terraform/examples/azure-vnet-to-vnet-peering
Robert Liebowitz 8d98fdecac Autoload only .auto.tfvars files 2017-07-05 17:24:17 -07:00
..
README.md Autoload only .auto.tfvars files 2017-07-05 17:24:17 -07:00
deploy.ci.sh
deploy.mac.sh
graph.png
main.tf
variables.tf

README.md

VNET to VNET Peering

This template creates two VNETs in the same location, each containing a single subnet, and creates connections between them using VNET Peering.

main.tf

The main.tf file contains the actual resources that will be deployed. It also contains the Azure Resource Group definition and any defined variables.

outputs.tf

This data is outputted when terraform apply is called, and can be queried using the terraform output command.

provider.tf

You may leave the provider block in the main.tf, as it is in this template, or you can create a file called provider.tf and add it to your .gitignore file.

Azure requires that an application is added to Azure Active Directory to generate the client_id, client_secret, and tenant_id needed by Terraform (subscription_id can be recovered from your Azure account details). Please go here for full instructions on how to create this to populate your provider.tf file.

terraform.tfvars

If a terraform.tfvars or any .auto.tfvars files are present in the current directory, Terraform automatically loads them to populate variables. We don't recommend saving usernames and password to version control, but you can create a local secret variables file and use the -var-file flag or the .auto.tfvars extension to load it.

If you are committing this template to source control, please insure that you add this file to your .gitignore file.

variables.tf

The variables.tf file contains all of the input parameters that the user can specify when deploying this Terraform template.

terraform graph