224 lines
7.4 KiB
Plaintext
224 lines
7.4 KiB
Plaintext
---
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page_title: Strings and Templates - Configuration Language
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description: >-
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String literals and template sequences interpolate values and manipulate text.
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Learn about both quoted and heredoc string syntax.
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---
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# Strings and Templates
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String literals are the most complex kind of literal expression in
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Terraform, and also the most commonly used.
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Terraform supports both a quoted syntax and a "heredoc" syntax for strings.
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Both of these syntaxes support template sequences for interpolating values and
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manipulating text.
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## Quoted Strings
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A quoted string is a series of characters delimited by straight double-quote
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characters (`"`).
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```
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"hello"
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```
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### Escape Sequences
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In quoted strings, the backslash character serves as an escape
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sequence, with the following characters selecting the escape behavior:
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| Sequence | Replacement |
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| ------------ | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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| `\n` | Newline |
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| `\r` | Carriage Return |
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| `\t` | Tab |
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| `\"` | Literal quote (without terminating the string) |
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| `\\` | Literal backslash |
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| `\uNNNN` | Unicode character from the basic multilingual plane (NNNN is four hex digits) |
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| `\UNNNNNNNN` | Unicode character from supplementary planes (NNNNNNNN is eight hex digits) |
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There are also two special escape sequences that do not use backslashes:
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| Sequence | Replacement |
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| -------- | -------------------------------------------------------------- |
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| `$${` | Literal `${`, without beginning an interpolation sequence. |
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| `%%{` | Literal `%{`, without beginning a template directive sequence. |
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## Heredoc Strings
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Terraform also supports a "heredoc" style of string literal inspired by Unix
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shell languages, which allows multi-line strings to be expressed more clearly.
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```hcl
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<<EOT
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hello
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world
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EOT
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```
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A heredoc string consists of:
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- An opening sequence consisting of:
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- A heredoc marker (`<<` or `<<-` — two less-than signs, with an optional hyphen for indented heredocs)
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- A delimiter word of your own choosing
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- A line break
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- The contents of the string, which can span any number of lines
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- The delimiter word you chose, alone on its own line (with indentation allowed for indented heredocs)
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The `<<` marker followed by any identifier at the end of a line introduces the
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sequence. Terraform then processes the following lines until it finds one that
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consists entirely of the identifier given in the introducer.
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In the above example, `EOT` is the identifier selected. Any identifier is
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allowed, but conventionally this identifier is in all-uppercase and begins with
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`EO`, meaning "end of". `EOT` in this case stands for "end of text".
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### Generating JSON or YAML
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Don't use "heredoc" strings to generate JSON or YAML. Instead, use
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[the `jsonencode` function](/language/functions/jsonencode) or
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[the `yamlencode` function](/language/functions/yamlencode) so that Terraform
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can be responsible for guaranteeing valid JSON or YAML syntax.
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```hcl
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example = jsonencode({
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a = 1
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b = "hello"
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})
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```
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### Indented Heredocs
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The standard heredoc form (shown above) treats all space characters as literal
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spaces. If you don't want each line to begin with spaces, then each line must be
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flush with the left margin, which can be awkward for expressions in an
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indented block:
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```hcl
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block {
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value = <<EOT
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hello
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world
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EOT
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}
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```
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To improve on this, Terraform also accepts an _indented_ heredoc string variant
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that is introduced by the `<<-` sequence:
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```hcl
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block {
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value = <<-EOT
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hello
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world
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EOT
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}
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```
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In this case, Terraform analyses the lines in the sequence to find the one
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with the smallest number of leading spaces, and then trims that many spaces
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from the beginning of all of the lines, leading to the following result:
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```
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hello
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world
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```
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### Escape Sequences
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Backslash sequences are not interpreted as escapes in a heredoc string
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expression. Instead, the backslash character is interpreted literally.
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Heredocs support two special escape sequences that do not use backslashes:
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| Sequence | Replacement |
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| -------- | -------------------------------------------------------------- |
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| `$${` | Literal `${`, without beginning an interpolation sequence. |
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| `%%{` | Literal `%{`, without beginning a template directive sequence. |
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## String Templates
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Within quoted and heredoc string expressions, the sequences `${` and `%{` begin
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_template sequences_. Templates let you directly embed expressions into a string
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literal, to dynamically construct strings from other values.
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### Interpolation
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A `${ ... }` sequence is an _interpolation,_ which evaluates the expression
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given between the markers, converts the result to a string if necessary, and
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then inserts it into the final string:
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```hcl
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"Hello, ${var.name}!"
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```
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In the above example, the named object `var.name` is accessed and its value
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inserted into the string, producing a result like "Hello, Juan!".
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### Directives
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A `%{ ... }` sequence is a _directive_, which allows for conditional
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results and iteration over collections, similar to conditional
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and `for` expressions.
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The following directives are supported:
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- The `%{if <BOOL>}`/`%{else}`/`%{endif}` directive chooses between two templates based
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on the value of a bool expression:
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```hcl
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"Hello, %{ if var.name != "" }${var.name}%{ else }unnamed%{ endif }!"
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```
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The `else` portion may be omitted, in which case the result is an empty
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string if the condition expression returns `false`.
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- The `%{for <NAME> in <COLLECTION>}` / `%{endfor}` directive iterates over the
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elements of a given collection or structural value and evaluates a given
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template once for each element, concatenating the results together:
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```hcl
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<<EOT
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%{ for ip in aws_instance.example.*.private_ip }
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server ${ip}
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%{ endfor }
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EOT
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```
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The name given immediately after the `for` keyword is used as a temporary
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variable name which can then be referenced from the nested template.
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### Whitespace Stripping
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To allow template directives to be formatted for readability without adding
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unwanted spaces and newlines to the result, all template sequences can include
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optional _strip markers_ (`~`), immediately after the opening characters or
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immediately before the end. When a strip marker is present, the template
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sequence consumes all of the literal whitespace (spaces and newlines) either
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before the sequence (if the marker appears at the beginning) or after (if the
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marker appears at the end):
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```hcl
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<<EOT
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%{ for ip in aws_instance.example.*.private_ip ~}
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server ${ip}
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%{ endfor ~}
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EOT
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```
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In the above example, the newline after each of the directives is not included
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in the output, but the newline after the `server ${ip}` sequence is retained,
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causing only one line to be generated for each element:
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```
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server 10.1.16.154
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server 10.1.16.1
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server 10.1.16.34
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```
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When using template directives, we recommend always using the "heredoc" string
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literal form and then formatting the template over multiple lines for
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readability. Quoted string literals should usually include only interpolation
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sequences.
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