633 lines
24 KiB
Markdown
633 lines
24 KiB
Markdown
---
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layout: "docs"
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page_title: "Modules - Configuration Language"
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sidebar_current: "docs-config-modules"
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description: |-
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Modules allow multiple resources to be grouped together and encapsulated.
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---
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# Modules
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-> **Note:** This page is about Terraform 0.12 and later. For Terraform 0.11 and
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earlier, see
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[0.11 Configuration Language: Modules](../configuration-0-11/modules.html).
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> For a hands-on tutorial, try the [Organize Configuration with Modules](https://learn.hashicorp.com/terraform/modules/modules-overview?utm_source=WEBSITE&utm_medium=WEB_IO&utm_offer=ARTICLE_PAGE&utm_content=DOCS) track on HashiCorp Learn.
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A _module_ is a container for multiple resources that are used together.
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Every Terraform configuration has at least one module, known as its
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_root module_, which consists of the resources defined in the `.tf` files in
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the main working directory.
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A module can call other modules, which lets you include the child module's
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resources into the configuration in a concise way. Modules
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can also be called multiple times, either within the same configuration or
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in separate configurations, allowing resource configurations to be packaged
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and re-used.
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This page describes how to call one module from another. Other pages in this
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section of the documentation describe the different elements that make up
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modules, and there is further information about how modules can be used,
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created, and published in [the dedicated _Modules_
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section](/docs/modules/index.html).
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## Calling a Child Module
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To _call_ a module means to include the contents of that module into the
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configuration with specific values for its
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[input variables](./variables.html). Modules are called
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from within other modules using `module` blocks:
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```hcl
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module "servers" {
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source = "./app-cluster"
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servers = 5
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}
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```
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A module that includes a `module` block like this is the _calling module_ of the
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child module.
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The label immediately after the `module` keyword is a local name, which the
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calling module can use to refer to this instance of the module.
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Within the block body (between `{` and `}`) are the arguments for the module.
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Most of the arguments correspond to [input variables](./variables.html)
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defined by the module, including the `servers` argument in the above example.
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Terraform also defines a few meta-arguments that are reserved by Terraform
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and used for its own purposes; we will discuss those throughout the rest of
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this section.
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All modules require a `source` argument, which is a meta-argument defined by
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Terraform. Its value is either the path to a local directory containing the
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module's configuration files, or a remote module source that Terraform should
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download and use. This value must be a literal string with no template
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sequences; arbitrary expressions are not allowed. For more information on
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possible values for this argument, see [Module Sources](/docs/modules/sources.html).
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The same source address can be specified in multiple `module` blocks to create
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multiple copies of the resources defined within, possibly with different
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variable values.
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After adding, removing, or modifying `module` blocks, you must re-run
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`terraform init` to allow Terraform the opportunity to adjust the installed
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modules. By default this command will not upgrade an already-installed module;
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use the `-upgrade` option to instead upgrade to the newest available version.
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## Accessing Module Output Values
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The resources defined in a module are encapsulated, so the calling module
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cannot access their attributes directly. However, the child module can
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declare [output values](./outputs.html) to selectively
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export certain values to be accessed by the calling module.
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For example, if the `./app-cluster` module referenced in the example above
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exported an output value named `instance_ids` then the calling module
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can reference that result using the expression `module.servers.instance_ids`:
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```hcl
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resource "aws_elb" "example" {
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# ...
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instances = module.servers.instance_ids
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}
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```
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For more information about referring to named values, see
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[Expressions](./expressions.html).
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## Transferring Resource State Into Modules
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When refactoring an existing configuration to split code into child modules,
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moving resource blocks between modules causes Terraform to see the new location
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as an entirely different resource from the old. Always check the execution plan
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after moving code across modules to ensure that no resources are deleted by
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surprise.
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If you want to make sure an existing resource is preserved, use
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[the `terraform state mv` command](/docs/commands/state/mv.html) to inform
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Terraform that it has moved to a different module.
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When passing resource addresses to `terraform state mv`, resources within child
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modules must be prefixed with `module.<MODULE NAME>.`. If a module was called
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with `count` or `for_each` ([see below][inpage-multiple]), its resource
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addresses must be prefixed with `module.<MODULE NAME>[<INDEX>].` instead, where
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`<INDEX>` matches the `count.index` or `each.key` value of a particular module
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instance.
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Full resource addresses for module contents are used within the UI and on the
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command line, but cannot be used within a Terraform configuration. Only
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[outputs](./outputs.html) from a module can be referenced from
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elsewhere in your configuration.
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## Other Meta-arguments
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Along with the `source` meta-argument described above, module blocks have
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some optional meta-arguments that have special meaning across all modules,
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described in more detail below:
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- `version` - A [version constraint string](./version-constraints.html)
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that specifies acceptable versions of the module. Described in detail under
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[Module Versions][inpage-versions] below.
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- `count` and `for_each` - Both of these arguments create multiple instances of a
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module from a single `module` block. Described in detail under
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[Multiple Instances of a Module][inpage-multiple] below.
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- `providers` - A map whose keys are provider configuration names
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that are expected by child module and whose values are the corresponding
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provider configurations in the calling module. This allows
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[provider configurations to be passed explicitly to child modules](#passing-providers-explicitly).
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If not specified, the child module inherits all of the default (un-aliased)
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provider configurations from the calling module. Described in detail under
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[Providers Within Modules][inpage-providers]
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- `depends_on` - Creates explicit dependencies between the entire
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module and the listed targets. This will delay the final evaluation of the
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module, and any sub-modules, until after the dependencies have been applied.
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Modules have the same dependency resolution behavior
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[as defined for managed resources](./resources.html#resource-dependencies).
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In addition to the above, the `lifecycle` argument is not currently used by
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Terraform but is reserved for planned future features.
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Since modules are a complex feature in their own right, further detail
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about how modules can be used, created, and published is included in
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[the dedicated section on modules](/docs/modules/index.html).
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## Module Versions
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[inpage-versions]: #module-versions
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When using modules installed from a module registry, we recommend explicitly
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constraining the acceptable version numbers to avoid unexpected or unwanted
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changes.
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Use the `version` attribute in the `module` block to specify versions:
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```shell
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module "consul" {
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source = "hashicorp/consul/aws"
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version = "0.0.5"
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servers = 3
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}
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```
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The `version` attribute accepts a [version constraint string](./version-constraints.html).
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Terraform will use the newest installed version of the module that meets the
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constraint; if no acceptable versions are installed, it will download the newest
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version that meets the constraint.
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Version constraints are supported only for modules installed from a module
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registry, such as the public [Terraform Registry](https://registry.terraform.io/)
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or [Terraform Cloud's private module registry](/docs/cloud/registry/index.html).
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Other module sources can provide their own versioning mechanisms within the
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source string itself, or might not support versions at all. In particular,
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modules sourced from local file paths do not support `version`; since
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they're loaded from the same source repository, they always share the same
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version as their caller.
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## Multiple Instances of a Module
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[inpage-multiple]: #multiple-instances-of-a-module
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-> **Note:** Module support for the `for_each` and `count` meta-arguments was
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added in Terraform 0.13. Previous versions can only use these arguments with
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individual resources.
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Use the `for_each` or the `count` argument to create multiple instances of a
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module from a single `module` block. These arguments have the same syntax and
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type constraints as
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[`for_each`](./resources.html#for_each-multiple-resource-instances-defined-by-a-map-or-set-of-strings)
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and
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[`count`](./resources.html#count-multiple-resource-instances-by-count)
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when used with resources.
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```hcl
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# my_buckets.tf
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module "bucket" {
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for_each = toset(["assets", "media"])
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source = "./publish_bucket"
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name = "${each.key}_bucket"
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}
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```
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```hcl
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# publish_bucket/bucket-and-cloudfront.tf
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variable "name" {} # this is the input parameter of the module
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resource "aws_s3_bucket" "example" {
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# Because var.name includes each.key in the calling
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# module block, its value will be different for
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# each instance of this module.
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bucket = var.name
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# ...
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}
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resource "aws_iam_user" "deploy_user" {
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# ...
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}
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```
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This example defines a local child module in the `./publish_bucket`
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subdirectory. That module has configuration to create an S3 bucket. The module
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wraps the bucket and all the other implementation details required to configure
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a bucket.
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We declare multiple module instances by using the `for_each` attribute,
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which accepts a map (with string keys) or a set of strings as its value. Additionally,
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we use the special `each.key` value in our module block, because the
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[`each`](/docs/configuration/resources.html#the-each-object) object is available when
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we have declared `for_each` on the module block. When using the `count` argument, the
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[`count`](/docs/configuration/resources.html#the-count-object) object is available.
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Resources from child modules are prefixed with `module.module_name[module index]`
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when displayed in plan output and elsewhere in the UI. For a module with without
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`count` or `for_each`, the address will not contain the module index as the module's
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name suffices to reference the module.
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In our example, the `./publish_bucket` module contains `aws_s3_bucket.example`, and so the two
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instances of this module produce S3 bucket resources with [resource addresses](/docs/internals/resource-addressing.html) of `module.bucket["assets"].aws_s3_bucket.example`
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and `module.bucket["media"].aws_s3_bucket.example` respectively.
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## Providers Within Modules
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[inpage-providers]: #providers-within-modules
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In a configuration with multiple modules, there are some special considerations
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for how resources are associated with provider configurations.
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Each resource in the configuration must be associated with one provider
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configuration. Provider configurations, unlike most other concepts in
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Terraform, are global to an entire Terraform configuration and can be shared
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across module boundaries. Provider configurations can be defined only in a
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root Terraform module.
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Providers can be passed down to descendent modules in two ways: either
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_implicitly_ through inheritance, or _explicitly_ via the `providers` argument
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within a `module` block. These two options are discussed in more detail in the
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following sections.
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A module intended to be called by one or more other modules must not contain
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any `provider` blocks, with the exception of the special
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"proxy provider blocks" discussed under
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_[Passing Providers Explicitly](#passing-providers-explicitly)_
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below.
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For backward compatibility with configurations targeting Terraform v0.10 and
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earlier Terraform does not produce an error for a `provider` block in a shared
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module if the `module` block only uses features available in Terraform v0.10,
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but that is a legacy usage pattern that is no longer recommended. A legacy
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module containing its own provider configurations is not compatible with the
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`for_each`, `count`, and `depends_on` arguments that were introduced in
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Terraform v0.13. For more information, see
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[Legacy Shared Modules with Provider Configurations](#legacy-shared-modules-with-provider-configurations).
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Provider configurations are used for all operations on associated resources,
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including destroying remote objects and refreshing state. Terraform retains, as
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part of its state, a reference to the provider configuration that was most
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recently used to apply changes to each resource. When a `resource` block is
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removed from the configuration, this record in the state will be used to locate
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the appropriate configuration because the resource's `provider` argument
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(if any) will no longer be present in the configuration.
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As a consequence, you must ensure that all resources that belong to a
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particular provider configuration are destroyed before you can remove that
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provider configuration's block from your configuration. If Terraform finds
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a resource instance tracked in the state whose provider configuration block is
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no longer available then it will return an error during planning, prompting you
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to reintroduce the provider configuration.
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### Provider Version Constraints in Modules
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Although provider _configurations_ are shared between modules, each module must
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declare its own [provider requirements](provider-requirements.html), so that
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Terraform can ensure that there is a single version of the provider that is
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compatible with all modules in the configuration and to specify the
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[source address](provider-requirements.html#source-addresses) that serves as
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the global (module-agnostic) identifier for a provider.
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To declare that a module requires particular versions of a specific provider,
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use a `required_providers` block inside a `terraform` block:
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```hcl
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terraform {
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required_providers {
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aws = {
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source = "hashicorp/aws"
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version = ">= 2.7.0"
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}
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}
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}
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```
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A provider requirement says, for example, "This module requires version v2.7.0
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of the provider `hashicorp/aws` and will refer to it as `aws`." It doesn't,
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however, specify any of the configuration settings that determine what remote
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endpoints the provider will access, such as an AWS region; configuration
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settings come from provider _configurations_, and a particular overall Terraform
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configuration can potentially have
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[several different configurations for the same provider](providers.html#alias-multiple-provider-instances).
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If you are writing a shared Terraform module, constrain only the minimum
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required provider version using a `>=` constraint. This should specify the
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minimum version containing the features your module relies on, and thus allow a
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user of your module to potentially select a newer provider version if other
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features are needed by other parts of their overall configuration.
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### Implicit Provider Inheritance
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For convenience in simple configurations, a child module automatically inherits
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default (un-aliased) provider configurations from its parent. This means that
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explicit `provider` blocks appear only in the root module, and downstream
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modules can simply declare resources for that provider and have them
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automatically associated with the root provider configurations.
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For example, the root module might contain only a `provider` block and a
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`module` block to instantiate a child module:
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```hcl
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provider "aws" {
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region = "us-west-1"
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}
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module "child" {
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source = "./child"
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}
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```
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The child module can then use any resource from this provider with no further
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provider configuration required:
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```hcl
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resource "aws_s3_bucket" "example" {
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bucket = "provider-inherit-example"
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}
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```
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We recommend using this approach when a single configuration for each provider
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is sufficient for an entire configuration.
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~> **Note:** Only provider configurations are inherited by child modules, not provider source or version requirements. Each module must [declare its own provider requirements](provider-requirements.html). This is especially important for non-HashiCorp providers.
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In more complex situations there may be
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[multiple provider configurations](/docs/configuration/providers.html#alias-multiple-provider-configurations),
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or a child module may need to use different provider settings than
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its parent. For such situations, you must pass providers explicitly.
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### Passing Providers Explicitly
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When child modules each need a different configuration of a particular
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provider, or where the child module requires a different provider configuration
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than its parent, you can use the `providers` argument within a `module` block
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to explicitly define which provider configurations are available to the
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child module. For example:
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```hcl
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# The default "aws" configuration is used for AWS resources in the root
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# module where no explicit provider instance is selected.
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provider "aws" {
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region = "us-west-1"
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}
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# An alternate configuration is also defined for a different
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# region, using the alias "usw2".
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provider "aws" {
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alias = "usw2"
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region = "us-west-2"
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}
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# An example child module is instantiated with the alternate configuration,
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# so any AWS resources it defines will use the us-west-2 region.
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module "example" {
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source = "./example"
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providers = {
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aws = aws.usw2
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}
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}
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```
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The `providers` argument within a `module` block is similar to
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[the `provider` argument](resources.html#provider-selecting-a-non-default-provider-configuration)
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within a resource, but is a map rather than a single string because a module may
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contain resources from many different providers.
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The keys of the `providers` map are provider configuration names as expected by
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the child module, and the values are the names of corresponding configurations
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in the _current_ module.
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Once the `providers` argument is used in a `module` block, it overrides all of
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the default inheritance behavior, so it is necessary to enumerate mappings
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for _all_ of the required providers. This is to avoid confusion and surprises
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that may result when mixing both implicit and explicit provider passing.
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Additional provider configurations (those with the `alias` argument set) are
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_never_ inherited automatically by child modules, and so must always be passed
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explicitly using the `providers` map. For example, a module
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that configures connectivity between networks in two AWS regions is likely
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to need both a source and a destination region. In that case, the root module
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may look something like this:
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```hcl
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provider "aws" {
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alias = "usw1"
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region = "us-west-1"
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}
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provider "aws" {
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alias = "usw2"
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region = "us-west-2"
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}
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module "tunnel" {
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source = "./tunnel"
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providers = {
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aws.src = aws.usw1
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aws.dst = aws.usw2
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}
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}
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```
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The subdirectory `./tunnel` must then contain _proxy configuration blocks_ like
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the following, to declare that it requires its calling module to pass
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configurations with these names in its `providers` argument:
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```hcl
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provider "aws" {
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alias = "src"
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}
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provider "aws" {
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alias = "dst"
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}
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```
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Each resource should then have its own `provider` attribute set to either
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`aws.src` or `aws.dst` to choose which of the two provider configurations to
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use.
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### Proxy Configuration Blocks
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A proxy configuration block is one that contains only the `alias` argument. It
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serves as a placeholder for provider configurations passed between modules, and
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declares that a module expects to be explicitly passed an additional (aliased)
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provider configuration.
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-> **Note:** Although a completely empty proxy configuration block is also
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valid, it is not necessary: proxy configuration blocks are needed only to
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establish which _aliased_ provider configurations a child module expects.
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Don't use a proxy configuration block if a module only needs a single default
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provider configuration, and don't use proxy configuration blocks only to imply
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[provider requirements](./provider-requirements.html).
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## Legacy Shared Modules with Provider Configurations
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In Terraform v0.10 and earlier there was no explicit way to use different
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configurations of a provider in different modules in the same configuration,
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and so module authors commonly worked around this by writing `provider` blocks
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directly inside their modules, making the module have its own separate
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|
provider configurations separate from those declared in the root module.
|
|
|
|
However, that pattern had a significant drawback: because a provider
|
|
configuration is required to destroy the remote object associated with a
|
|
resource instance as well as to create or update it, a provider configuration
|
|
must always stay present in the overall Terraform configuration for longer
|
|
than all of the resources it manages. If a particular module includes
|
|
both resources and the provider configurations for those resources then
|
|
removing the module from its caller would violate that constraint: both the
|
|
resources and their associated providers would, in effect, be removed
|
|
simultaneously.
|
|
|
|
Terraform v0.11 introduced the mechanisms described in earlier sections to
|
|
allow passing provider configurations between modules in a structured way, and
|
|
thus we explicitly recommended against writing a child module with its own
|
|
provider configuration blocks. However, that legacy pattern continued to work
|
|
for compatibility purposes -- though with the same drawback -- until Terraform
|
|
v0.13.
|
|
|
|
Terraform v0.13 introduced the possibility for a module itself to use the
|
|
`for_each`, `count`, and `depends_on` arguments, but the implementation of
|
|
those unfortunately conflicted with the support for the legacy pattern.
|
|
|
|
To retain the backward compatibility as much as possible, Terraform v0.13
|
|
continues to support the legacy pattern for module blocks that do not use these
|
|
new features, but a module with its own provider configurations is not
|
|
compatible with `for_each`, `count`, or `depends_on`. Terraform will produce an
|
|
error if you attempt to combine these features. For example:
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
Error: Module does not support count
|
|
|
|
on main.tf line 15, in module "child":
|
|
15: count = 2
|
|
|
|
Module "child" cannot be used with count because it contains a nested provider
|
|
configuration for "aws", at child/main.tf:2,10-15.
|
|
|
|
This module can be made compatible with count by changing it to receive all of
|
|
its provider configurations from the calling module, by using the "providers"
|
|
argument in the calling module block.
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
To make a module compatible with the new features, you must either remove all
|
|
of the `provider` blocks from its definition or, if you need multiple
|
|
configurations for the same provider, replace them with
|
|
_proxy configuration blocks_ as described in
|
|
[Passing Providers Explicitly](#passing-providers-explicitly).
|
|
|
|
If the new version of the module uses proxy configuration blocks, or if the
|
|
calling module needs the child module to use different provider configurations
|
|
than its own default provider configurations, the calling module must then
|
|
include an explicit `providers` argument to describe which provider
|
|
configurations the child module will use:
|
|
|
|
```hcl
|
|
provider "aws" {
|
|
region = "us-west-1"
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
provider "aws" {
|
|
region = "us-east-1"
|
|
alias = "east"
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
module "child" {
|
|
count = 2
|
|
providers = {
|
|
# By default, the child module would use the
|
|
# default (unaliased) AWS provider configuration
|
|
# using us-west-1, but this will override it
|
|
# to use the additional "east" configuration
|
|
# for its resources instead.
|
|
aws = aws.east
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Since the association between resources and provider configurations is
|
|
static, module calls using `for_each` or `count` cannot pass different
|
|
provider configurations to different instances. If you need different
|
|
instances of your module to use different provider configurations then you
|
|
must use a separate `module` block for each distinct set of provider
|
|
configurations:
|
|
|
|
```hcl
|
|
provider "aws" {
|
|
alias = "usw1"
|
|
region = "us-west-1"
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
provider "aws" {
|
|
alias = "usw2"
|
|
region = "us-west-2"
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
provider "google" {
|
|
alias = "usw1"
|
|
credentials = "${file("account.json")}"
|
|
project = "my-project-id"
|
|
region = "us-west1"
|
|
zone = "us-west1-a"
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
provider "google" {
|
|
alias = "usw2"
|
|
credentials = "${file("account.json")}"
|
|
project = "my-project-id"
|
|
region = "us-west2"
|
|
zone = "us-west2-a"
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
module "bucket_w1" {
|
|
source = "./publish_bucket"
|
|
providers = {
|
|
aws.src = aws.usw1
|
|
google.src = google.usw2
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
module "bucket_w2" {
|
|
source = "./publish_bucket"
|
|
providers = {
|
|
aws.src = aws.usw2
|
|
google.src = google.usw2
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
## Tainting resources within a module
|
|
|
|
The [taint command](/docs/commands/taint.html) can be used to _taint_ specific
|
|
resources within a module:
|
|
|
|
```shell
|
|
$ terraform taint module.salt_master.aws_instance.salt_master
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
It is not possible to taint an entire module. Instead, each resource within
|
|
the module must be tainted separately.
|