/HashiCorp/Terraform/plugins`
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* **Mac OS X:** `$HOME/.terraform.d/plugins`,
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`~/Library/Application Support/io.terraform/plugins`, and
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`/Library/Application Support/io.terraform/plugins`
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* **Linux and other Unix-like systems**:`$HOME/.terraform.d/plugins` and
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`terraform/plugins` located within a valid
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[XDG Base Directory](https://specifications.freedesktop.org/basedir-spec/basedir-spec-latest.html)
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data directory such as `$XDG_DATA_HOME/terraform/plugins`.
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Without any XDG environment variables set, Terraform will use
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`~/.local/share/terraform/plugins`,
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`/usr/local/share/terraform/plugins`, and `/usr/share/terraform/plugins`.
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If a `terraform.d/plugins` directory exists in the current working directory
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then Terraform will also include that directory, regardless of your operating
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system.
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Terraform will check each of the paths above to see if it exists, and if so
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treat it as a filesystem mirror. The directory structure inside each one must
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therefore match one of the two structures described for `filesystem_mirror`
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blocks in [Explicit Installation Method Configuration](#explicit-installation-method-configuration).
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In addition to the zero or more implied `filesystem_mirror` blocks, Terraform
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also creates an implied `direct` block. Terraform will scan all of the
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filesystem mirror directories to see which providers are placed there and
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automatically exclude all of those providers from the implied `direct` block.
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(This automatic `exclude` behavior applies only to _implicit_ `direct` blocks;
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if you use explicit `provider_installation` you will need to write the intended
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exclusions out yourself.)
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### Provider Plugin Cache
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By default, `terraform init` downloads plugins into a subdirectory of the
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working directory so that each working directory is self-contained. As a
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consequence, if you have multiple configurations that use the same provider
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then a separate copy of its plugin will be downloaded for each configuration.
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Given that provider plugins can be quite large (on the order of hundreds of
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megabytes), this default behavior can be inconvenient for those with slow
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or metered Internet connections. Therefore Terraform optionally allows the
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use of a local directory as a shared plugin cache, which then allows each
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distinct plugin binary to be downloaded only once.
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To enable the plugin cache, use the `plugin_cache_dir` setting in
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the CLI configuration file. For example:
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```hcl
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plugin_cache_dir = "$HOME/.terraform.d/plugin-cache"
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```
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This directory must already exist before Terraform will cache plugins;
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Terraform will not create the directory itself.
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Please note that on Windows it is necessary to use forward slash separators
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(`/`) rather than the conventional backslash (`\`) since the configuration
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file parser considers a backslash to begin an escape sequence.
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Setting this in the configuration file is the recommended approach for a
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persistent setting. Alternatively, the `TF_PLUGIN_CACHE_DIR` environment
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variable can be used to enable caching or to override an existing cache
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directory within a particular shell session:
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```bash
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export TF_PLUGIN_CACHE_DIR="$HOME/.terraform.d/plugin-cache"
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```
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When a plugin cache directory is enabled, the `terraform init` command will
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still use the configured or implied installation methods to obtain metadata
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about which plugins are available, but once a suitable version has been
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selected it will first check to see if the chosen plugin is already available
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in the cache directory. If so, Terraform will use the previously-downloaded
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copy.
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If the selected plugin is not already in the cache, Terraform will download
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it into the cache first and then copy it from there into the correct location
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under your current working directory. When possible Terraform will use
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symbolic links to avoid storing a separate copy of a cached plugin in multiple
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directories.
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The plugin cache directory _must not_ also be one of the configured or implied
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filesystem mirror directories, since the cache management logic conflicts with
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the filesystem mirror logic when operating on the same directory.
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Terraform will never itself delete a plugin from the plugin cache once it has
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been placed there. Over time, as plugins are upgraded, the cache directory may
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grow to contain several unused versions which you must delete manually.
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-> **Note:** The plugin cache directory is not guaranteed to be concurrency
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safe. The provider installer's behavior in environments with multiple `terraform
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init` calls is undefined.
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### Development Overrides for Provider Developers
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-> **Note:** Development overrides work only in Terraform v0.14 and later.
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Using a `dev_overrides` block in your CLI configuration will cause Terraform
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v0.13 to reject the configuration as invalid.
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Normally Terraform verifies version selections and checksums for providers
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in order to help ensure that all operations are made with the intended version
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of a provider, and that authors can gradually upgrade to newer provider versions
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in a controlled manner.
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These version and checksum rules are inconvenient when developing a provider
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though, because we often want to try a test configuration against a development
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build of a provider that doesn't even have an associated version number yet,
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and doesn't have an official set of checksums listed in a provider registry.
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As a convenience for provider development, Terraform supports a special
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additional block `dev_overrides` in `provider_installation` blocks. The contents
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of this block effectively override all of the other configured installation
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methods, so a block of this type must always appear first in the sequence:
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```hcl
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provider_installation {
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# Use /home/developer/tmp/terraform-null as an overridden package directory
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# for the hashicorp/null provider. This disables the version and checksum
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# verifications for this provider and forces Terraform to look for the
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# null provider plugin in the given directory.
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dev_overrides {
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"hashicorp/null" = "/home/developer/tmp/terraform-null"
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}
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# For all other providers, install them directly from their origin provider
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# registries as normal. If you omit this, Terraform will _only_ use
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# the dev_overrides block, and so no other providers will be available.
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direct {}
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}
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```
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With development overrides in effect, the `terraform init` command will still
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attempt to select a suitable published version of your provider to install and
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record in
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[the dependency lock file](/language/files/dependency-lock)
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for future use, but other commands like
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`terraform apply` will disregard the lock file's entry for `hashicorp/null` and
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will use the given directory instead. Once your new changes are included in a
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published release of the provider, you can use `terraform init -upgrade` to
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select the new version in the dependency lock file and remove your development
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override.
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The override path for a particular provider should be a directory similar to
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what would be included in a `.zip` file when distributing the provider. At
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minimum that includes an executable file named with a prefix like
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`terraform-provider-null`, where `null` is the provider type. If your provider
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makes use of other files in its distribution package then you can copy those
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files into the override directory too.
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You may wish to enable a development override only for shell sessions where
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you are actively working on provider development. If so, you can write a
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local CLI configuration file with content like the above in your development
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directory, perhaps called `dev.tfrc` for the sake of example, and then use the
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`TF_CLI_CONFIG_FILE` environment variable to instruct Terraform to use that
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localized CLI configuration instead of the default one:
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```
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export TF_CLI_CONFIG_FILE=/home/developer/tmp/dev.tfrc
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```
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Development overrides are not intended for general use as a way to have
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Terraform look for providers on the local filesystem. If you wish to put
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copies of _released_ providers in your local filesystem, see
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[Implied Local Mirror Directories](#implied-local-mirror-directories)
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or
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[Explicit Installation Method Configuration](#explicit-installation-method-configuration)
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instead.
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This development overrides mechanism is intended as a pragmatic way to enable
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smoother provider development. The details of how it behaves, how to
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configure it, and how it interacts with the dependency lock file may all evolve
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in future Terraform releases, including possible breaking changes. We therefore
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recommend using development overrides only temporarily during provider
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development work.
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## Removed Settings
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The following settings are supported in Terraform 0.12 and earlier but are
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no longer recommended for use:
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* `providers` - a configuration block that allows specifying the locations of
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specific plugins for each named provider. This mechanism is deprecated
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because it is unable to specify a version number and source for each provider.
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See [Provider Installation](#provider-installation) above for the replacement
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of this setting in Terraform 0.13 and later.
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