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Martin Atkins 5ac1074c54 main: Report version information for "interesting" dependencies
We have a few dependencies that are such a significant part of Terraform's
behavior that they will often be the root cause of or the solution to a
bug reported against Terraform.

As a small quality-of-life improvement to help with diagnosing those,
we'll now report the selected versions for each of these so-called
"interesting" dependencies as part of our initial trace log output during
Terraform startup.

The goal here is that when someone opens a bug report, and includes the
trace log as our bug report template requests, we'll be able to see at a
glance which versions of these dependencies were involved, instead of
having to manually cross-reference in the go.mod file of the reported main
Terraform CLI version.

This does slightly grow the general overhead of the logs, but as long as
we keep this set of interesting dependencies relatively small it shouldn't
present any significant problem in typical usage.
2021-11-05 16:47:38 -07:00
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commands.go command: Remove the experimental "terraform add" command 2021-10-20 06:42:47 -07:00
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plugins.go Move command/ to internal/command/ 2021-05-17 14:09:07 -07:00
provider_source.go Move command/ to internal/command/ 2021-05-17 14:09:07 -07:00
signal_unix.go Upgrade to Go 1.17 2021-08-17 15:20:05 -07:00
signal_windows.go Upgrade to Go 1.17 2021-08-17 15:20:05 -07:00
version.go Remove revision from version command 2021-01-12 16:35:30 -05:00
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README.md

Terraform

Terraform

Terraform is a tool for building, changing, and versioning infrastructure safely and efficiently. Terraform can manage existing and popular service providers as well as custom in-house solutions.

The key features of Terraform are:

  • Infrastructure as Code: Infrastructure is described using a high-level configuration syntax. This allows a blueprint of your datacenter to be versioned and treated as you would any other code. Additionally, infrastructure can be shared and re-used.

  • Execution Plans: Terraform has a "planning" step where it generates an execution plan. The execution plan shows what Terraform will do when you call apply. This lets you avoid any surprises when Terraform manipulates infrastructure.

  • Resource Graph: Terraform builds a graph of all your resources, and parallelizes the creation and modification of any non-dependent resources. Because of this, Terraform builds infrastructure as efficiently as possible, and operators get insight into dependencies in their infrastructure.

  • Change Automation: Complex changesets can be applied to your infrastructure with minimal human interaction. With the previously mentioned execution plan and resource graph, you know exactly what Terraform will change and in what order, avoiding many possible human errors.

For more information, see the introduction section of the Terraform website.

Getting Started & Documentation

Documentation is available on the Terraform website:

If you're new to Terraform and want to get started creating infrastructure, please check out our Getting Started guides on HashiCorp's learning platform. There are also additional guides to continue your learning.

Show off your Terraform knowledge by passing a certification exam. Visit the certification page for information about exams and find study materials on HashiCorp's learning platform.

Developing Terraform

This repository contains only Terraform core, which includes the command line interface and the main graph engine. Providers are implemented as plugins, and Terraform can automatically download providers that are published on the Terraform Registry. HashiCorp develops some providers, and others are developed by other organizations. For more information, see Extending Terraform.

To learn more about compiling Terraform and contributing suggested changes, please refer to the contributing guide.

To learn more about how we handle bug reports, please read the bug triage guide.

License

Mozilla Public License v2.0