809 lines
33 KiB
Markdown
809 lines
33 KiB
Markdown
---
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layout: "guides"
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page_title: "Upgrading to Terraform 0.12"
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sidebar_current: "upgrade-guides-0-12"
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description: |-
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Upgrading to Terraform v0.12
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---
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# Upgrading to Terraform v0.12
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[Terraform v0.12 is a major release](https://hashicorp.com/blog/terraform-0-1-2-preview)
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focused on configuration language improvements and thus includes some
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changes that you'll need to consider when upgrading. The goal of this guide is
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to cover the most common upgrade concerns and issues.
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For most users, upgrading configuration should be completely automatic. Some
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simple configurations will require no changes at all, and most other
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configurations can be prepared by running
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[the automatic upgrade tool](/docs/commands/0.12upgrade.html). Please read on
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for more information and recommendations on the upgrade process.
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-> If you are a developer maintaining a provider plugin, please see
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[the documentation on 0.12 compatibility for providers](/docs/extend/terraform-0.12-compatibility.html)
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to learn more about the changes that are required.
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## Upgrade to Terraform 0.11 first
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We strongly recommend completing an upgrade to the latest Terraform v0.11
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release first. This will give you an opportunity to address any changes
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required for the previous major version upgrades separately, rather than
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making multiple changes at once.
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In particular, if you are upgrading from a Terraform version prior to v0.9,
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you _must_ first [upgrade to Terraform v0.9](/upgrade-guides/0-9.html) and
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switch to initializing with `terraform init`, because v0.12 no longer includes
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the functionality for automatically migrating from the legacy remote state
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mechanism.
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This guide focuses on changes from v0.11 to v0.12. Each previous major release
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has its own upgrade guide, so please consult the other guides (available in the
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navigation) to upgrade step-by-step to v0.11 first.
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Terraform v0.11.14 (and any subsequent v0.11 releases) also include some
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additional functionality to help smooth the upgrade, which we will use later
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in this guide.
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Prior versions of Terraform are available from
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[the releases server](https://releases.hashicorp.com/terraform/).
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## Pre-upgrade Checklist
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Terraform v0.11.14 introduced a temporary helper command
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`terraform 0.12checklist`, which analyzes your configuration to detect any
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required steps that will be easier to perform before upgrading.
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To use it, first upgrade to [Terraform v0.11.14](https://releases.hashicorp.com/terraform/0.11.14/).
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Then, perform the following steps:
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* `terraform init` to ensure your working directory is fully initialized and
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all required plugins are installed and selected.
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* `terraform apply` to ensure that your real infrastructure and Terraform
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state are consistent with the current configuration. The instructions
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produced by the checklist command assume that configuration and state are
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synchronized.
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* `terraform 0.12checklist` to see if there are any pre-upgrade steps in the
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checklist.
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If all is well, the final command will produce a message like this:
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```
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Looks good! We did not detect any problems that ought to be
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addressed before upgrading to Terraform v0.12
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This tool is not perfect though, so please check the v0.12 upgrade
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guide for additional guidance, and for next steps:
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https://www.terraform.io/upgrade-guides/0-12.html
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```
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As the message suggests, the next step in that case is to read the remainder
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of this page to prepare for and carry out the upgrade.
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However, the checklist command may instead produce a list of one or more tasks
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that we recommend you perform before upgrading to Terraform 0.12, because they
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are easier to perform with a fully-functional Terraform 0.11 than with a
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Terraform 0.12 that has encountered compatibility problems.
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The tasks it may suggest you perform could include:
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* Upgrading any provider versions that are not compatible with Terraform v0.12.
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We recommend upgrading to the latest version of each provider before upgrading
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because that will avoid changing many things in one step.
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* Renaming any resources or provider aliases that have names that start with
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digits, because that is no longer valid in Terraform 0.12.
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* Upgrading any external modules the configuration uses which themselves have
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the above problems.
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In each case, the tool will give some direction on how to perform the task it
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is suggesting.
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The output from `terraform 0.12checklist` is in Markdown format so that it can
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easily be pasted into a Markdown-compatible issue tracker, should you want
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to track the necessary tasks or share the work with other team members.
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After all of the tasks are complete, run `terraform 0.12checklist` one more time
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to verify that everything is complete. If so, continue reading the following
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sections to complete the upgrade!
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## Upgrading to Terraform 0.12
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Before switching to Terraform 0.12, we recommend using Terraform v0.11.14 (or
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any later v0.11 release) to perform one last `terraform init` and
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`terraform apply` to ensure that everything is initialized and synchronized.
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Once `terraform apply` shows no changes pending, switch over to a Terraform
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v0.12 release and run `terraform init` again to upgrade the working directory
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metadata to v0.12 format. (Once you've done this, you'll need to delete the
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`.terraform` directory if you wish to return to Terraform v0.11, but no
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real infrastructure or persisted state will be upgraded yet.)
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It is possible that your configuration may be using configuration constructs
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that are not Terraform v0.12 compatible and thus require upgrade. In that case,
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`terraform init` will produce the following message:
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```
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Terraform has initialized, but configuration upgrades may be needed.
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Terraform found syntax errors in the configuration that prevented full
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initialization. If you've recently upgraded to Terraform v0.12, this may be
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because your configuration uses syntax constructs that are no longer valid,
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and so must be updated before full initialization is possible.
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Terraform has installed the required providers to support the configuration
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upgrade process. To begin upgrading your configuration, run the following:
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terraform 0.12upgrade
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To see the full set of errors that led to this message, run:
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terraform validate
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```
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As mentioned in the message, Terraform has partially initialized the directory
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just enough to perform the configuration upgrade process, which is described
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in the following section.
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We recommend running the configuration upgrade tool even if you do not see
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the above message, because it may detect and fix constructs that are
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syntactically correct but still need some changes to work as expected with
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Terraform v0.12.
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## Upgrading Terraform configuration
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Terraform v0.12 includes a new command `terraform 0.12upgrade` that will
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read the configuration files for a module written for Terraform 0.11 and
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update them in-place to use the cleaner Terraform 0.12 syntax and also
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adjust for use of features that have changed behavior in the 0.12 Terraform
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language.
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Simple configuration files are likely to be understood by Terraform 0.12 as-is,
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because the language is still broadly compatible, but we recommend that everyone
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run the upgrade tool nonetheless. Even if your configuration is already
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compatible, the tool will update your configuration to use the cleaner syntax
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available in Terraform 0.12, which should improve readability.
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To run the command, first make sure that your local working directory is synced
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with your version control system so that there are no changes outstanding. This
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will make it easier to review the changes that the upgrade tool is proposing,
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using the diff feature of your version control system.
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With a fully-initialized working directory (all necessary providers and child
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modules installed), run `terraform 0.12upgrade` to begin the process. By default
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it will print some information about what it is about to do and prompt for
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confirmation:
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```
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This command will rewrite the configuration files in the given directory so
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that they use the new syntax features from Terraform v0.12, and will identify
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any constructs that may need to be adjusted for correct operation with
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Terraform v0.12.
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We recommend using this command in a clean version control work tree, so that
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you can easily see the proposed changes as a diff against the latest commit.
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If you have uncommitted changes already present, we recommend aborting this
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command and dealing with them before running this command again.
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Would you like to upgrade the module in the current directory?
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```
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If you answer yes, the `.tf` and `.tfvars` files in your current working
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directory will be rewritten in-place.
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The upgrade tool may also print out warnings about constructs it wasn't able to
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migrate fully automatically; in that case, it will also emit comments into the
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rewritten source files containing the special marker `TF-UPGRADE-TODO`, as
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a prompt for a decision you'll need to make to complete the upgrade.
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Once the upgrade tool has successfully completed and you've resolved any
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`TF-UPGRADE-TODO` prompts, use your version control tool to review the proposed
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changes and then run `terraform plan` to see the effect of those changes.
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In most cases, `terraform plan` should report that no changes are required,
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because the updated configuration is equivalent to before.
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The remaining sections below describe both some common changes that the upgrade
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tool is able to make automatically, and some other upgrade situations that
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the configuration tool may not be able to fully resolve. If you encounter
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any errors during the upgrade or during the subsequent `terraform plan`, the
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sections below may give some additional context for how to proceed.
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Once you're happy with the updated configuration, commit it to version control
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in the usual way and apply it with Terraform 0.12.
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### Remote state references
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The `terraform_remote_state` data source has changed slightly for the v0.12
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release to make all of the remote state outputs available as a single map
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value, rather than as top-level attributes as in previous releases.
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In previous releases, a reference to a `vpc_id` output exported by the remote
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state data source might have looked like this:
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```hcl
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data.terraform_remote_state.vpc.vpc_id
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```
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This value must now be accessed via the new `outputs` attribute:
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```hcl
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data.terraform_remote_state.vpc.outputs.vpc_id
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```
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The upgrade tool will rewrite remote state references automatically to include
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the additional `outputs` attribute.
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Where appropriate, you can also access the outputs attribute directly to
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work with the whole map as a single value:
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```hcl
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data.terraform_remote_state.vpc.outputs
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```
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Another consideration for `terraform_remote_state` is that this data source must
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be able to parse the latest state snapshot for a separate Terraform
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configuration that may have been updated by a newer version of Terraform.
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To provide flexibility when upgrading decomposed environments that use
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`terraform_remote_state`, Terraform v0.11.14 introduced support for reading
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outputs from the Terraform v0.12 state format, so if you upgrade all of your
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configurations to Terraform v0.11.14 first you can then perform v0.12 upgrades
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of individual configurations in any order, without breaking
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`terraform_remote_state` usage.
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Note that the `config` block should now be in the form of an assignment with the `=` sign:
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```hcl
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data "terraform_remote_state" "default" {
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backend = "gcs"
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config = {
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bucket = "..."
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}
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}
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```
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### Attributes vs. blocks
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Terraform resource configurations consist of both arguments that set
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individual properties of the main object being described, and nested blocks
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which declare zero or more other objects that are modeled as being part of
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their parent. For example:
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```hcl
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resource "aws_instance" "example" {
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instance_type = "t2.micro"
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ami = "ami-abcd1234"
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tags = {
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Name = "example instance"
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}
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ebs_block_device {
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device_name = "sda2"
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volume_type = "gp2"
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volume_size = 24
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}
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}
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```
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In the above resource, `instance_type`, `ami`, and `tags` are both direct
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arguments of the `aws_instance` resource, while `ebs_block_device` describes
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a separate EBS block device object that is connected to the parent instance.
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Due to the design of the configuration language decoder in Terraform v0.11 and
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earlier, it was in many cases possible to interchange the argument syntax
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(with `=`) and the block syntax (with just braces) when dealing with map
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arguments vs. nested blocks. However, this led to some subtle bugs and
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limitations, so Terraform v0.12 now requires consistent usage of argument
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syntax for arguments and nested block syntax for nested blocks.
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In return for this new strictness, Terraform v0.12 now allows map keys to be
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set dynamically from expressions, which is a long-requested feature. The
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main difference between a map attribute and a nested block is that a map
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attribute will usually have user-defined keys, like we see in the `tags`
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example above, while a nested block always has a fixed set of supported
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arguments defined by the resource type schema, which Terraform will validate.
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The configuration upgrade tool uses the provider's schema to recognize the
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nature of each construct and will select the right syntax automatically. For
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most simple usage, this will just involve adding or removing the equals sign
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as appropriate.
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A more complicated scenario is where users found that they could exploit this
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flexibility to -- with some caveats -- dynamically generate nested blocks even
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though this wasn't intentionally allowed:
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```hcl
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# Example of no-longer-supported workaround from 0.11 and earlier
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ebs_block_device = "${concat(map("device_name", "sda4"), var.extra_block_devices)}"
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```
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Terraform v0.12 now includes a first-class feature for dynamically generating
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nested blocks using expressions, using the special `dynamic` block type. The
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above can now be written like this, separating the static block device from
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the dynamic ones:
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```hcl
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ebs_block_device {
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device_name = "sda4"
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}
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dynamic "ebs_block_device" {
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for_each = var.extra_block_devices
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content {
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device_name = ebs_block_device.value.device_name
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volume_type = ebs_block_device.value.volume_type
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volume_size = ebs_block_device.value.volume_size
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}
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}
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```
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The configuration upgrade tool will detect use of the above workaround and
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rewrite it as a `dynamic` block, but it may make non-ideal decisions for how to
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flatten your expression down into static vs. dynamic blocks, so we recommend
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reviewing the generated `dynamic` blocks to see if any simplifications are
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possible.
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Terraform v0.12 now also requires that each argument be set only once within
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a particular block, whereas before Terraform would either take the last
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definition or, in some cases, attempt to merge together multiple definitions
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into a list. The upgrade tool does not remove or attempt to consolidate
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any existing duplicate arguments, but other commands like `terraform validate`
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will detect and report these after upgrading.
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### Integer vs. Float Number Types
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From Terraform v0.12, the Terraform language no longer distinguishes between
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integer and float types, instead just having a single "number" type that can
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represent high-precision floating point numbers. This new type can represent
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any value that could be represented before, plus many new values due to the
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expanded precision.
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In most cases this change should not cause any significant behavior change, but
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please note that in particular the behavior of the division operator is now
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different: it _always_ performs floating point division, whereas before it
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would sometimes perform integer division by attempting to infer intent from
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the argument types.
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If you are relying on integer division behavior in your configuration, please
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use the `floor` function to obtain the previous result. A common place this
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would arise is in index operations, where the index is computed by division:
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```hcl
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example = var.items[floor(count.index / var.any_number)]
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```
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Using a fractional number to index a list will produce an error telling you
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that this is not allowed, serving as a prompt to add `floor`:
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```
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Error: Invalid index
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The given key does not identify an element in this collection value: indexing a
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sequence requires a whole number, but the given index (0.5) has a fractional
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part.
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```
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Unfortunately the automatic upgrade tool cannot apply a fix for this case
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because it does not have enough information to know if floating point or integer
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division was intended by the configuration author, so this change must be made
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manually where needed.
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### Referring to List Variables
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In early versions of Terraform, before list support became first-class, we
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required using seemingly-redundant list brackets around a single expression
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in order to hint to the language interpreter that a list interpretation was
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desired:
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```hcl
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# Example for older versions of Terraform; not valid for v0.12
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example = ["${var.any_list}"]
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```
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This strange requirement was subsequently lifted after the introduction of
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first-class list support, but we retained compatibility with this older usage
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for a transitional period by including some fixup logic that would detect when
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list brackets contain list expressions and automatically flatten to a single
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list.
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As part of implementing the first-class expressions support for v0.12, we needed
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to finally remove that backward-compatibility mechanism to avoid ambiguity
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in the language, so an expression like the above will now produce a list of
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lists and thus produce a type checking error for any argument that was expecting
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a list of some other type.
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The upgrade tool is able to recognize most simple usage of this pattern and
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rewrite automatically to just refer to the list directly:
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```hcl
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example = var.any_list
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```
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However, an unintended side-effect of this compatibility mechanism was to
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also flatten mixed lists of single-value and list expressions into a single
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list automatically. We didn't intend for this to be a part of the language, but
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in retrospect it was an obvious consequence of how the compatibility mechanism
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was implemented. If you have expressions in your modules that produce a list
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of strings by using list brackets with a mixture of string and list-of-string
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sub-expressions, you will need to rewrite this to explicitly use
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[the `flatten` function](/docs/configuration/functions/flatten.html)
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to make the special treatment more obvious to the reader:
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```hcl
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example = flatten([
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"single string",
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var.any_list,
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])
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```
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The configuration upgrade tool unfortunately cannot make this change
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automatically, because it doesn't have enough information to know for certain
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which interpretation was intended for a given list.
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For complex examples that the upgrade tool is not able to adjust automatically,
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subsequent Terraform operations may produce an error message like the following:
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```
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Error: Incorrect attribute value type
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on redundant-list-brackets.tf line 9, in resource "aws_security_group" "foo":
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9: cidr_blocks = ["${var.cidr_blocks}"]
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Inappropriate value for attribute "cidr_blocks": element 0: string required.
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```
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This message is reporting that Terraform has understood this expression as a
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list of lists, and therefore element zero is a list rather than a string. To
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fix the error, remove the redundant list brackets and possibly add a
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`flatten` function call as described above, for more complex cases.
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### Reserved Variable Names
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In preparation for new features planned for future releases, Terraform 0.12
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reserves some additional names that can no longer be used as input variable
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names for modules. These reserved names are:
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* `count`
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* `depends_on`
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* `for_each`
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* `lifecycle`
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* `providers`
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* `source`
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When any of these names is used as the label of a `variable` block, Terraform
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will now generate the following error:
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```
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Error: Invalid variable name
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on reserved-variable-names.tf line 2, in variable "count":
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2: variable "count" {
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The variable name "count" is reserved due to its special meaning inside module
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blocks.
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```
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The upgrade tool cannot automatically adjust for these reserved names, because
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it does not know what new name would be more appropriate. To proceed, you must
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unfortunately rename these input variables and make a new major release of
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the module in question, since renaming input variables is a breaking change.
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### Type Constraints on Variables
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In Terraform v0.11, variables were documented as accepting only strings, lists
|
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of strings, and maps of strings. However, in practice Terraform permitted
|
|
lists of lists and lists of maps and other nested structures in some cases,
|
|
even though it was then generally inconvenient to work with those values
|
|
elsewhere in the module due to limitations of the index syntax, `element`
|
|
function, and `lookup` function.
|
|
|
|
Terraform now allows various [type constraints](/docs/configuration/types.html)
|
|
to be specified, as part of the language's new type system and generalized
|
|
functions and operators. However, because lists and maps of non-string values
|
|
were not officially supported in 0.11, existing configurations do not have
|
|
enough information for the upgrade tool to know what element type was intended.
|
|
It will therefore assume that lists and maps are of strings as documented,
|
|
which will be incorrect for configurations using more complex structures. The
|
|
result will be one of the following error messages:
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
Error: Invalid default value for variable
|
|
|
|
on child_module/example.tf line 4, in variable "example":
|
|
4: default = [
|
|
5: {
|
|
6: "foo" = "bar"
|
|
7: },
|
|
8: ]
|
|
|
|
This default value is not compatible with the variable's type constraint:
|
|
element 0: string required.
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
Error: Invalid value for module argument
|
|
|
|
on variables-incorrect-elem-type.tf line 4, in module "child":
|
|
4: example = [
|
|
5: {
|
|
6: "foo" = "bar"
|
|
7: },
|
|
8: ]
|
|
|
|
The given value is not suitable for child module variable "example" defined at
|
|
child/child.tf:1,1-19: element 0: string required.
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
To fix this, change the `type` argument from `list(string)` or `map(string)`
|
|
to a more appropriate [type constraint](/docs/configuration/types.html).
|
|
|
|
If you're not sure what type constraint to use yet, another option is to
|
|
use the type constraint `any`, which will effectively disable validation and
|
|
allow any value. We recommend using specific types where possible, but selecting
|
|
`any` during upgrade may be preferable, so that the work to select and define
|
|
a more precise type can be saved for a later change at your leisure, once
|
|
upgrading is complete.
|
|
|
|
### Working with `count` on resources
|
|
|
|
The `count` feature allows declaration of multiple instances of a particular
|
|
resource constructed from the same configuration. In Terraform v0.11, any
|
|
use of `count` would generally lead to referring to the resource in question
|
|
using the "splat expression" syntax elsewhere in the configuration:
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
aws_instance.example.*.id[0]
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Because `aws_instance.example` itself was not directly referencable in
|
|
Terraform v0.11, the expression system allowed some flexibility in how such
|
|
expressions were resolved. For example, Terraform would treat
|
|
`aws_instance.example.id` as an alias for `aws_instance.example.*.id[0]`.
|
|
|
|
Terraform v0.12 allows referring to an entire resource as an object value,
|
|
but that required making a decision on what type of value is returned by
|
|
`aws_instance.example`. The new rules are as follows:
|
|
|
|
* For resources where `count` is _not_ set, a reference like
|
|
`aws_instance.example` returns a single object, whose attributes can be
|
|
accessed in the usual way, like `aws_instance.example.id`.
|
|
|
|
* For resources where `count` _is_ set -- even if the expression evaluates to
|
|
`1` -- `aws_instance.example` returns a list of objects whose length is
|
|
decided by the count. In this case `aws_instance.example.id` is an error,
|
|
and must instead be written as `aws_instance.example[0].id` to access
|
|
one of the objects before retrieving its `id` attribute value.
|
|
|
|
The splat syntax is still available and will still be useful in situations
|
|
where a list result is needed, but we recommend updating expressions like
|
|
`aws_instance.example.*.id[count.index]` to instead be
|
|
`aws_instance.example[count.index].id`, which should be easier to read and
|
|
understand for those who are familiar with other languages.
|
|
|
|
Another consequence of the new handling of `count` is that you can use the
|
|
`length` function directly with references to resources that have `count` set:
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
length(aws_instance.example)
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
This replaces the v0.11 special case of `aws_instance.example.count`, which
|
|
can no longer be supported due to `aws_instance.example` being a list.
|
|
|
|
The upgrade tool will automatically detect references that are inconsistent
|
|
with the `count` setting on the target resource and rewrite them to use the
|
|
new syntax. The upgrade tool will _not_ rewrite usage of splat syntax to
|
|
direct index syntax, because the old splat syntax form is still compatible.
|
|
|
|
Another `count`-related change is that Terraform now requires `count` to be
|
|
assigned a numeric value, and will not automatically convert a boolean value
|
|
to a number in the interests of clarity. If you wish to use a boolean value
|
|
to activate or deactivate a particular resource, use the conditional operator
|
|
to show clearly how the boolean value maps to a number value:
|
|
|
|
```hcl
|
|
count = var.enabled ? 1 : 0
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
### First-class expressions
|
|
|
|
Terraform v0.11 and earlier allowed expressions only within interpolation
|
|
sequences, like `"${var.example}"`. Because expressions are such an important
|
|
part of Terraform -- they are the means by which we connect the attributes of
|
|
one resource to the configuration of another -- Terraform v0.12 now allows
|
|
you to use expressions directly when defining most attributes.
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
ami = var.ami
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
The generalization of expression handling also has some other benefits. For
|
|
example, it's now possible to directly construct lists and maps within
|
|
expressions using the normal syntax, whereas in Terraform v0.11 we required
|
|
using the `list` and `map` functions:
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
# Old 0.11 example
|
|
tags = "${merge(map("Name", "example"), var.common_tags)}"
|
|
|
|
# Updated 0.12 example
|
|
tags = merge({ Name = "example" }, var.common_tags)
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
The automatic upgrade tool will perform rewrites like these automatically,
|
|
making expressions easier to read and understand.
|
|
|
|
### Default settings in `connection` blocks
|
|
|
|
Terraform v0.11 and earlier allowed providers to pre-populate certain arguments
|
|
in a `connection` block for use with remote provisioners. Several resource
|
|
type implementations use this to pre-populate `type` as `"ssh"` and `host`
|
|
as one of the IP addresses of the compute instance being created.
|
|
|
|
While that feature was convenient in some cases, we found that in practice it
|
|
was hard for users to predict how it would behave, since each provider had its
|
|
own rules for whether to prefer public vs. private IP addresses, which network
|
|
interface to use, whether to use IPv4 or IPv6, etc.
|
|
|
|
It also violated our design principle of "explicit is better than implicit": we
|
|
think it's important that someone who is unfamiliar with a particular Terraform
|
|
configuration (or with Terraform itself) to be able to read the configuration
|
|
and make a good guess as to what it will achieve, and the default connection
|
|
settings feature left an important detail unstated: how do the provisioners
|
|
access the host?
|
|
|
|
With this in mind, Terraform v0.12 no longer performs any automatic population
|
|
of `connection` blocks. Instead, if you are using any remote provisioners you
|
|
should explicitly set the connection type and the hostname to connect to:
|
|
|
|
```hcl
|
|
connection {
|
|
type = "ssh"
|
|
host = self.public_ip
|
|
# ...
|
|
}
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
The automatic upgrade tool will detect existing `connection` blocks that are
|
|
lacking these settings within resource types that are known to have previously
|
|
set defaults, and it will write out an expression that approximates whatever
|
|
selection logic the provider was previously doing in its own implementation.
|
|
|
|
Unfortunately in some cases the provider did not export the result of the
|
|
possibly-rather-complex host selection expression as a single attribute, and so
|
|
for some resource types the generated `host` expression will be quite
|
|
complicated. We recommend reviewing these and replacing them with a simpler
|
|
expression where possible, since you will often know better than Terraform does
|
|
which of the instance IP addresses are likely to be accessible from the host
|
|
where Terraform is running.
|
|
|
|
### Equality operations must be valid on value and type
|
|
|
|
In 0.11, `"1"` would compare truthfully against `1`, however, in 0.12,
|
|
values must be equal on both value and type in order to be true. That is, in 0.11
|
|
you would see:
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
> "1" == 1
|
|
true
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
and in 0.12:
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
> "1" == 1
|
|
false
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
This means special care should be taken if you have any conditionals comparing to say,
|
|
`count.index` where you were previously expecting it to be a string, when it is now a number.
|
|
|
|
This is a scenario where you would need to update existing 0.11 code to work as you expect in 0.12:
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
resource "server_instance" "app" {
|
|
server_status = "${count.index == local.prod_index ? "production" : "standby"}"
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
locals {
|
|
# when migrating to 0.12, be sure to change this value to a number
|
|
# to ensure expected behavior
|
|
prod_index = "0"
|
|
}
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Also take care that if you have a variable that is a number, but defined as a string,
|
|
the upgrade tool will not change it to a number, so take care to inspect your code:
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
locals {
|
|
some_count = "3" # will not be changed to a number after config upgrade
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
## Upgrades for reusable modules
|
|
|
|
If you are making upgrades to a reusable module that is consumed by many
|
|
different configurations, you may need to take care with the timing of your
|
|
upgrade and of how you publish it.
|
|
|
|
We strongly recommend using module versioning, either via a Terraform registry
|
|
or via version control arguments in your module source addresses, to pin
|
|
existing references to the old version of the module and then publish the
|
|
upgraded version under a new version number. If you are using semantic
|
|
versioning, such as in a Terraform registry, the updates made by the upgrade
|
|
tool should be considered a breaking change and published as a new major
|
|
version.
|
|
|
|
The migration tool will automatically add a `>= 0.12.0` Terraform version
|
|
constraint to indicate that the module has been upgraded to use v0.12-only
|
|
features. By using version constraints, users can gradually update their callers
|
|
to use the newly-upgraded version as they begin to use Terraform v0.12 with
|
|
those modules.
|
|
|
|
For simpler modules it may be possible to carefully adapt them to be both
|
|
0.11 and 0.12 compatible at the same time, by following the upgrade notes in
|
|
earlier sections and avoiding any v0.12-only features. However, for any module
|
|
using a undocumented workarounds for v0.11 limitations it is unlikely to be
|
|
possible to both update it for Terraform v0.12 and retain v0.11 compatibility
|
|
at the same time, because those undocumented workarounds have been replaced
|
|
with new features in Terraform v0.12.
|
|
|
|
## Map variables no longer merge when overridden
|
|
|
|
In prior versions of Terraform, a variable of type `"map"` had a special
|
|
behavior where any value provided via mechanisms such as the `-var` command
|
|
line option would be keywise-merged with any default value associated with
|
|
the variable. This was useful in early versions of Terraform that lacked
|
|
mechanisms for doing such merging explicitly, but since Terraform v0.10
|
|
introduced the concept of local values we consider it preferable to perform
|
|
such merges manually so that they are explicit in configuration:
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
variable "example_map" {
|
|
type = map(string)
|
|
default = {}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
locals {
|
|
default_map_keys = {
|
|
"a" = "b"
|
|
}
|
|
merged_map_keys = merge(local.default_map_keys, var.example_map)
|
|
}
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
In order to improve the consistency of variable handling across types, the
|
|
map variable merging behavior is removed in Terraform v0.12. Because this
|
|
mechanism was driven by command line options rather than configuration, the
|
|
automatic upgrade tool cannot automatically handle it. If you are relying on
|
|
the merging feature, you must reorganize your configuration to use explicit
|
|
merging like in the above example, or else your default map value will be
|
|
entirely overridden by any explicitly-set value.
|
|
|
|
## Upgrading `remote` Backend Configuration
|
|
|
|
Terraform Enterprise users, and users of the Terraform SAAS free tier, will need
|
|
to run `terraform init -reconfigure` to upgrade to Terraform 0.12.
|
|
|
|
Terraform provides a message stating that `terraform init` is required; while
|
|
there is no harm in running this command, the next error message will clarify
|
|
that `terraform init -reconfigure` is required.
|
|
|
|
## Upgrading Sentinel policies
|
|
|
|
The Terraform Sentinel imports have been updated to work with Terraform 0.12.
|
|
Care has been taken to ensure that the API is as backwards compatible as
|
|
possible and most policies will continue to work without modification. However,
|
|
there are some important changes and certain policies will need to modified.
|
|
|
|
More information on the changes can be found in our page on [using Sentinel with
|
|
Terraform 0.12](/docs/enterprise/sentinel/sentinel-tf-012.html).
|
|
|
|
It's strongly advised that you test your Sentinel policies after upgrading to
|
|
Terraform 0.12 to ensure they continue to work as expected. [Mock
|
|
generation](/docs/enterprise/sentinel/mock.html) has also been updated to
|
|
produce mock data for the Sentinel imports as they appear in Terraform 0.12.
|
|
|
|
For more information on testing a policy with 0.11 and 0.12 at the same time,
|
|
see the section on [testing a policy with 0.11 and 0.12
|
|
simultaneously](/docs/enterprise/sentinel/sentinel-tf-012.html#testing-a-policy-with-0-11-and-0-12-simultaneously).
|