436 lines
16 KiB
Markdown
436 lines
16 KiB
Markdown
---
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layout: "docs"
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page_title: "Module Sources"
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sidebar_current: "docs-modules-sources"
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description: The source argument within a module block specifies the location of the source code of a child module.
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---
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# Module Sources
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The `source` argument in [a `module` block](/docs/configuration/modules.html)
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tells Terraform where to find the source code for the desired child module.
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Terraform uses this during the module installation step of `terraform init`
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to download the source code to a directory on local disk so that it can be
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used by other Terraform commands.
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The module installer supports installation from a number of different source
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types, as listed below.
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* [Local paths](#local-paths)
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* [Terraform Registry](#terraform-registry)
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* [GitHub](#github)
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* [Bitbucket](#bitbucket)
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* Generic [Git](#generic-git-repository), [Mercurial](#generic-mercurial-repository) repositories
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* [HTTP URLs](#http-urls)
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* [S3 buckets](#s3-bucket)
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* [GCS buckets](#gcs-bucket)
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Each of these is described in the following sections. Module source addresses
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use a _URL-like_ syntax, but with extensions to support unambiguous selection
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of sources and additional features.
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We recommend using local file paths for closely-related modules used primarily
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for the purpose of factoring out repeated code elements, and using a native
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Terraform module registry for modules intended to be shared by multiple calling
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configurations. We support other sources so that you can potentially distribute
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Terraform modules internally with existing infrastructure.
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Many of the source types will make use of "ambient" credentials available
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when Terraform is run, such as from environment variables or credentials files
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in your home directory. This is covered in more detail in each of the following
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sections.
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We recommend placing each module that is intended to be re-usable in the root
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of its own repository or archive file, but it is also possible to
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[reference modules from subdirectories](#modules-in-package-sub-directories).
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## Local Paths
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Local path references allow for factoring out portions of a configuration
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within a single source repository.
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```hcl
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module "consul" {
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source = "./consul"
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}
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```
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A local path must begin with either `./` or `../` to indicate that a local
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path is intended, to distinguish from
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[a module registry address](#terraform-registry).
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Local paths are special in that they are not "installed" in the same sense
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that other sources are: the files are already present on local disk (possibly
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as a result of installing a parent module) and so can just be used directly.
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Their source code is automatically updated if the parent module is upgraded.
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## Terraform Registry
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A module registry is the native way of distributing Terraform modules for use
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across multiple configurations, using a Terraform-specific protocol that
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has full support for module versioning.
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[Terraform Registry](https://registry.terraform.io/) is an index of modules
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shared publicly using this protocol. This public registry is the easiest way
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to get started with Terraform and find modules created by others in the
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community.
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You can also use a
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[private registry](/docs/registry/private.html), either
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via the built-in feature from Terraform Cloud, or by running a custom
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service that implements
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[the module registry protocol](/docs/registry/api.html).
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Modules on the public Terraform Registry can be referenced using a registry
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source address of the form `<NAMESPACE>/<NAME>/<PROVIDER>`, with each
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module's information page on the registry site including the exact address
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to use.
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```hcl
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module "consul" {
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source = "hashicorp/consul/aws"
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version = "0.1.0"
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}
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```
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The above example will use the
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[Consul module for AWS](https://registry.terraform.io/modules/hashicorp/consul/aws)
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from the public registry.
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For modules hosted in other registries, prefix the source address with an
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additional `<HOSTNAME>/` portion, giving the hostname of the private registry:
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```hcl
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module "consul" {
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source = "app.terraform.io/example-corp/k8s-cluster/azurerm"
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version = "1.1.0"
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}
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```
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If you are using the SaaS version of Terraform Cloud, its private
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registry hostname is `app.terraform.io`. If you are using a Terraform Enterprise
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instance, its private registry hostname is the same hostname you use to
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access the Terraform Cloud application.
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Registry modules support versioning. You can provide a specific version as shown
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in the above examples, or use flexible
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[version constraints](/docs/configuration/modules.html#module-versions).
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You can learn more about the registry at the
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[Terraform Registry documentation](/docs/registry/modules/use.html#using-modules).
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To access modules from a private registry, you may need to configure an access
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token [in the CLI config](/docs/commands/cli-config.html#credentials). Use the
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same hostname as used in the module source string. For a private registry
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within Terraform Cloud, use the same authentication token as you would
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use with the Enterprise API or command-line clients.
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## GitHub
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Terraform will recognize unprefixed `github.com` URLs and interpret them
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automatically as Git repository sources.
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```hcl
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module "consul" {
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source = "github.com/hashicorp/example"
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}
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```
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The above address scheme will clone over HTTPS. To clone over SSH, use the
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following form:
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```hcl
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module "consul" {
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source = "git@github.com:hashicorp/example.git"
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}
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```
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These GitHub schemes are treated as convenient aliases for
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[the general Git repository address scheme](#generic-git-repository), and so
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they obtain credentials in the same way and support the `ref` argument for
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selecting a specific revision. You will need to configure credentials in
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particular to access private repositories.
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## Bitbucket
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Terraform will recognize unprefixed `bitbucket.org` URLs and interpret them
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automatically as BitBucket repositories:
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```hcl
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module "consul" {
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source = "bitbucket.org/hashicorp/terraform-consul-aws"
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}
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```
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This shorthand works only for public repositories, because Terraform must
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access the BitBucket API to learn if the given repository uses Git or Mercurial.
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Terraform treats the result either as [a Git source](#generic-git-repository)
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or [a Mercurial source](#generic-mercurial-repository) depending on the
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repository type. See the sections on each version control type for information
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on how to configure credentials for private repositories and how to specify
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a specific revision to install.
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## Generic Git Repository
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Arbitrary Git repositories can be used by prefixing the address with the
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special `git::` prefix. After this prefix, any valid
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[Git URL](https://git-scm.com/docs/git-clone#_git_urls_a_id_urls_a)
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can be specified to select one of the protocols supported by Git.
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For example, to use HTTPS or SSH:
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```hcl
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module "vpc" {
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source = "git::https://example.com/vpc.git"
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}
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module "storage" {
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source = "git::ssh://username@example.com/storage.git"
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}
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```
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Terraform installs modules from Git repositories by running `git clone`, and
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so it will respect any local Git configuration set on your system, including
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credentials. To access a non-public Git repository, configure Git with
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suitable credentials for that repository.
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If you use the SSH protocol then any configured SSH keys will be used
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automatically. This is the most common way to access non-public Git
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repositories from automated systems because it allows access to private
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repositories without interactive prompts.
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If using the HTTP/HTTPS protocol, or any other protocol that uses
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username/password credentials, configure
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[Git Credentials Storage](https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Git-Tools-Credential-Storage)
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to select a suitable source of credentials for your environment.
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If your Terraform configuration will be used within [Terraform Cloud](https://www.hashicorp.com/products/terraform),
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only SSH key authentication is supported, and
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[keys can be configured on a per-workspace basis](/docs/cloud/workspaces/ssh-keys.html).
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### Selecting a Revision
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By default, Terraform will clone and use the default branch (referenced by
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`HEAD`) in the selected repository. You can override this using the
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`ref` argument:
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```hcl
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module "vpc" {
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source = "git::https://example.com/vpc.git?ref=v1.2.0"
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}
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```
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The value of the `ref` argument can be any reference that would be accepted
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by the `git checkout` command, including branch and tag names.
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### "scp-like" address syntax
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When using Git over SSH, we recommend using the `ssh://`-prefixed URL form
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for consistency with all of the other URL-like git address forms.
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You may opt to use the alternative "scp-like" syntax instead, in which case you
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must omit the `ssh://` scheme part and include only the `git::` part.
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For example:
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```hcl
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module "storage" {
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source = "git::username@example.com:storage.git"
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}
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```
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If you use the `ssh://` URL scheme then Terraform will assume that the colon
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marks the beginning of a port number, rather than the beginning of the path.
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This matches how Git itself interprets these different forms, aside from
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the Terraform-specific `git::` selector prefix.
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## Generic Mercurial Repository
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You can use arbitrary Mercurial repositories by prefixing the address with the
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special `hg::` prefix. After this prefix, any valid
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[Mercurial URL](https://www.mercurial-scm.org/repo/hg/help/urls)
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can be specified to select one of the protocols supported by Mercurial.
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```hcl
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module "vpc" {
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source = "hg::http://example.com/vpc.hg"
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}
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```
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Terraform installs modules from Mercurial repositories by running `hg clone`, and
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so it will respect any local Mercurial configuration set on your system,
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including credentials. To access a non-public repository, configure Mercurial
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with suitable credentials for that repository.
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If you use the SSH protocol then any configured SSH keys will be used
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automatically. This is the most common way to access non-public Mercurial
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repositories from automated systems because it allows access to private
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repositories without interactive prompts.
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If your Terraform configuration will be used within [Terraform Cloud](https://www.hashicorp.com/products/terraform),
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only SSH key authentication is supported, and
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[keys can be configured on a per-workspace basis](/docs/cloud/workspaces/ssh-keys.html).
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### Selecting a Revision
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You can select a non-default branch or tag using the optional `ref` argument:
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```hcl
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module "vpc" {
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source = "hg::http://example.com/vpc.hg?ref=v1.2.0"
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}
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```
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## HTTP URLs
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When you use an HTTP or HTTPS URL, Terraform will make a `GET` request to
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the given URL, which can return _another_ source address. This indirection
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allows using HTTP URLs as a sort of "vanity redirect" over a more complicated
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module source address.
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Terraform will append an additional query string argument `terraform-get=1` to
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the given URL before sending the `GET` request, allowing the server to
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optionally return a different result when Terraform is requesting it.
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If the response is successful (`200`-range status code), Terraform looks in
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the following locations in order for the next address to access:
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* The value of a response header field named `X-Terraform-Get`.
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* If the response is an HTML page, a `meta` element with the name `terraform-get`:
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```html
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<meta name="terraform-get"
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content="github.com/hashicorp/example" />
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```
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In either case, the result is interpreted as another module source address
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using one of the forms documented elsewhere on this page.
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If an HTTP/HTTPS URL requires authentication credentials, use a `.netrc`
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file in your home directory to configure these. For information on this format,
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see [the documentation for using it in `curl`](https://ec.haxx.se/usingcurl-netrc.html).
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### Fetching archives over HTTP
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As a special case, if Terraform detects that the URL has a common file
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extension associated with an archive file format then it will bypass the
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special `terraform-get=1` redirection described above and instead just use
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the contents of the referenced archive as the module source code:
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```hcl
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module "vpc" {
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source = "https://example.com/vpc-module.zip"
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}
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```
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The extensions that Terraform recognizes for this special behavior are:
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* `zip`
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* `tar.bz2` and `tbz2`
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* `tar.gz` and `tgz`
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* `tar.xz` and `txz`
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If your URL _doesn't_ have one of these extensions but refers to an archive
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anyway, use the `archive` argument to force this interpretation:
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```hcl
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module "vpc" {
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source = "https://example.com/vpc-module?archive=zip"
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}
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```
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-> **Note:** If the content of the archive file is a directory, you will need to
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include that directory in the module source. Read the section on
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[Modules in Package Sub-directories](#modules-in-package-sub-directories) for more
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information.
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## S3 Bucket
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You can use archives stored in S3 as module sources using the special `s3::`
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prefix, followed by
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[a path-style S3 bucket object URL](http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/dev/UsingBucket.html#access-bucket-intro).
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```hcl
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module "consul" {
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source = "s3::https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/examplecorp-terraform-modules/vpc.zip"
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}
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```
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-> **Note:** Buckets in AWS's us-east-1 region must use the hostname `s3.amazonaws.com` (instead of `s3-us-east-1.amazonaws.com`).
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The `s3::` prefix causes Terraform to use AWS-style authentication when
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accessing the given URL. As a result, this scheme may also work for other
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services that mimic the S3 API, as long as they handle authentication in the
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same way as AWS.
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The resulting object must be an archive with one of the same file
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extensions as for [archives over standard HTTP](#fetching-archives-over-http).
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Terraform will extract the archive to obtain the module source tree.
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The module installer looks for AWS credentials in the following locations,
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preferring those earlier in the list when multiple are available:
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* The `AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID` and `AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY` environment variables.
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* The default profile in the `.aws/credentials` file in your home directory.
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* If running on an EC2 instance, temporary credentials associated with the
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instance's IAM Instance Profile.
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## GCS Bucket
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You can use archives stored in Google Cloud Storage as module sources using the special `gcs::`
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prefix, followed by
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[a GCS bucket object URL](https://cloud.google.com/storage/docs/request-endpoints#typical).
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For example
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* `gcs::https://www.googleapis.com/storage/v1/BUCKET_NAME/PATH_TO_MODULE`
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* `gcs::https://www.googleapis.com/storage/v1/BUCKET_NAME/PATH/TO/module.zip`
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```hcl
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module "consul" {
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source = "gcs::https://www.googleapis.com/storage/v1/modules/foomodule.zip"
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}
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```
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The module installer uses Google Cloud SDK to authenticate with GCS. To set credentials you can:
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* Enter the path of your service account key file in the GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS environment variable, or;
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* If you're running Terraform from a GCE instance, default credentials are automatically available. See [Creating and Enabling Service Accounts](https://cloud.google.com/compute/docs/authentication) for Instances for more details
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* On your computer, you can make your Google identity available by running `gcloud auth application-default login`.
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## Modules in Package Sub-directories
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When the source of a module is a version control repository or archive file
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(generically, a "package"), the module itself may be in a sub-directory relative
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to the root of the package.
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A special double-slash syntax is interpreted by Terraform to indicate that
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the remaining path after that point is a sub-directory within the package.
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For example:
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* `hashicorp/consul/aws//modules/consul-cluster`
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* `git::https://example.com/network.git//modules/vpc`
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* `https://example.com/network-module.zip//modules/vpc`
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* `s3::https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/examplecorp-terraform-modules/network.zip//modules/vpc`
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If the source address has arguments, such as the `ref` argument supported for
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the version control sources, the sub-directory portion must be _before_ those
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arguments:
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* `git::https://example.com/network.git//modules/vpc?ref=v1.2.0`
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Terraform will still extract the entire package to local disk, but will read
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the module from the subdirectory. As a result, it is safe for a module in
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a sub-directory of a package to use [a local path](#local-paths) to another
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module as long as it is in the _same_ package.
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