562 lines
24 KiB
Markdown
562 lines
24 KiB
Markdown
---
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layout: "docs"
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page_title: "Interpolation Syntax - 0.11 Configuration Language"
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sidebar_current: "docs-conf-old-interpolation"
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description: |-
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Embedded within strings in Terraform, whether you're using the Terraform syntax or JSON syntax, you can interpolate other values into strings. These interpolations are wrapped in `${}`, such as `${var.foo}`.
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---
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# Interpolation Syntax
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-> **Note:** This page is about Terraform 0.11 and earlier. For Terraform 0.12
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and later, see
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[Configuration Language: Expressions](../configuration/expressions.html) and
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[Configuration Language: Functions](../configuration/functions.html).
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Embedded within strings in Terraform, whether you're using the
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Terraform syntax or JSON syntax, you can interpolate other values. These
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interpolations are wrapped in `${}`, such as `${var.foo}`.
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The interpolation syntax is powerful and allows you to reference
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variables, attributes of resources, call functions, etc.
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You can perform [simple math](#math) in interpolations, allowing
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you to write expressions such as `${count.index + 1}`. And you can
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also use [conditionals](#conditionals) to determine a value based
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on some logic.
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You can escape interpolation with double dollar signs: `$${foo}`
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will be rendered as a literal `${foo}`.
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## Available Variables
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There are a variety of available variable references you can use.
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#### User string variables
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Use the `var.` prefix followed by the variable name. For example,
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`${var.foo}` will interpolate the `foo` variable value.
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#### User map variables
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The syntax is `var.MAP["KEY"]`. For example, `${var.amis["us-east-1"]}`
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would get the value of the `us-east-1` key within the `amis` map
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variable.
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#### User list variables
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The syntax is `"${var.LIST}"`. For example, `"${var.subnets}"`
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would get the value of the `subnets` list, as a list. You can also
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return list elements by index: `${var.subnets[idx]}`.
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#### Attributes of your own resource
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The syntax is `self.ATTRIBUTE`. For example `${self.private_ip}`
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will interpolate that resource's private IP address.
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-> **Note**: The `self.ATTRIBUTE` syntax is only allowed and valid within
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provisioners.
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#### Attributes of other resources
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The syntax is `TYPE.NAME.ATTRIBUTE`. For example,
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`${aws_instance.web.id}` will interpolate the ID attribute from the
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`aws_instance` resource named `web`. If the resource has a `count`
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attribute set, you can access individual attributes with a zero-based
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index, such as `${aws_instance.web.0.id}`. You can also use the splat
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syntax to get a list of all the attributes: `${aws_instance.web.*.id}`.
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#### Attributes of a data source
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The syntax is `data.TYPE.NAME.ATTRIBUTE`. For example. `${data.aws_ami.ubuntu.id}` will interpolate the `id` attribute from the `aws_ami` [data source](./data-sources.html) named `ubuntu`. If the data source has a `count`
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attribute set, you can access individual attributes with a zero-based
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index, such as `${data.aws_subnet.example.0.cidr_block}`. You can also use the splat
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syntax to get a list of all the attributes: `${data.aws_subnet.example.*.cidr_block}`.
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#### Outputs from a module
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The syntax is `MODULE.NAME.OUTPUT`. For example `${module.foo.bar}` will
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interpolate the `bar` output from the `foo`
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[module](/docs/modules/index.html).
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#### Count information
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The syntax is `count.FIELD`. For example, `${count.index}` will
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interpolate the current index in a multi-count resource. For more
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information on `count`, see the [resource configuration
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page](./resources.html).
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#### Path information
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The syntax is `path.TYPE`. TYPE can be `cwd`, `module`, or `root`.
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`cwd` will interpolate the current working directory. `module` will
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interpolate the path to the current module. `root` will interpolate the
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path of the root module. In general, you probably want the
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`path.module` variable.
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#### Terraform meta information
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The syntax is `terraform.FIELD`. This variable type contains metadata about
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the currently executing Terraform run. FIELD can currently only be `env` to
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reference the currently active [state environment](/docs/state/environments.html).
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## Conditionals
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Interpolations may contain conditionals to branch on the final value.
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```hcl
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resource "aws_instance" "web" {
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subnet = "${var.env == "production" ? var.prod_subnet : var.dev_subnet}"
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}
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```
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The conditional syntax is the well-known ternary operation:
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```text
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CONDITION ? TRUEVAL : FALSEVAL
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```
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The condition can be any valid interpolation syntax, such as variable
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access, a function call, or even another conditional. The true and false
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value can also be any valid interpolation syntax. The returned types by
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the true and false side must be the same.
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The supported operators are:
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* Equality: `==` and `!=`
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* Numerical comparison: `>`, `<`, `>=`, `<=`
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* Boolean logic: `&&`, `||`, unary `!`
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A common use case for conditionals is to enable/disable a resource by
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conditionally setting the count:
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```hcl
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resource "aws_instance" "vpn" {
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count = "${var.something ? 1 : 0}"
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}
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```
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In the example above, the "vpn" resource will only be included if
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"var.something" evaluates to true. Otherwise, the VPN resource will
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not be created at all.
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## Built-in Functions
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Terraform ships with built-in functions. Functions are called with the
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syntax `name(arg, arg2, ...)`. For example, to read a file:
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`${file("path.txt")}`.
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~> **NOTE**: Proper escaping is required for JSON field values containing quotes
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(`"`) such as `environment` values. If directly setting the JSON, they should be
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escaped as `\"` in the JSON, e.g. `"value": "I \"love\" escaped quotes"`. If
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using a Terraform variable value, they should be escaped as `\\\"` in the
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variable, e.g. `value = "I \\\"love\\\" escaped quotes"` in the variable and
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`"value": "${var.myvariable}"` in the JSON.
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### Supported built-in functions
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The supported built-in functions are:
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* `abs(float)` - Returns the absolute value of a given float.
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Example: `abs(1)` returns `1`, and `abs(-1)` would also return `1`,
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whereas `abs(-3.14)` would return `3.14`. See also the `signum` function.
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* `basename(path)` - Returns the last element of a path.
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* `base64decode(string)` - Given a base64-encoded string, decodes it and
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returns the original string.
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* `base64encode(string)` - Returns a base64-encoded representation of the
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given string.
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* `base64gzip(string)` - Compresses the given string with gzip and then
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encodes the result to base64. This can be used with certain resource
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arguments that allow binary data to be passed with base64 encoding, since
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Terraform strings are required to be valid UTF-8.
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* `base64sha256(string)` - Returns a base64-encoded representation of raw
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SHA-256 sum of the given string.
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**This is not equivalent** of `base64encode(sha256(string))`
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since `sha256()` returns hexadecimal representation.
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* `base64sha512(string)` - Returns a base64-encoded representation of raw
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SHA-512 sum of the given string.
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**This is not equivalent** of `base64encode(sha512(string))`
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since `sha512()` returns hexadecimal representation.
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* `bcrypt(password, cost)` - Returns the Blowfish encrypted hash of the string
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at the given cost. A default `cost` of 10 will be used if not provided.
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* `ceil(float)` - Returns the least integer value greater than or equal
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to the argument.
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* `chomp(string)` - Removes trailing newlines from the given string.
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* `chunklist(list, size)` - Returns the `list` items chunked by `size`.
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Examples:
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* `chunklist(aws_subnet.foo.*.id, 1)`: will outputs `[["id1"], ["id2"], ["id3"]]`
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* `chunklist(var.list_of_strings, 2)`: will outputs `[["id1", "id2"], ["id3", "id4"], ["id5"]]`
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* `cidrhost(iprange, hostnum)` - Takes an IP address range in CIDR notation
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and creates an IP address with the given host number. If given host
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number is negative, the count starts from the end of the range.
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For example, `cidrhost("10.0.0.0/8", 2)` returns `10.0.0.2` and
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`cidrhost("10.0.0.0/8", -2)` returns `10.255.255.254`.
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* `cidrnetmask(iprange)` - Takes an IP address range in CIDR notation
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and returns the address-formatted subnet mask format that some
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systems expect for IPv4 interfaces. For example,
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`cidrnetmask("10.0.0.0/8")` returns `255.0.0.0`. Not applicable
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to IPv6 networks since CIDR notation is the only valid notation for
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IPv6.
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* `cidrsubnet(iprange, newbits, netnum)` - Takes an IP address range in
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CIDR notation (like `10.0.0.0/8`) and extends its prefix to include an
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additional subnet number. For example,
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`cidrsubnet("10.0.0.0/8", 8, 2)` returns `10.2.0.0/16`;
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`cidrsubnet("2607:f298:6051:516c::/64", 8, 2)` returns
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`2607:f298:6051:516c:200::/72`.
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* `coalesce(string1, string2, ...)` - Returns the first non-empty value from
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the given arguments. At least two arguments must be provided.
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* `coalescelist(list1, list2, ...)` - Returns the first non-empty list from
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the given arguments. At least two arguments must be provided.
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* `compact(list)` - Removes empty string elements from a list. This can be
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useful in some cases, for example when passing joined lists as module
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variables or when parsing module outputs.
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Example: `compact(module.my_asg.load_balancer_names)`
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* `concat(list1, list2, ...)` - Combines two or more lists into a single list.
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Example: `concat(aws_instance.db.*.tags.Name, aws_instance.web.*.tags.Name)`
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* `contains(list, element)` - Returns *true* if a list contains the given element
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and returns *false* otherwise. Examples: `contains(var.list_of_strings, "an_element")`
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* `dirname(path)` - Returns all but the last element of path, typically the path's directory.
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* `distinct(list)` - Removes duplicate items from a list. Keeps the first
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occurrence of each element, and removes subsequent occurrences. This
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function is only valid for flat lists. Example: `distinct(var.usernames)`
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* `element(list, index)` - Returns a single element from a list
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at the given index. If the index is greater than the number of
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elements, this function will wrap using a standard mod algorithm.
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This function only works on flat lists. Examples:
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* `element(aws_subnet.foo.*.id, count.index)`
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* `element(var.list_of_strings, 2)`
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* `file(path)` - Reads the contents of a file into the string. Variables
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in this file are _not_ interpolated. The contents of the file are
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read as-is. The `path` is interpreted relative to the working directory.
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[Path variables](#path-information) can be used to reference paths relative
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to other base locations. For example, when using `file()` from inside a
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module, you generally want to make the path relative to the module base,
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like this: `file("${path.module}/file")`.
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* `floor(float)` - Returns the greatest integer value less than or equal to
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the argument.
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* `flatten(list of lists)` - Flattens lists of lists down to a flat list of
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primitive values, eliminating any nested lists recursively. Examples:
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* `flatten(data.github_user.user.*.gpg_keys)`
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* `format(format, args, ...)` - Formats a string according to the given
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format. The syntax for the format is standard `sprintf` syntax.
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Good documentation for the syntax can be [found here](https://golang.org/pkg/fmt/).
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Example to zero-prefix a count, used commonly for naming servers:
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`format("web-%03d", count.index + 1)`.
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* `formatlist(format, args, ...)` - Formats each element of a list
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according to the given format, similarly to `format`, and returns a list.
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Non-list arguments are repeated for each list element.
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For example, to convert a list of DNS addresses to a list of URLs, you might use:
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`formatlist("https://%s:%s/", aws_instance.foo.*.public_dns, var.port)`.
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If multiple args are lists, and they have the same number of elements, then the formatting is applied to the elements of the lists in parallel.
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Example:
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`formatlist("instance %v has private ip %v", aws_instance.foo.*.id, aws_instance.foo.*.private_ip)`.
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Passing lists with different lengths to formatlist results in an error.
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* `indent(numspaces, string)` - Prepends the specified number of spaces to all but the first
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line of the given multi-line string. May be useful when inserting a multi-line string
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into an already-indented context. The first line is not indented, to allow for the
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indented string to be placed after some sort of already-indented preamble.
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Example: `" \"items\": ${ indent(4, "[\n \"item1\"\n]") },"`
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* `index(list, elem)` - Finds the index of a given element in a list.
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This function only works on flat lists.
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Example: `index(aws_instance.foo.*.tags.Name, "foo-test")`
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* `join(delim, list)` - Joins the list with the delimiter for a resultant string.
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This function works only on flat lists.
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Examples:
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* `join(",", aws_instance.foo.*.id)`
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* `join(",", var.ami_list)`
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* `jsonencode(value)` - Returns a JSON-encoded representation of the given
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value, which can contain arbitrarily-nested lists and maps. Note that if
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the value is a string then its value will be placed in quotes.
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* `keys(map)` - Returns a lexically sorted list of the map keys.
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* `length(list)` - Returns the number of members in a given list or map, or the number of characters in a given string.
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* `${length(split(",", "a,b,c"))}` = 3
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* `${length("a,b,c")}` = 5
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* `${length(map("key", "val"))}` = 1
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* `list(items, ...)` - Returns a list consisting of the arguments to the function.
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This function provides a way of representing list literals in interpolation.
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* `${list("a", "b", "c")}` returns a list of `"a", "b", "c"`.
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* `${list()}` returns an empty list.
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* `log(x, base)` - Returns the logarithm of `x`.
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* `lookup(map, key, [default])` - Performs a dynamic lookup into a map
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variable. The `map` parameter should be another variable, such
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as `var.amis`. If `key` does not exist in `map`, the interpolation will
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fail unless you specify a third argument, `default`, which should be a
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string value to return if no `key` is found in `map`. This function
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only works on flat maps and will return an error for maps that
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include nested lists or maps.
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* `lower(string)` - Returns a copy of the string with all Unicode letters mapped to their lower case.
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* `map(key, value, ...)` - Returns a map consisting of the key/value pairs
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specified as arguments. Every odd argument must be a string key, and every
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even argument must have the same type as the other values specified.
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Duplicate keys are not allowed. Examples:
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* `map("hello", "world")`
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* `map("us-east", list("a", "b", "c"), "us-west", list("b", "c", "d"))`
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* `matchkeys(values, keys, searchset)` - For two lists `values` and `keys` of
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equal length, returns all elements from `values` where the corresponding
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element from `keys` exists in the `searchset` list. E.g.
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`matchkeys(aws_instance.example.*.id,
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aws_instance.example.*.availability_zone, list("us-west-2a"))` will return a
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list of the instance IDs of the `aws_instance.example` instances in
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`"us-west-2a"`. No match will result in empty list. Items of `keys` are
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processed sequentially, so the order of returned `values` is preserved.
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* `max(float1, float2, ...)` - Returns the largest of the floats.
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* `merge(map1, map2, ...)` - Returns the union of 2 or more maps. The maps
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are consumed in the order provided, and duplicate keys overwrite previous
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entries.
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* `${merge(map("a", "b"), map("c", "d"))}` returns `{"a": "b", "c": "d"}`
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* `min(float1, float2, ...)` - Returns the smallest of the floats.
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* `md5(string)` - Returns a (conventional) hexadecimal representation of the
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MD5 hash of the given string.
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* `pathexpand(string)` - Returns a filepath string with `~` expanded to the home directory. Note:
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This will create a plan diff between two different hosts, unless the filepaths are the same.
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* `pow(x, y)` - Returns the base `x` of exponential `y` as a float.
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Example:
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* `${pow(3,2)}` = 9
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* `${pow(4,0)}` = 1
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* `replace(string, search, replace)` - Does a search and replace on the
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given string. All instances of `search` are replaced with the value
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of `replace`. If `search` is wrapped in forward slashes, it is treated
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as a regular expression. If using a regular expression, `replace`
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can reference subcaptures in the regular expression by using `$n` where
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`n` is the index or name of the subcapture. If using a regular expression,
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the syntax conforms to the [re2 regular expression syntax](https://github.com/google/re2/wiki/Syntax).
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* `rsadecrypt(string, key)` - Decrypts `string` using RSA. The padding scheme
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PKCS #1 v1.5 is used. The `string` must be base64-encoded. `key` must be an
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RSA private key in PEM format. You may use `file()` to load it from a file.
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* `sha1(string)` - Returns a (conventional) hexadecimal representation of the
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SHA-1 hash of the given string.
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Example: `"${sha1("${aws_vpc.default.tags.customer}-s3-bucket")}"`
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* `sha256(string)` - Returns a (conventional) hexadecimal representation of the
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SHA-256 hash of the given string.
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Example: `"${sha256("${aws_vpc.default.tags.customer}-s3-bucket")}"`
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* `sha512(string)` - Returns a (conventional) hexadecimal representation of the
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SHA-512 hash of the given string.
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Example: `"${sha512("${aws_vpc.default.tags.customer}-s3-bucket")}"`
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* `signum(integer)` - Returns `-1` for negative numbers, `0` for `0` and `1` for positive numbers.
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This function is useful when you need to set a value for the first resource and
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a different value for the rest of the resources.
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Example: `element(split(",", var.r53_failover_policy), signum(count.index))`
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where the 0th index points to `PRIMARY` and 1st to `FAILOVER`
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* `slice(list, from, to)` - Returns the portion of `list` between `from` (inclusive) and `to` (exclusive).
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Example: `slice(var.list_of_strings, 0, length(var.list_of_strings) - 1)`
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* `sort(list)` - Returns a lexographically sorted list of the strings contained in
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the list passed as an argument. Sort may only be used with lists which contain only
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strings.
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Examples: `sort(aws_instance.foo.*.id)`, `sort(var.list_of_strings)`
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* `split(delim, string)` - Splits the string previously created by `join`
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back into a list. This is useful for pushing lists through module
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outputs since they currently only support string values. Depending on the
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use, the string this is being performed within may need to be wrapped
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in brackets to indicate that the output is actually a list, e.g.
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`a_resource_param = ["${split(",", var.CSV_STRING)}"]`.
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Example: `split(",", module.amod.server_ids)`
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* `substr(string, offset, length)` - Extracts a substring from the input string. A negative offset is interpreted as being equivalent to a positive offset measured backwards from the end of the string. A length of `-1` is interpreted as meaning "until the end of the string".
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* `timestamp()` - Returns a UTC timestamp string in RFC 3339 format. This string will change with every
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invocation of the function, so in order to prevent diffs on every plan & apply, it must be used with the
|
|
[`ignore_changes`](./resources.html#ignore-changes) lifecycle attribute.
|
|
|
|
* `timeadd(time, duration)` - Returns a UTC timestamp string corresponding to adding a given `duration` to `time` in RFC 3339 format.
|
|
For example, `timeadd("2017-11-22T00:00:00Z", "10m")` produces a value `"2017-11-22T00:10:00Z"`.
|
|
|
|
* `title(string)` - Returns a copy of the string with the first characters of all the words capitalized.
|
|
|
|
* `transpose(map)` - Swaps the keys and list values in a map of lists of strings. For example, transpose(map("a", list("1", "2"), "b", list("2", "3")) produces a value equivalent to map("1", list("a"), "2", list("a", "b"), "3", list("b")).
|
|
|
|
* `trimspace(string)` - Returns a copy of the string with all leading and trailing white spaces removed.
|
|
|
|
* `upper(string)` - Returns a copy of the string with all Unicode letters mapped to their upper case.
|
|
|
|
* `urlencode(string)` - Returns an URL-safe copy of the string.
|
|
|
|
* `uuid()` - Returns a random UUID string. This string will change with every invocation of the function, so in order to prevent diffs on every plan & apply, it must be used with the [`ignore_changes`](./resources.html#ignore-changes) lifecycle attribute.
|
|
|
|
* `values(map)` - Returns a list of the map values, in the order of the keys
|
|
returned by the `keys` function. This function only works on flat maps and
|
|
will return an error for maps that include nested lists or maps.
|
|
|
|
* `zipmap(list, list)` - Creates a map from a list of keys and a list of
|
|
values. The keys must all be of type string, and the length of the lists
|
|
must be the same.
|
|
For example, to output a mapping of AWS IAM user names to the fingerprint
|
|
of the key used to encrypt their initial password, you might use:
|
|
`zipmap(aws_iam_user.users.*.name, aws_iam_user_login_profile.users.*.key_fingerprint)`.
|
|
|
|
The hashing functions `base64sha256`, `base64sha512`, `md5`, `sha1`, `sha256`,
|
|
and `sha512` all have variants with a `file` prefix, like `filesha1`, which
|
|
interpret their first argument as a path to a file on disk rather than as a
|
|
literal string. This allows safely creating hashes of binary files that might
|
|
otherwise be corrupted in memory if loaded into Terraform strings (which are
|
|
assumed to be UTF-8). `filesha1(filename)` is equivalent to `sha1(file(filename))`
|
|
in Terraform 0.11 and earlier, but the latter will fail for binary files in
|
|
Terraform 0.12 and later.
|
|
|
|
## Templates
|
|
|
|
Long strings can be managed using templates.
|
|
[Templates](/docs/providers/template/index.html) are
|
|
[data-sources](./data-sources.html) defined by a
|
|
filename and some variables to use during interpolation. They have a
|
|
computed `rendered` attribute containing the result.
|
|
|
|
A template data source looks like:
|
|
|
|
```hcl
|
|
data "template_file" "example" {
|
|
template = "$${hello} $${world}!"
|
|
vars {
|
|
hello = "goodnight"
|
|
world = "moon"
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
output "rendered" {
|
|
value = "${data.template_file.example.rendered}"
|
|
}
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Then the rendered value would be `goodnight moon!`.
|
|
|
|
You may use any of the built-in functions in your template. For more
|
|
details on template usage, please see the
|
|
[template_file documentation](/docs/providers/template/d/file.html).
|
|
|
|
### Using Templates with Count
|
|
|
|
Here is an example that combines the capabilities of templates with the interpolation
|
|
from `count` to give us a parameterized template, unique to each resource instance:
|
|
|
|
```hcl
|
|
variable "count" {
|
|
default = 2
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
variable "hostnames" {
|
|
default = {
|
|
"0" = "example1.org"
|
|
"1" = "example2.net"
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
data "template_file" "web_init" {
|
|
# Render the template once for each instance
|
|
count = "${length(var.hostnames)}"
|
|
template = "${file("templates/web_init.tpl")}"
|
|
vars {
|
|
# count.index tells us the index of the instance we are rendering
|
|
hostname = "${var.hostnames[count.index]}"
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
resource "aws_instance" "web" {
|
|
# Create one instance for each hostname
|
|
count = "${length(var.hostnames)}"
|
|
|
|
# Pass each instance its corresponding template_file
|
|
user_data = "${data.template_file.web_init.*.rendered[count.index]}"
|
|
}
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
With this, we will build a list of `template_file.web_init` data resources
|
|
which we can use in combination with our list of `aws_instance.web` resources.
|
|
|
|
## Math
|
|
|
|
Simple math can be performed in interpolations:
|
|
|
|
```hcl
|
|
variable "count" {
|
|
default = 2
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
resource "aws_instance" "web" {
|
|
# ...
|
|
|
|
count = "${var.count}"
|
|
|
|
# Tag the instance with a counter starting at 1, ie. web-001
|
|
tags {
|
|
Name = "${format("web-%03d", count.index + 1)}"
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
The supported operations are:
|
|
|
|
- *Add* (`+`), *Subtract* (`-`), *Multiply* (`*`), and *Divide* (`/`) for **float** types
|
|
- *Add* (`+`), *Subtract* (`-`), *Multiply* (`*`), *Divide* (`/`), and *Modulo* (`%`) for **integer** types
|
|
|
|
Operator precedences is the standard mathematical order of operations:
|
|
*Multiply* (`*`), *Divide* (`/`), and *Modulo* (`%`) have precedence over
|
|
*Add* (`+`) and *Subtract* (`-`). Parenthesis can be used to force ordering.
|
|
|
|
```text
|
|
"${2 * 4 + 3 * 3}" # computes to 17
|
|
"${3 * 3 + 2 * 4}" # computes to 17
|
|
"${2 * (4 + 3) * 3}" # computes to 42
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
You can use the [terraform console](/docs/commands/console.html) command to
|
|
try the math operations.
|
|
|
|
-> **Note:** Since Terraform allows hyphens in resource and variable names,
|
|
it's best to use spaces between math operators to prevent confusion or unexpected
|
|
behavior. For example, `${var.instance-count - 1}` will subtract **1** from the
|
|
`instance-count` variable value, while `${var.instance-count-1}` will interpolate
|
|
the `instance-count-1` variable value.
|