158 lines
5.5 KiB
Markdown
158 lines
5.5 KiB
Markdown
---
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layout: "intro"
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page_title: "Modules"
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sidebar_current: "gettingstarted-modules"
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description: |-
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Up to this point, we've been configuring Terraform by editing Terraform configurations directly. As our infrastructure grows, this practice has a few key problems: a lack of organization, a lack of reusability, and difficulties in management for teams.
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---
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# Modules
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Up to this point, we've been configuring Terraform by editing Terraform
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configurations directly. As our infrastructure grows, this practice has a few
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key problems: a lack of organization, a lack of reusability, and difficulties
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in management for teams.
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_Modules_ in Terraform are self-contained packages of Terraform configurations
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that are managed as a group. Modules are used to create reusable components,
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improve organization, and to treat pieces of infrastructure as a black box.
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This section of the getting started will cover the basics of using modules.
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Writing modules is covered in more detail in the
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[modules documentation](/docs/modules/index.html).
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~> **Warning!** The examples on this page are _**not** eligible_ for the AWS
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[free-tier](https://aws.amazon.com/free/). Do not execute the examples on this
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page unless you're willing to spend a small amount of money.
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## Using Modules
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If you have any instances running from prior steps in the getting
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started guide, use `terraform destroy` to destroy them, and remove all
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configuration files.
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As an example, we're going to use the
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[Consul Terraform module](https://github.com/hashicorp/consul/tree/master/terraform)
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which will setup a complete [Consul](https://www.consul.io) cluster
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for us.
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Create a configuration file with the following contents:
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```
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provider "aws" {
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access_key = "AWS ACCESS KEY"
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secret_key = "AWS SECRET KEY"
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region = "AWS REGION"
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}
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module "consul" {
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source = "github.com/hashicorp/consul/terraform/aws"
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key_name = "AWS SSH KEY NAME"
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key_path = "PATH TO ABOVE PRIVATE KEY"
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region = "AWS REGION"
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servers = "3"
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}
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```
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(Note that the `provider` block can be omitted in favor of environment
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variables. See the [AWS Provider docs](/docs/providers/aws/index.html)
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for details.)
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The `module` block tells Terraform to create and manage a module. It is
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very similar to the `resource` block. It has a logical name -- in this
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case "consul" -- and a set of configurations.
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The `source` configuration is the only mandatory key for modules. It tells
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Terraform where the module can be retrieved. Terraform automatically
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downloads and manages modules for you. For our example, we're getting the
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module directly from GitHub. Terraform can retrieve modules from a variety
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of sources including Git, Mercurial, HTTP, and file paths.
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The other configurations are parameters to our module. Please fill them
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in with the proper values.
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Prior to running any command such as `plan` with a configuration that
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uses modules, you'll have to [get](/docs/commands/get.html) the modules.
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This is done using the [get command](/docs/commands/get.html).
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```
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$ terraform get
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...
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```
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This command will download the modules if they haven't been already.
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By default, the command will not check for updates, so it is safe (and fast)
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to run multiple times. You can use the `-u` flag to check and download
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updates.
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## Planning and Apply Modules
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With the modules downloaded, we can now plan and apply it. If you run
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`terraform plan`, you should see output similar to below:
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```
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$ terraform plan
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...
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+ module.consul
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4 resource(s)
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```
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As you can see, the module is treated like a black box. In the plan, Terraform
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shows the module managed as a whole. It does not show what resources within
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the module will be created. If you care, you can see that by specifying
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a `-module-depth=-1` flag.
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Next, run `terraform apply` to create the module. Note that as we warned above,
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the resources this module creates are outside of the AWS free tier, so this
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will have some cost associated with it.
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```
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$ terraform apply
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...
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Apply complete! Resources: 3 added, 0 changed, 0 destroyed.
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```
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After a few minutes, you'll have a three server Consul cluster up and
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running! Without any knowledge of how Consul works, how to install Consul,
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or how to configure Consul into a cluster, you've created a real cluster in
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just minutes.
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## Module Outputs
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Just as we parameterized the module with configurations such as
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`servers` above, modules can also output information (just like a resource).
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You'll have to reference the module's code or documentation to know what
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outputs it supports for now, but for this guide we'll just tell you that the
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Consul module has an output named `server_address` that has the address of
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one of the Consul servers that was setup.
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To reference this, we'll just put it into our own output variable. But this
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value could be used anywhere: in another resource, to configure another
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provider, etc.
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```
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output "consul_address" {
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value = "${module.consul.server_address}"
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}
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```
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The syntax for referencing module outputs should be very familiar. The
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syntax is `${module.NAME.ATTRIBUTE}`. The `NAME` is the logical name
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we assigned earlier, and the `ATTRIBUTE` is the output attribute.
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If you run `terraform apply` again, Terraform should make no changes, but
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you'll now see the "consul\_address" output with the address of our Consul
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server.
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## Next
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For more information on modules, the types of sources supported, how
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to write modules, and more, read the in depth
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[module documentation](/docs/modules/index.html).
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We've now concluded the getting started guide, however
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there are a number of [next steps](/intro/getting-started/next-steps.html)
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to get started with Terraform.
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