3.9 KiB
layout | page_title | sidebar_current | description |
---|---|---|---|
docs | Plugin Basics | docs-plugins-basics | This page documents the basics of how the plugin system in Terraform works, and how to setup a basic development environment for plugin development if you're writing a Terraform plugin. |
Plugin Basics
~> Advanced topic! Plugin development is a highly advanced topic in Terraform, and is not required knowledge for day-to-day usage. If you don't plan on writing any plugins, this section of the documentation is not necessary to read. For general use of Terraform, please see our Intro to Terraform and Getting Started guides.
This page documents the basics of how the plugin system in Terraform works, and how to setup a basic development environment for plugin development if you're writing a Terraform plugin.
How it Works
Terraform providers and provisioners are provided via plugins. Each plugin exposes an implementation for a specific service, such as AWS, or provisioner, such as bash. Plugins are executed as a separate process and communicate with the main Terraform binary over an RPC interface.
More details are available in Plugin Internals.
The code within the binaries must adhere to certain interfaces. The network communication and RPC is handled automatically by higher-level Terraform libraries. The exact interface to implement is documented in its respective documentation section.
Installing Plugins
The provider plugins distributed by HashiCorp are
automatically installed by terraform init
. Third-party plugins (both
providers and provisioners) can be manually installed into the user plugins
directory, located at %APPDATA%\terraform.d\plugins
on Windows and
~/.terraform.d/plugins
on other systems.
For more information, see:
For developer-centric documentation, see:
Developing a Plugin
Developing a plugin is simple. The only knowledge necessary to write a plugin is basic command-line skills and basic knowledge of the Go programming language.
-> Note: A common pitfall is not properly setting up a
$GOPATH
. This can lead to strange errors. You can read more about
this here to familiarize
yourself.
Create a new Go project somewhere in your $GOPATH
. If you're a
GitHub user, we recommend creating the project in the directory
$GOPATH/src/github.com/USERNAME/terraform-NAME
, where USERNAME
is your GitHub username and NAME
is the name of the plugin you're
developing. This structure is what Go expects and simplifies things down
the road.
The NAME
should either begin with provider-
or provisioner-
,
depending on what kind of plugin it will be. The repository name will,
by default, be the name of the binary produced by go install
for
your plugin package.
With the package directory made, create a main.go
file. This project will
be a binary so the package is "main":
package main
import (
"github.com/hashicorp/terraform/plugin"
)
func main() {
plugin.Serve(new(MyPlugin))
}
The name MyPlugin
is a placeholder for the struct type that represents
your plugin's implementation. This must implement either
terraform.ResourceProvider
or terraform.ResourceProvisioner
, depending
on the plugin type.
To test your plugin, the easiest method is to copy your terraform
binary
to $GOPATH/bin
and ensure that this copy is the one being used for testing.
terraform init
will search for plugins within the same directory as the
terraform
binary, and $GOPATH/bin
is the directory into which go install
will place the plugin executable.