68 lines
2.9 KiB
Plaintext
68 lines
2.9 KiB
Plaintext
---
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page_title: 'Command: taint'
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description: |-
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The `terraform taint` command informs Terraform that a particular object
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is damaged or degraded.
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---
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# Command: taint
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The `terraform taint` command informs Terraform that a particular object has
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become degraded or damaged. Terraform represents this by marking the
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object as "tainted" in the Terraform state, and Terraform will
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propose to replace it in the next plan you create.
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~> **Warning:** This command is deprecated. For Terraform v0.15.2 and later, we recommend using the `-replace` option with `terraform apply` instead (details below).
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## Recommended Alternative
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For Terraform v0.15.2 and later, we recommend using the [`-replace` option](/cli/commands/plan#replace-address) with `terraform apply` to force Terraform to replace an object even though there are no configuration changes that would require it.
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```
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$ terraform apply -replace="aws_instance.example[0]"
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```
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We recommend the `-replace` option because the change will be reflected in the Terraform plan, letting you understand how it will affect your infrastructure before you take any externally-visible action. When you use `terraform taint`, other users could create a new plan against your tainted object before you can review the effects.
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## Usage
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```
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$ terraform taint [options] <address>
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```
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The `address` argument is the address of the resource to mark as tainted.
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The address is in
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[the resource address syntax](/cli/state/resource-addressing) syntax,
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as shown in the output from other commands, such as:
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* `aws_instance.foo`
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* `aws_instance.bar[1]`
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* `aws_instance.baz[\"key\"]` (quotes in resource addresses must be escaped on the command line, so that they will not be interpreted by your shell)
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* `module.foo.module.bar.aws_instance.qux`
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This command accepts the following options:
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* `-allow-missing` - If specified, the command will succeed (exit code 0)
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even if the resource is missing. The command might still return an error
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for other situations, such as if there is a problem reading or writing
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the state.
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* `-lock=false` - Disables Terraform's default behavior of attempting to take
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a read/write lock on the state for the duration of the operation.
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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
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[the `remote` backend](/language/settings/backends/remote)
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only, `terraform taint`
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also accepts the option
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[`-ignore-remote-version`](/language/settings/backends/remote#command-line-arguments).
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For configurations using
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[the `local` backend](/language/settings/backends/local) only,
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`terraform taint` also accepts the legacy options
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[`-state`, `-state-out`, and `-backup`](/language/settings/backends/local#command-line-arguments).
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