172 lines
7.7 KiB
Markdown
172 lines
7.7 KiB
Markdown
---
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layout: "language"
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page_title: "Resources - Configuration Language"
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sidebar_current: "docs-config-resources"
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description: |-
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Resources are the most important element in a Terraform configuration.
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Each resource corresponds to an infrastructure object, such as a virtual
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network or compute instance.
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---
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# Resource Blocks
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-> **Note:** This page is about Terraform 0.12 and later. For Terraform 0.11 and
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earlier, see
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[0.11 Configuration Language: Resources](/docs/configuration-0-11/resources.html).
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> **Hands-on:** Try the [Terraform: Get Started](https://learn.hashicorp.com/collections/terraform/aws-get-started?utm_source=WEBSITE&utm_medium=WEB_IO&utm_offer=ARTICLE_PAGE&utm_content=DOCS) collection on HashiCorp Learn.
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_Resources_ are the most important element in the Terraform language.
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Each resource block describes one or more infrastructure objects, such
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as virtual networks, compute instances, or higher-level components such
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as DNS records.
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## Resource Syntax
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Resource declarations can include a number of advanced features, but only
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a small subset are required for initial use. More advanced syntax features,
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such as single resource declarations that produce multiple similar remote
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objects, are described later in this page.
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```hcl
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resource "aws_instance" "web" {
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ami = "ami-a1b2c3d4"
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instance_type = "t2.micro"
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}
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```
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A `resource` block declares a resource of a given type ("aws_instance")
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with a given local name ("web"). The name is used to refer to this resource
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from elsewhere in the same Terraform module, but has no significance outside
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that module's scope.
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The resource type and name together serve as an identifier for a given
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resource and so must be unique within a module.
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Within the block body (between `{` and `}`) are the configuration arguments
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for the resource itself. Most arguments in this section depend on the
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resource type, and indeed in this example both `ami` and `instance_type` are
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arguments defined specifically for [the `aws_instance` resource type](/docs/providers/aws/r/instance.html).
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-> **Note:** Resource names must start with a letter or underscore, and may
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contain only letters, digits, underscores, and dashes.
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## Resource Types
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Each resource is associated with a single _resource type_, which determines
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the kind of infrastructure object it manages and what arguments and other
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attributes the resource supports.
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### Providers
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Each resource type is implemented by a [provider](/docs/configuration/provider-requirements.html),
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which is a plugin for Terraform that offers a collection of resource types. A
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provider usually provides resources to manage a single cloud or on-premises
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infrastructure platform. Providers are distributed separately from Terraform
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itself, but Terraform can automatically install most providers when initializing
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a working directory.
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In order to manage resources, a Terraform module must specify which providers it
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requires. Additionally, most providers need some configuration in order to
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access their remote APIs, and the root module must provide that configuration.
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For more information, see:
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- [Provider Requirements](/docs/configuration/provider-requirements.html), for declaring which
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providers a module uses.
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- [Provider Configuration](/docs/configuration/providers.html), for configuring provider settings.
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Terraform usually automatically determines which provider to use based on a
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resource type's name. (By convention, resource type names start with their
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provider's preferred local name.) When using multiple configurations of a
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provider (or non-preferred local provider names), you must use the `provider`
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meta-argument to manually choose an alternate provider configuration. See
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[the `provider` meta-argument](/docs/configuration/meta-arguments/resource-provider.html) for more details.
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### Resource Arguments
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Most of the arguments within the body of a `resource` block are specific to the
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selected resource type. The resource type's documentation lists which arguments
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are available and how their values should be formatted.
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The values for resource arguments can make full use of
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[expressions](/docs/configuration/expressions/index.html) and other dynamic Terraform
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language features.
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There are also some _meta-arguments_ that are defined by Terraform itself
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and apply across all resource types. (See [Meta-Arguments](#meta-arguments) below.)
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### Documentation for Resource Types
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Every Terraform provider has its own documentation, describing its resource
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types and their arguments.
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Most publicly available providers are distributed on the
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[Terraform Registry](https://registry.terraform.io/browse/providers), which also
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hosts their documentation. When viewing a provider's page on the Terraform
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Registry, you can click the "Documentation" link in the header to browse its
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documentation. Provider documentation on the registry is versioned, and you can
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use the dropdown version menu in the header to switch which version's
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documentation you are viewing.
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To browse the publicly available providers and their documentation, see
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[the providers section of the Terraform Registry](https://registry.terraform.io/browse/providers).
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-> **Note:** Provider documentation used to be hosted directly on terraform.io,
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as part of Terraform's core documentation. Although some provider documentation
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might still be hosted here, the Terraform Registry is now the main home for all
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public provider docs. (The exception is the built-in
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[`terraform` provider](/docs/providers/terraform/index.html) for reading state
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data, since it is not available on the Terraform Registry.)
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## Resource Behavior
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For more information about how Terraform manages resources when applying a
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configuration, see
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[Resource Behavior](/docs/configuration/blocks/resources/behavior.html).
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## Meta-Arguments
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The Terraform language defines several meta-arguments, which can be used with
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any resource type to change the behavior of resources.
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The following meta-arguments are documented on separate pages:
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- [`depends_on`, for specifying hidden dependencies](/docs/configuration/meta-arguments/depends_on.html)
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- [`count`, for creating multiple resource instances according to a count](/docs/configuration/meta-arguments/count.html)
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- [`for_each`, to create multiple instances according to a map, or set of strings](/docs/configuration/meta-arguments/for_each.html)
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- [`provider`, for selecting a non-default provider configuration](/docs/configuration/meta-arguments/resource-provider.html)
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- [`lifecycle`, for lifecycle customizations](/docs/configuration/meta-arguments/lifecycle.html)
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- [`provisioner` and `connection`, for taking extra actions after resource creation](/docs/configuration/blocks/resources/provisioners/index.html)
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## Operation Timeouts
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Some resource types provide a special `timeouts` nested block argument that
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allows you to customize how long certain operations are allowed to take
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before being considered to have failed.
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For example, [`aws_db_instance`](/docs/providers/aws/r/db_instance.html)
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allows configurable timeouts for `create`, `update` and `delete` operations.
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Timeouts are handled entirely by the resource type implementation in the
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provider, but resource types offering these features follow the convention
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of defining a child block called `timeouts` that has a nested argument
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named after each operation that has a configurable timeout value.
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Each of these arguments takes a string representation of a duration, such
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as `"60m"` for 60 minutes, `"10s"` for ten seconds, or `"2h"` for two hours.
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```hcl
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resource "aws_db_instance" "example" {
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# ...
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timeouts {
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create = "60m"
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delete = "2h"
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}
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}
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```
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The set of configurable operations is chosen by each resource type. Most
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resource types do not support the `timeouts` block at all. Consult the
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documentation for each resource type to see which operations it offers
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for configuration, if any.
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