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docs | Override Files - 0.11 Configuration Language | docs-conf-old-override | Terraform loads all configuration files within a directory and appends them together. Terraform also has a concept of overrides, a way to create files that are loaded last and merged into your configuration, rather than appended. |
Override Files
-> Note: This page is about Terraform 0.11 and earlier. For Terraform 0.12 and later, see Configuration Language: Override Files.
Terraform loads all configuration files within a directory and appends them together. Terraform also has a concept of overrides, a way to create files that are loaded last and merged into your configuration, rather than appended.
Overrides have a few use cases:
-
Machines (tools) can create overrides to modify Terraform behavior without having to edit the Terraform configuration tailored to human readability.
-
Temporary modifications can be made to Terraform configurations without having to modify the configuration itself.
Overrides names must be override
or end in _override
, excluding
the extension. Examples of valid override files are override.tf
,
override.tf.json
, temp_override.tf
.
Override files are loaded last in alphabetical order.
Override files can be in Terraform syntax or JSON, just like non-override Terraform configurations.
Example
If you have a Terraform configuration example.tf
with the contents:
resource "aws_instance" "web" {
ami = "ami-408c7f28"
}
And you created a file override.tf
with the contents:
resource "aws_instance" "web" {
ami = "foo"
}
Then the AMI for the one resource will be replaced with "foo". Note that the override syntax can be Terraform syntax or JSON. You can mix and match syntaxes without issue.