349 lines
9.4 KiB
Markdown
349 lines
9.4 KiB
Markdown
---
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layout: "docs"
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page_title: "Input Variables - 0.11 Configuration Language"
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sidebar_current: "docs-conf-old-variables"
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description: |-
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Input variables are parameters for Terraform modules.
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This page covers configuration syntax for variables.
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---
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# Input Variables
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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: Input Variables](../configuration/variables.html).
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Input variables serve as parameters for a Terraform module.
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When used in the root module of a configuration, variables can be set from CLI
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arguments and environment variables. For [_child_ modules](./modules.html),
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they allow values to pass from parent to child.
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Input variable usage is introduced in the Getting Started guide section
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[_Input Variables_](/intro/getting-started/variables.html).
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This page assumes you're familiar with the
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[configuration syntax](./syntax.html)
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already.
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## Example
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Input variables can be defined as follows:
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```hcl
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variable "key" {
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type = "string"
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}
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variable "images" {
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type = "map"
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default = {
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us-east-1 = "image-1234"
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us-west-2 = "image-4567"
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}
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}
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variable "zones" {
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default = ["us-east-1a", "us-east-1b"]
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}
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```
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## Description
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The `variable` block configures a single input variable for a Terraform module.
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Each block declares a single variable.
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The name given in the block header is used to assign a value to the variable
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via the CLI and to reference the variable elsewhere in the configuration.
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Within the block body (between `{ }`) is configuration for the variable,
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which accepts the following arguments:
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- `type` (Optional) - If set this defines the type of the variable. Valid values
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are `string`, `list`, and `map`. If this field is omitted, the variable type
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will be inferred based on `default`. If no `default` is provided, the type
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is assumed to be `string`.
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- `default` (Optional) - This sets a default value for the variable. If no
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default is provided, Terraform will raise an error if a value is not provided
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by the caller. The default value can be of any of the supported data types,
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as described below. If `type` is also set, the given value must be
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of the specified type.
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- `description` (Optional) - A human-friendly description for the variable. This
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is primarily for documentation for users using your Terraform configuration.
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When a module is published in [Terraform Registry](https://registry.terraform.io/),
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the given description is shown as part of the documentation.
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The name of a variable can be any valid identifier. However, due to the
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interpretation of [module configuration blocks](./modules.html),
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the names `source`, `version` and `providers` are reserved for Terraform's own
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use and are thus not recommended for any module intended to be used as a
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child module.
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The default value of an input variable must be a _literal_ value, containing
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no interpolation expressions. To assign a name to an expression so that it
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may be re-used within a module, use [Local Values](./locals.html)
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instead.
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### Strings
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String values are simple and represent a basic key to value
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mapping where the key is the variable name. An example is:
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```hcl
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variable "key" {
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type = "string"
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default = "value"
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}
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```
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A multi-line string value can be provided using heredoc syntax.
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```hcl
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variable "long_key" {
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type = "string"
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default = <<EOF
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This is a long key.
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Running over several lines.
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EOF
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}
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```
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Terraform performs automatic conversion from string values to numeric and
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boolean values based on context, so in practice string variables may be used
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to set arguments of any primitive type. For boolean values in particular
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there are some caveats, described under [_Booleans_](#booleans) below.
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### Maps
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A map value is a lookup table from string keys to string values. This is
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useful for selecting a value based on some other provided value.
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A common use of maps is to create a table of machine images per region,
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as follows:
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```hcl
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variable "images" {
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type = "map"
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default = {
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"us-east-1" = "image-1234"
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"us-west-2" = "image-4567"
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}
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}
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```
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### Lists
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A list value is an ordered sequence of strings indexed by integers starting
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with zero. For example:
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```hcl
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variable "users" {
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type = "list"
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default = ["admin", "ubuntu"]
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}
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```
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### Booleans
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Although Terraform can automatically convert between boolean and string
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values, there are some subtle implications of these conversions that should
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be completely understood when using boolean values with input variables.
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It is recommended for now to specify boolean values for variables as the
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strings `"true"` and `"false"`, to avoid some caveats in the conversion
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process. A future version of Terraform will properly support boolean values
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and so relying on the current behavior could result in
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backwards-incompatibilities at that time.
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For a configuration such as the following:
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```hcl
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variable "active" {
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default = false
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}
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```
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The false is converted to a string `"0"` when running Terraform.
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Then, depending on where you specify overrides, the behavior can differ:
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- Variables with boolean values in a `tfvars` file will likewise be converted to
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"0" and "1" values.
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- Variables specified via the `-var` command line flag will be literal strings
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"true" and "false", so care should be taken to explicitly use "0" or "1".
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- Variables specified with the `TF_VAR_` environment variables will be literal
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string values, just like `-var`.
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A future version of Terraform will fully support first-class boolean
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types which will make the behavior of booleans consistent as you would
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expect. This may break some of the above behavior.
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When passing boolean-like variables as parameters to resource configurations
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that expect boolean values, they are converted consistently:
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- "1" and "true" become `true`
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- "0" and "false" become `false`
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The behavior of conversion in _this_ direction (string to boolean) will _not_
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change in future Terraform versions. Therefore, using these string values
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rather than literal booleans is recommended when using input variables.
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## Environment Variables
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Environment variables can be used to set the value of an input variable in
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the root module. The name of the environment variable must be
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`TF_VAR_` followed by the variable name, and the value is the value of the
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variable.
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For example, given the configuration below:
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```hcl
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variable "image" {}
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```
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The variable can be set via an environment variable:
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```shell
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$ TF_VAR_image=foo terraform apply
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```
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Maps and lists can be specified using environment variables as well using
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[HCL](./syntax.html#HCL) syntax in the value.
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For a list variable like so:
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```hcl
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variable "somelist" {
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type = "list"
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}
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```
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The variable could be set like so:
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```shell
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$ TF_VAR_somelist='["ami-abc123", "ami-bcd234"]' terraform plan
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```
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Similarly, for a map declared like:
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```hcl
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variable "somemap" {
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type = "map"
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}
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```
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The value can be set like this:
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```shell
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$ TF_VAR_somemap='{foo = "bar", baz = "qux"}' terraform plan
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```
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## Variable Files
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Values for the input variables of a root module can be gathered in
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_variable definition files_ and passed together using the `-var-file=FILE`
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option.
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For all files which match `terraform.tfvars` or `*.auto.tfvars` present in the
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current directory, Terraform automatically loads them to populate variables. If
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the file is located somewhere else, you can pass the path to the file using the
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`-var-file` flag. It is recommended to name such files with names ending in
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`.tfvars`.
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Variables files use HCL or JSON syntax to define variable values. Strings, lists
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or maps may be set in the same manner as the default value in a `variable` block
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in Terraform configuration. For example:
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```hcl
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foo = "bar"
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xyz = "abc"
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somelist = [
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"one",
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"two",
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]
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somemap = {
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foo = "bar"
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bax = "qux"
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}
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```
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The `-var-file` flag can be used multiple times per command invocation:
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```shell
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$ terraform apply -var-file=foo.tfvars -var-file=bar.tfvars
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```
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-> **Note**: Variable files are evaluated in the order in which they are
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specified on the command line. If a particular variable is defined in more than
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one variable file, the last value specified is effective.
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### Variable Merging
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When multiple values are provided for the same input variable, map values are
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merged while all other values are overriden by the last definition.
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For example, if you define a variable twice on the command line:
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```shell
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$ terraform apply -var foo=bar -var foo=baz
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```
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Then the value of `foo` will be `baz`, since it was the last definition seen.
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However, for maps, the values are merged:
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```shell
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$ terraform apply -var 'foo={quux="bar"}' -var 'foo={bar="baz"}'
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```
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The resulting value of `foo` will be:
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```shell
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{
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quux = "bar"
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bar = "baz"
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}
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```
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There is no way currently to unset map values in Terraform. Whenever a map
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is modified either via variable input or being passed into a module, the
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values are always merged.
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### Variable Precedence
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Both these files have the variable `baz` defined:
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_foo.tfvars_
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```hcl
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baz = "foo"
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```
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_bar.tfvars_
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```hcl
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baz = "bar"
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```
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When they are passed in the following order:
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```shell
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$ terraform apply -var-file=foo.tfvars -var-file=bar.tfvars
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```
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The result will be that `baz` will contain the value `bar` because `bar.tfvars`
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has the last definition loaded.
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Definition files passed using the `-var-file` flag will always be evaluated after
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those in the working directory.
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Values passed within definition files or with `-var` will take precedence over
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`TF_VAR_` environment variables, as environment variables are considered defaults.
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