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docs | Module Registry Protocol | docs-internals-module-registry-protocol | The module registry protocol is implemented by a host intending to be the host of one or more Terraform modules, specifying which modules are available and where to find their distribution packages. |
Module Registry Protocol
-> Third-party provider registries are supported only in Terraform CLI 0.11 and later. Prior versions do not support this protocol.
The module registry protocol is what Terraform CLI uses to discover metadata about modules available for installation and to locate the distribution package for a selected module.
The primary implementation of this protocol is the public
Terraform Registry at registry.terraform.io
.
By writing and deploying your own implementation of this protocol, you can
create a separate registry to distribute your own modules, as an alternative to
publishing them on the public Terraform Registry.
The public Terraform Registry implements a superset of the API described on this page, in order to capture additional information used in the registry UI. For information on those extensions, see Terraform Registry HTTP API. Third-party registry implementations may choose to implement those extensions if desired, but Terraform CLI itself does not use them.
Module Addresses
Each Terraform module has an associated address. A module address has the
syntax hostname/namespace/name/system
, where:
hostname
is the hostname of the provider registry that serves this module.namespace
is the name of a namespace, unique on a particular hostname, that can contain one or more modules that are somehow related. On the public Terraform Registry the "namespace" represents the organization that is packaging and distributing the module.name
is the module name, which generally names the abstraction that the module is intending to create.system
is the name of a system that the module is primarily written to target. For multi-cloud abstractions, there can be multiple modules with addresses that differ only in "system" to reflect system-specific implementations of the abstraction, likeregistry.terraform.io/hashicorp/consul/aws
vs.registry.terraform.io/hashicorp/consul/azurerm
. The system name commonly matches the type portion of the address of an official provider, but that is not required.
The hostname/
portion of a provider address (including its slash delimiter)
is optional, and if omitted defaults to registry.terraform.io/
.
For example:
hashicorp/consul/aws
is a shorthand forregistry.terraform.io/hashicorp/consul/aws
, which is a module on the public registry for deploying Consul clusters in Amazon Web Services.example.com/awesomecorp/consul/happycloud
is a hypothetical module published on a third-party registry.
If you intend only to share a module you've developed for use by all Terraform users, please consider publishing it into the public Terraform Registry, which will make your module discoverable. You only need to implement this module registry protocol if you wish to publish modules whose addresses include a different hostname that is under your control.
Module Versions
Each distinct module address has associated with it a set of versions, each of which has an associated version number. Terraform assumes version numbers follow the Semantic Versioning 2.0 conventions, with the user-facing behavior of the module serving as the "public API".
Each module
block may select a distinct version of a module, even if multiple
blocks have the same source address.
Service Discovery
The providers protocol begins with Terraform CLI using Terraform's remote service discovery protocol, with the hostname in the module address acting as the "User-facing Hostname".
The service identifier for the module registry protocol is modules.v1
.
Its associated string value is the base URL for the relative URLs defined in
the sections that follow.
For example, the service discovery document for a host that only implements the module registry protocol might contain the following:
{
"modules.v1": "/terraform/modules/v1/"
}
If the given URL is a relative URL then Terraform will interpret it as relative to the discovery document itself. The specific module registry protocol endpoints are defined as URLs relative to the given base URL, and so the specified base URL should generally end with a slash to ensure that those relative paths will be resolved as expected.
The following sections describe the various operations that a module
registry must implement to be compatible with Terraform CLI's module
installer. The indicated URLs are all relative to the URL resulting from
service discovery, as described above. We use the current URLs on
Terraform Registry as working examples, assuming that the caller already
performed service discovery on registry.terraform.io
to learn the base URL.
The URLs are shown with the convention that a path portion with a colon :
prefix is a placeholder for a dynamically-selected value, while all other
path portions are literal. For example, in :namespace/:type/versions
,
the first two path portions are placeholders while the third is literally
the string "versions".
List Available Versions for a Specific Module
This is the primary endpoint for resolving module sources, returning the available versions for a given fully-qualified module.
Method | Path | Produces |
---|---|---|
GET |
:namespace/:name/:provider/versions |
application/json |
Parameters
-
namespace
(string: <required>)
- The user or organization the module is owned by. This is required and is specified as part of the URL path. -
name
(string: <required>)
- The name of the module. This is required and is specified as part of the URL path. -
provider
(string: <required>)
- The name of the target system. This is required and is specified as part of the URL path.
Sample Request
$ curl 'https://registry.terraform.io/v1/modules/hashicorp/consul/aws/versions'
Sample Response
The modules
array in the response always includes the requested module as the
first element.
Other elements of this list are not currently used. Third-party implementations should always use a single-element list for forward compatiblity with possible future extensions to the protocol.
Each returned module has an array of available versions, which Terraform matches against any version constraints given in configuration.
{
"modules": [
{
"versions": [
{"version": "1.0.0"},
{"version": "1.1.0"},
{"version": "2.0.0"}
]
}
]
}
Return 404 Not Found
to indicate that no module is available with the
requested namespace, name, and provider
Download Source Code for a Specific Module Version
This endpoint downloads the specified version of a module for a single provider.
Method | Path | Produces |
---|---|---|
GET |
:namespace/:name/:provider/:version/download |
application/json |
Parameters
-
namespace
(string: <required>)
- The user the module is owned by. This is required and is specified as part of the URL path. -
name
(string: <required>)
- The name of the module. This is required and is specified as part of the URL path. -
provider
(string: <required>)
- The name of the target system. This is required and is specified as part of the URL path. -
version
(string: <required>)
- The version of the module. This is required and is specified as part of the URL path.
Sample Request
$ curl -i 'https://registry.terraform.io/v1/modules/hashicorp/consul/aws/0.0.1/download'
Sample Response
HTTP/1.1 204 No Content
Content-Length: 0
X-Terraform-Get: https://api.github.com/repos/hashicorp/terraform-aws-consul/tarball/v0.0.1//*?archive=tar.gz
A successful response has no body, and includes the location from which the
module version's source can be downloaded in the X-Terraform-Get
header.
The value of this header accepts the same values as the source
argument
in a module
block in Terraform configuration, as described in
Module Sources,
except that it may not recursively refer to another module registry address.
The value of X-Terraform-Get
may instead be a relative URL, indicated by
beginning with /
, ./
or ../
, in which case it is resolved relative to
the full URL of the download endpoint to produce
an HTTP URL module source.