192 lines
7.8 KiB
Plaintext
192 lines
7.8 KiB
Plaintext
---
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page_title: 'Command: state mv'
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description: >-
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The `terraform state mv` command changes bindings in Terraform state,
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associating existing remote objects with new resource instances.
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---
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# Command: state mv
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The main function of [Terraform state](/language/state) is
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to track the bindings between resource instance addresses in your configuration
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and the remote objects they represent. Normally Terraform automatically
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updates the state in response to actions taken when applying a plan, such as
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removing a binding for an remote object that has now been deleted.
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You can use `terraform state mv` in the less common situation where you wish
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to retain an existing remote object but track it as a different resource
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instance address in Terraform, such as if you have renamed a resource block
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or you have moved it into a different module in your configuration.
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## Usage
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Usage: `terraform state mv [options] SOURCE DESTINATION`
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Terraform will look in the current state for a resource instance, resource,
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or module that matches the given address, and if successful it will move the
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remote objects currently associated with the source to be tracked instead
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by the destination.
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Both the source and destination addresses must use
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[resource address syntax](/cli/state/resource-addressing), and
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they must both refer to the same kind of object: you can only move a resource
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instance to another resource instance, a whole module instance to another
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whole module instance, etc. Furthermore, if you are moving a resource or
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a resource instance then you can only move it to a new address with the
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same resource type.
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The most common uses for `terraform state mv` are when you have renamed a
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resource block in your configuration or you've moved a resource block into
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a child module, in both cases with the intention of retaining the existing
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object but tracking it under a new name. By default Terraform will understand
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moving or renaming a resource configuration as a request to delete the old
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object and create a new object at the new address, and so `terraform state mv`
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allows you to override that interpretation by pre-emptively attaching the
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existing object to the new address in Terraform.
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~> _Warning:_ If you are using Terraform in a collaborative environment, you
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must ensure that when you are using `terraform state mv` for a code refactoring
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purpose you communicate carefully with your coworkers to ensure that nobody
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makes any other changes between your configuration change and your
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`terraform state mv` command, because otherwise they might inadvertently create
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a plan that will destroy the old object and create a new object at the new
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address.
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This command also accepts the following options:
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- `-dry-run` - Report all of the resource instances that match the given
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address without actually "forgetting" any of them.
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- `-lock=false` - Don't hold a state lock during the operation. This is
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dangerous if others might concurrently run commands against the same
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workspace.
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- `-lock-timeout=DURATION` - Unless locking is disabled with `-lock=false`,
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instructs Terraform to retry acquiring a lock for a period of time before
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returning an error. The duration syntax is a number followed by a time
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unit letter, such as "3s" for three seconds.
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For configurations using the [Terraform Cloud CLI integration](/cli/cloud) or the [`remote` backend](/language/settings/backends/remote)
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only, `terraform state mv`
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also accepts the option
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[`-ignore-remote-version`](/cli/cloud/command-line-arguments#ignore-remote-version).
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The legacy options [`-backup` and `-backup-out`](/language/settings/backends/local#command-line-arguments)
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operate on a local state file only. Configurations using
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[the `remote` backend](/language/settings/backends/remote)
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must specify a local state file with the [`-state`](/language/settings/backends/local#command-line-arguments)
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option in order to use the [`-backup` and `-backup-out`](/language/settings/backends/local#command-line-arguments)
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options.
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For configurations using
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[the `local` state mv](/language/settings/backends/local) only,
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`terraform state mv` also accepts the legacy options
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[`-state`, `-state-out`, `-backup`, and `-backup-out`](/language/settings/backends/local#command-line-arguments).
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## Example: Rename a Resource
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Renaming a resource means making a configuration change like the following:
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```diff
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-resource "packet_device" "worker" {
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+resource "packet_device" "helper" {
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# ...
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}
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```
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To tell Terraform that it should treat the new "helper" resource as a rename
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of the old "worker" resource, you can pair the above configuration change
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with the following command:
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```shell
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terraform state mv packet_device.worker packet_device.helper
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```
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## Example: Move a Resource Into a Module
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If you originally wrote a resource in your root module but now wish to refactor
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it into a child module, you can move the `resource` block into the child
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module configuration, removing the original in the root module, and then
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run the following command to tell Terraform to treat it as a move:
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```shell
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terraform state mv packet_device.worker module.worker.packet_device.worker
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```
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In the above example the new resource has the same name but a different module
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address. You could also change the resource name at the same time, if the new
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module organization suggests a different naming scheme:
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```shell
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terraform state mv packet_device.worker module.worker.packet_device.main
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```
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## Example: Move a Module Into a Module
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You can also refactor an entire module into a child module. In the
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configuration, move the `module` block representing the module into a different
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module and then pair that change with a command like the following:
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```shell
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terraform state mv module.app module.parent.module.app
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```
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## Example: Move a Particular Instance of a Resource using `count`
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A resource defined with [the `count` meta-argument](/language/meta-arguments/count)
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has multiple instances that are each identified by an integer. You can
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select a particular instance by including an explicit index in your given
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address:
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```shell
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$ terraform state mv 'packet_device.worker[0]' 'packet_device.helper[0]'
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```
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A resource that doesn't use `count` or `for_each` has only a single resource
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instance whose address is the same as the resource itself, and so you can
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move from an address not containing an index to an address containing an index,
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or the opposite, as long as the address type you use matches whether and how
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each resource is configured:
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```shell
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$ terraform state mv 'packet_device.main' 'packet_device.all[0]'
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```
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Brackets (`[`, `]`) have a special meaning in some shells, so you may need to
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quote or escape the address in order to pass it literally to Terraform.
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The above examples show the typical quoting syntax for Unix-style shells.
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## Example: Move a Resource configured with for_each
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A resource defined with [the `for_each` meta-argument](/language/meta-arguments/for_each)
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has multiple instances that are each identified by an string. You can
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select a particular instance by including an explicit key in your given
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address.
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However, the syntax for strings includes quotes and the quote symbol often
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has special meaning in command shells, so you'll need to use the appropriate
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quoting and/or escaping syntax for the shell you are using. For example:
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Unix-style shells, such as on Linux or macOS:
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```shell
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terraform state mv 'packet_device.worker["example123"]' 'packet_device.helper["example456"]'
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```
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Windows Command Prompt (`cmd.exe`):
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```shell
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terraform state mv packet_device.worker[\"example123\"] packet_device.helper[\"example456\"]
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```
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PowerShell:
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```shell
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terraform state mv 'packet_device.worker[\"example123\"]' 'packet_device.helper[\"example456\"]'
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```
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Aside from the use of strings instead of integers for instance keys, the
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treatment of `for_each` resources is similar to `count` resources and so
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the same combinations of addresses with and without index components is
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valid as described in the previous section.
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