219 lines
7.2 KiB
Markdown
219 lines
7.2 KiB
Markdown
---
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layout: "docs"
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page_title: "Module Sources"
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sidebar_current: "docs-modules-sources"
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description: Explains the use of the source parameter, which tells Terraform where modules can be found.
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---
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# Module Sources
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As documented in the [Usage section](/docs/modules/usage.html), the only required parameter when using a module is `source`. The `source` parameter tells Terraform where the module can be found and what constraints to put on the module. Constraints can include a specific version or Git branch.
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Terraform manages modules for you: it downloads them, organizes them on disk, checks for updates, etc. Terraform uses this `source` parameter to determine where it should retrieve and update modules from.
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Terraform supports the following sources:
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* Local file paths
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* GitHub
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* BitBucket
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* Generic Git, Mercurial repositories
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* HTTP URLs
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* S3 buckets
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Each is documented further below.
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## Local File Paths
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The easiest source is the local file path. For maximum portability, this should be a relative file path into a subdirectory. This allows you to organize your Terraform configuration into modules within one repository, for example:
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```
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module "consul" {
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source = "./consul"
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}
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```
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Updates for file paths are automatic: when "downloading" the module using the [get command](/docs/commands/get.html), Terraform will create a symbolic link to the original directory. Therefore, any changes are automatically available.
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## GitHub
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Terraform will automatically recognize GitHub URLs and turn them into a link to the specific Git repository. The syntax is simple:
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```
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module "consul" {
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source = "github.com/hashicorp/example"
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}
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```
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Subdirectories within the repository can also be referenced:
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```
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module "consul" {
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source = "github.com/hashicorp/example//subdir"
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}
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```
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These will fetch the modules using HTTPS. If you want to use SSH instead:
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```
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module "consul" {
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source = "git@github.com:hashicorp/example.git//subdir"
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}
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```
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**Note:** The double-slash, `//`, is important. It is what tells Terraform that that is the separator for a subdirectory, and not part of the repository itself.
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GitHub source URLs require that Git is installed on your system and that you have access to the repository.
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You can use the same parameters to GitHub repositories as you can generic Git repositories (such as tags or branches). See the documentation for generic Git repositories for more information.
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### Private GitHub Repos
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If you need Terraform to be able to fetch modules from private GitHub repos on a remote machine (like Atlas or a CI server), you'll need to provide Terraform with credentials that can be used to authenticate as a user with read access to the private repo.
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First, create a [machine user](https://developer.github.com/guides/managing-deploy-keys/#machine-users) on GitHub with read access to the private repo in question, then embed this user's credentials into the `source` parameter:
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```
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module "private-infra" {
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source = "git::https://MACHINE-USER:MACHINE-PASS@github.com/org/privatemodules//modules/foo"
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}
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```
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**Note:** Terraform does not yet support interpolations in the `source` field, so the machine username and password will have to be embedded directly into the `source` string. You can track [GH-1439](https://github.com/hashicorp/terraform/issues/1439) to learn when this limitation is addressed.
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## BitBucket
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Terraform will automatically recognize BitBucket URLs and turn them into a link to the specific Git or Mercurial repository, for example:
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```
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module "consul" {
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source = "bitbucket.org/hashicorp/consul"
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}
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```
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Subdirectories within the repository can also be referenced:
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```
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module "consul" {
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source = "bitbucket.org/hashicorp/consul//subdir"
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}
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```
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**Note:** The double-slash, `//`, is important. It is what tells Terraform that this is the separator for a subdirectory, and not part of the repository itself.
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BitBucket URLs will require that Git or Mercurial is installed on your system, depending on the type of repository.
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## Generic Git Repository
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Generic Git repositories are also supported. The value of `source` in this case should be a complete Git-compatible URL. Using generic Git repositories requires that Git is installed on your system.
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```
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module "consul" {
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source = "git://hashicorp.com/consul.git"
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}
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```
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You can also use protocols such as HTTP or SSH to reference a module, but you'll have specify to Terraform that it is a Git module, by prefixing the URL with `git::` like so:
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```
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module "consul" {
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source = "git::https://hashicorp.com/consul.git"
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}
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module "ami" {
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source = "git::ssh://git@github.com/owner/repo.git"
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}
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```
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If you do not specify the type of `source` then Terraform will attempt to use the closest match, for example assuming `https://hashicorp.com/consul.git` is a HTTP URL.
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The URLs for Git repositories support the following query parameters:
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* `ref` - The ref to checkout. This can be a branch, tag, commit, etc.
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```
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module "consul" {
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source = "git::https://hashicorp.com/consul.git?ref=master"
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}
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```
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## Generic Mercurial Repository
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Generic Mercurial repositories are supported. The value of `source` in this case should be a complete Mercurial-compatible URL. Using generic Mercurial repositories requires that Mercurial is installed on your system. You must tell Terraform that your `source` is a Mercurial repository by prefixing it with `hg::`.
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```
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module "consul" {
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source = "hg::http://hashicorp.com/consul.hg"
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}
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```
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URLs for Mercurial repositories support the following query parameters:
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* `rev` - The rev to checkout. This can be a branch, tag, commit, etc.
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```
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module "consul" {
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source = "hg::http://hashicorp.com/consul.hg?ref=master"
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}
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```
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## HTTP URLs
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An HTTP or HTTPS URL can be used to redirect Terraform to get the module source from one of the other sources. For HTTP URLs, Terraform will make a `GET` request to the given URL. An additional `GET` parameter, `terraform-get=1`, will be appended, allowing
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you to optionally render the page differently when Terraform is requesting it.
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Terraform then looks for the resulting module URL in the following order:
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1. Terraform will look to see if the header `X-Terraform-Get` is present. The header should contain the source URL of the actual module.
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2. Terraform will look for a `<meta>` tag with the name of `terraform-get`, for example:
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```
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<meta name=“terraform-get” content="github.com/hashicorp/example" />
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```
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### S3 Bucket
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Terraform can also store modules in an S3 bucket. To access the bucket
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you must have appropriate AWS credentials in your configuration or
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available via shared credentials or environment variables.
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There are a variety of S3 bucket addressing schemes, most are
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[documented in the S3
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configuration](http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/dev/UsingBucket.html#access-bucket-intro).
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Here are a couple of examples.
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Using the `s3` protocol.
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```
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module "consul" {
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source = "s3::https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/consulbucket/consul.zip"
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}
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```
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Or directly using the bucket's URL.
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```
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module "consul" {
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source = "consulbucket.s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/consul.zip"
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}
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```
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## Unarchiving
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Terraform will automatically unarchive files based on the extension of
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the file being requested (over any protocol). It supports the following
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archive formats:
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* tar.gz and tgz
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* tar.bz2 and tbz2
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* zip
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* gz
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* bz2
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