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Build Infrastructure

With Terraform installed, let's dive right into it and start creating some infrastructure.

We'll build infrastructure on AWS for the getting started guide since it is popular and generally understood, but Terraform can manage many providers, including multiple providers in a single configuration. Some examples of this are in the use cases section.

If you don't have an AWS account, create one now. For the getting started guide, we'll only be using resources which qualify under the AWS free-tier, meaning it will be free. If you already have an AWS account, you may be charged some amount of money, but it shouldn't be more than a few dollars at most.

Note: If you're not using an account that qualifies under the AWS free-tier, you may be charged to run these examples. The most you should be charged should only be a few dollars, but we're not responsible for any charges that may incur.

Configuration

The set of files used to describe infrastructure in Terraform is simply known as a Terraform configuration. We're going to write our first configuration now to launch a single AWS EC2 instance.

The format of the configuration files is documented here. Configuration files can also be JSON, but we recommend only using JSON when the configuration is generated by a machine.

The entire configuration is shown below. We'll go over each part after. Save the contents to a file named example.tf. Verify that there are no other *.tf files in your directory, since Terraform loads all of them.

provider "aws" {
	access_key = "ACCESS_KEY_HERE"
	secret_key = "SECRET_KEY_HERE"
	region = "us-east-1"
}

resource "aws_instance" "example" {
	ami = "ami-408c7f28"
	instance_type = "t1.micro"
}

Replace the ACCESS_KEY_HERE and SECRET_KEY_HERE with your AWS access key and secret key, available from this page. We're hardcoding them for now, but will extract these into variables later in the getting started guide.

This is a complete configuration that Terraform is ready to apply. The general structure should be intuitive and straightforward.

The provider block is used to configure the named provider, in our case "aws." A provider is responsible for creating and managing resources. Multiple provider blocks can exist if a Terraform configuration is comprised of multiple providers, which is a common situation.

The resource block defines a resource that exists within the infrastructure. A resource might be a physical component such as an EC2 instance, or it can be a logical resource such as a Heroku applcation.

The resource block has two strings before opening the block: the resource type and the resource name. In our example, the resource type is "aws_instance" and the name is "example." The prefix of the type maps to the provider. In our case "aws_instance" automatically tells Terraform that it is managed by the "aws" provider.

Within the resource block itself is configuration for that resource. This is dependent on each resource provider and is fully documented within our providers reference. For our EC2 instance, we specify an AMI for Ubuntu, and request a "t1.micro" instance so we qualify under the free tier.

Execution Plan

Next, let's see what Terraform would do if we asked it to apply this configuration. In the same directory as the example.tf file you created, run terraform plan. You should see output similar to what is copied below. We've truncated some of the output to save space.

$ terraform plan
...

+ aws_instance.example
    ami:               "" => "ami-408c7f28"
    availability_zone: "" => "<computed>"
    instance_type:     "" => "t1.micro"
    key_name:          "" => "<computed>"
    private_dns:       "" => "<computed>"
    private_ip:        "" => "<computed>"
    public_dns:        "" => "<computed>"
    public_ip:         "" => "<computed>"
    security_groups:   "" => "<computed>"
    subnet_id:         "" => "<computed>"

terraform plan shows what changes Terraform will apply to your infrastructure given the current state of your infrastructure as well as the current contents of your configuration.

If terraform plan failed with an error, read the error message and fix the error that occurred. At this stage, it is probably a syntax error in the configuration.

The output format is similar to the diff format generated by tools such as Git. The output has a "+" next to "aws_instance.example", meaning that Terraform will create this resource. Beneath that, it shows the attributes that will be set. When the value it is going to is <computed>, it means that the value won't be known until the resource is created.

Apply

The plan looks good, our configuration appears valid, so its time to create real resources. Run terraform apply in the same directory as your example.tf, and watch it go! It will take a few minutes since Terraform waits for the EC2 instance to become available.

$ terraform apply
aws_instance.example: Creating...
  ami:           "" => "ami-408c7f28"
  instance_type: "" => "t1.micro"

Apply complete! Resources: 1 added, 0 changed, 0 destroyed.

...

Done! You can go to the AWS console to prove to yourself that the EC2 instance has been created.

Terraform also put some state into the terraform.tfstate file by default. This state file is extremely important; it maps various resource metadata to actual resource IDs so that Terraform knows what it is managing. This file must be saved and distributed to anyone who might run Terraform. We recommend simply putting it into version control, since it generally isn't too large.

You can inspect the state using terraform show:

$ terraform show
aws_instance.example:
  id = i-e60900cd
  ami = ami-408c7f28
  availability_zone = us-east-1c
  instance_type = t1.micro
  key_name =
  private_dns = domU-12-31-39-12-38-AB.compute-1.internal
  private_ip = 10.200.59.89
  public_dns = ec2-54-81-21-192.compute-1.amazonaws.com
  public_ip = 54.81.21.192
  security_groups.# = 1
  security_groups.0 = default
  subnet_id =

You can see that by creating our resource, we've also gathered a lot more metadata about it. This metadata can actually be referenced for other resources or outputs, which will be covered later in the getting started guide.

Next

Congratulations! You've built your first infrastructure with Terraform. You've seen the configuration syntax, an example of a basic execution plan, and understand the state file.

Next, we're going to move on to changing and destroying infrastructure.