174 lines
7.8 KiB
Markdown
174 lines
7.8 KiB
Markdown
# terraform-bundle
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`terraform-bundle` is a helper program to create "bundle archives", which are
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zip files that contain both a particular version of Terraform and a number
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of provider plugins.
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Normally `terraform init` will download and install the plugins necessary to
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work with a particular configuration, but sometimes Terraform is deployed in
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a network that, for one reason or another, cannot access the official
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plugin repository for automatic download.
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In some cases, this can be solved by installing provider plugins into the
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[user plugins directory](https://www.terraform.io/docs/configuration/providers.html#third-party-plugins).
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However, this doesn't always meet the needs of automated deployments.
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`terraform-bundle` provides an alternative, by allowing the auto-download
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process to be run out-of-band on a separate machine that _does_ have access
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to the repository. The result is a zip file that can be extracted onto the
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target system to install both the desired Terraform version and a selection
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of providers, thus avoiding the need for on-the-fly plugin installation.
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## Building
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To build `terraform-bundle` from source, set up a Terraform development
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environment per [Terraform's own README](../../README.md) and then install
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this tool from within it:
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```
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$ go install ./tools/terraform-bundle
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```
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This will install `terraform-bundle` in `$GOPATH/bin`, which is assumed by
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the rest of this README to be in `PATH`.
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## Usage
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`terraform-bundle` uses a simple configuration file to define what should
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be included in a bundle. This is designed so that it can be checked into
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version control and used by an automated build and deploy process.
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The configuration file format works as follows:
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```hcl
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terraform {
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# Version of Terraform to include in the bundle. An exact version number
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# is required.
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version = "0.10.0"
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}
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# Define which provider plugins are to be included
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providers {
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# Include the newest "aws" provider version in the 1.0 series.
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aws = ["~> 1.0"]
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# Include both the newest 1.0 and 2.0 versions of the "google" provider.
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# Each item in these lists allows a distinct version to be added. If the
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# two expressions match different versions then _both_ are included in
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# the bundle archive.
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google = ["~> 1.0", "~> 2.0"]
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# Include a custom plugin to the bundle. Will search for the plugin in the
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# plugins directory, and package it with the bundle archive. Plugin must have
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# a name of the form: terraform-provider-*, and must be build with the operating
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# system and architecture that terraform enterprise is running, e.g. linux and amd64
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customplugin = ["0.1"]
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}
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```
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The `terraform` block defines which version of Terraform will be included
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in the bundle. An exact version is required here.
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The `providers` block defines zero or more providers to include in the bundle
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along with core Terraform. Each attribute in this block is a provider name,
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and its value is a list of version constraints. For each given constraint,
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`terraform-bundle` will find the newest available version matching the
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constraint and include it in the bundle.
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It is allowed to specify multiple constraints for the same provider, in which
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case multiple versions can be included in the resulting bundle. Each constraint
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string given results in a separate plugin in the bundle, unless two constraints
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resolve to the same concrete plugin.
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Including multiple versions of the same provider allows several configurations
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running on the same system to share an installation of the bundle and to
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choose a version using version constraints within the main Terraform
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configuration. This avoids the need to upgrade all configurations to newer
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versions in lockstep.
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After creating the configuration file, e.g. `terraform-bundle.hcl`, a bundle
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zip file can be produced as follows:
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```
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$ terraform-bundle package terraform-bundle.hcl
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```
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By default the bundle package will target the operating system and CPU
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architecture where the tool is being run. To override this, use the `-os` and
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`-arch` options. For example, to build a bundle for on-premises Terraform
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Enterprise:
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```
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$ terraform-bundle package -os=linux -arch=amd64 terraform-bundle.hcl
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```
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The bundle file is assigned a name that includes the core Terraform version
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number, a timestamp to the nearest hour of when the bundle was built, and the
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target OS and CPU architecture. It is recommended to refer to a bundle using
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this composite version number so that bundle archives can be easily
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distinguished from official release archives and from each other when multiple
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bundles contain the same core Terraform version.
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To include custom plugins in the bundle file, create a local directory "./plugins"
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and put all the plugins you want to include there. Optionally, you can use the
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`-plugin-dir` flag to specify a location where to find the plugins. To be recognized
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as a valid plugin, the file must have a name of the form
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`terraform-provider-<NAME>-v<VERSION>`. In
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addition, ensure that the plugin is built using the same operating system and
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architecture used for Terraform Enterprise. Typically this will be `linux` and `amd64`.
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## Provider Resolution Behavior
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Terraform's provider resolution behavior is such that if a given constraint
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can be resolved by any plugin already installed on the system it will use
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the newest matching plugin and not attempt automatic installation.
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Therefore if automatic installation is not desired, it is important to ensure
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that version constraints within Terraform configurations do not exclude all
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of the versions available from the bundle. If a suitable version cannot be
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found in the bundle, Terraform _will_ attempt to satisfy that dependency by
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automatic installation from the official repository. If you want
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`terraform init` to explicitly fail instead of contacting the repository, pass
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the `-get-plugins=false` option.
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For full details about provider resolution, see
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[How Terraform Works: Plugin Discovery](https://www.terraform.io/docs/extend/how-terraform-works.html#discovery).
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The downloaded provider archives are verified using the same signature check
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that is used for auto-installed plugins, using Hashicorp's release key. At
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this time, the core Terraform archive itself is _not_ verified in this way;
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that may change in a future version of this tool.
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## Installing a Bundle in On-premises Terraform Enterprise
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If using a private install of Terraform Enterprise in an "air-gapped"
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environment, this tool can produce a custom Terraform version package, which
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includes a set of provider plugins along with core Terraform.
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To create a suitable bundle, use the `-os` and `-arch` options as described
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above to produce a bundle targeting `linux_amd64`. You can then place this
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archive on an HTTP server reachable by the Terraform Enterprise hosts and
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install it as per
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[Administration: Managing Terraform Versions](https://www.terraform.io/docs/enterprise/private/admin/resources.html#managing-terraform-versions).
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After clicking the "Add Terraform Version" button:
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1. In the "Version" field, enter the generated bundle version from the bundle
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filename, which will be of the form `N.N.N-bundleYYYYMMDDHH`.
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2. In the "URL" field, enter the URL where the generated bundle archive can be found.
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3. In the "SHA256 Checksum" field, enter the SHA256 hash of the file, which can
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be found by running `sha256sum <FILE>` or `shasum -a256 <FILE>`.
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The new bundle version can then be selected as the Terraform version for
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any workspace. When selected, configurations that require only plugins
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included in the bundle will run without trying to auto-install.
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Note that the above does _not_ apply to Terraform Pro, or to Terraform Premium
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when not running a private install. In these packages, Terraform versions
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are managed centrally across _all_ organizations and so custom bundles are not
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supported.
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For more information on the available Terraform Enterprise packages, see
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[the Terraform product site](https://www.hashicorp.com/products/terraform/).
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