427 lines
17 KiB
Markdown
427 lines
17 KiB
Markdown
---
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layout: "language"
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page_title: "Provider Requirements - Configuration Language"
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description: "Providers are plugins that allow Terraform to interact with services, cloud providers, and other APIs. Learn how to declare providers in a configuration."
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---
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# Provider Requirements
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Terraform relies on plugins called "providers" to interact with remote systems.
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Terraform configurations must declare which providers they require, so that
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Terraform can install and use them. This page documents how to declare providers
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so Terraform can install them.
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> **Hands-on:** Try the [Perform CRUD Operations with Providers](https://learn.hashicorp.com/tutorials/terraform/provider-use) tutorial on HashiCorp Learn.
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Additionally, some providers require configuration (like endpoint URLs or cloud
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regions) before they can be used. The [Provider
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Configuration](/docs/language/providers/configuration.html) page documents how
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to configure settings for providers.
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-> **Note:** This page is about a feature of Terraform 0.13 and later; it also
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describes how to use the more limited version of that feature that was available
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in Terraform 0.12.
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## Requiring Providers
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Each Terraform module must declare which providers it requires, so that
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Terraform can install and use them. Provider requirements are declared in a
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`required_providers` block.
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A provider requirement consists of a local name, a source location, and a
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version constraint:
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```hcl
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terraform {
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required_providers {
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mycloud = {
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source = "mycorp/mycloud"
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version = "~> 1.0"
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}
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}
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}
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```
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The `required_providers` block must be nested inside the top-level
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[`terraform` block](/docs/language/settings/index.html) (which can also contain other settings).
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Each argument in the `required_providers` block enables one provider. The key
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determines the provider's [local name](#local-names) (its unique identifier
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within this module), and the value is an object with the following elements:
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* `source` - the global [source address](#source-addresses) for the
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provider you intend to use, such as `hashicorp/aws`.
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* `version` - a [version constraint](#version-constraints) specifying
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which subset of available provider versions the module is compatible with.
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-> **Note:** The `name = { source, version }` syntax for `required_providers`
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was added in Terraform v0.13. Previous versions of Terraform used a version
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constraint string instead of an object (like `mycloud = "~> 1.0"`), and had no
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way to specify provider source addresses. If you want to write a module that
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works with both Terraform v0.12 and v0.13, see [v0.12-Compatible Provider
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Requirements](#v0-12-compatible-provider-requirements) below.
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## Names and Addresses
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Each provider has two identifiers:
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- A unique _source address,_ which is only used when requiring a provider.
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- A _local name,_ which is used everywhere else in a Terraform module.
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-> **Note:** Prior to Terraform 0.13, providers only had local names, since
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Terraform could only automatically download providers distributed by HashiCorp.
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### Local Names
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Local names are module-specific, and are assigned when requiring a provider.
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Local names must be unique per-module.
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Outside of the `required_providers` block, Terraform configurations always refer
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to providers by their local names. For example, the following configuration
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declares `mycloud` as the local name for `mycorp/mycloud`, then uses that local
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name when [configuring the provider](/docs/language/providers/configuration.html):
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```hcl
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terraform {
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required_providers {
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mycloud = {
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source = "mycorp/mycloud"
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version = "~> 1.0"
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}
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}
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}
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provider "mycloud" {
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# ...
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}
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```
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Users of a provider can choose any local name for it. However, nearly every
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provider has a _preferred local name,_ which it uses as a prefix for all of its
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resource types. (For example, resources from `hashicorp/aws` all begin with
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`aws`, like `aws_instance` or `aws_security_group`.)
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Whenever possible, you should use a provider's preferred local name. This makes
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your configurations easier to understand, and lets you omit the `provider`
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meta-argument from most of your resources. (If a resource doesn't specify which
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provider configuration to use, Terraform interprets the first word of the
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resource type as a local provider name.)
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### Source Addresses
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A provider's source address is its global identifier. It also specifies the
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primary location where Terraform can download it.
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Source addresses consist of three parts delimited by slashes (`/`), as
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follows:
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`[<HOSTNAME>/]<NAMESPACE>/<TYPE>`
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* **Hostname** (optional): The hostname of the Terraform registry that
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distributes the provider. If omitted, this defaults to
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`registry.terraform.io`, the hostname of
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[the public Terraform Registry](https://registry.terraform.io/).
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* **Namespace:** An organizational namespace within the specified registry.
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For the public Terraform Registry and for Terraform Cloud's private registry,
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this represents the organization that publishes the provider. This field
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may have other meanings for other registry hosts.
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* **Type:** A short name for the platform or system the provider manages. Must
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be unique within a particular namespace on a particular registry host.
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The type is usually the provider's preferred local name. (There are
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exceptions; for example,
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[`hashicorp/google-beta`](https://registry.terraform.io/providers/hashicorp/google-beta/latest)
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is an alternate release channel for `hashicorp/google`, so its preferred
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local name is `google`. If in doubt, check the provider's documentation.)
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For example,
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[the official HTTP provider](https://registry.terraform.io/providers/hashicorp/http)
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belongs to the `hashicorp` namespace on `registry.terraform.io`, so its
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source address is `registry.terraform.io/hashicorp/http` or, more commonly, just
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`hashicorp/http`.
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The source address with all three components given explicitly is called the
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provider's _fully-qualified address_. You will see fully-qualified address in
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various outputs, like error messages, but in most cases a simplified display
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version is used. This display version omits the source host when it is the
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public registry, so you may see the shortened version `"hashicorp/random"` instead
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of `"registry.terraform.io/hashicorp/random"`.
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-> **Note:** If you omit the `source` argument when requiring a provider,
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Terraform uses an implied source address of
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`registry.terraform.io/hashicorp/<LOCAL NAME>`. This is a backward compatibility
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feature to support the transition to Terraform 0.13; in modules that require
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0.13 or later, we recommend using explicit source addresses for all providers.
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### Handling Local Name Conflicts
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Whenever possible, we recommend using a provider's preferred local name, which
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is usually the same as the "type" portion of its source address.
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However, it's sometimes necessary to use two providers with the same preferred
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local name in the same module, usually when the providers are named after a
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generic infrastructure type. Terraform requires unique local names for each
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provider in a module, so you'll need to use a non-preferred name for at least
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one of them.
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When this happens, we recommend combining each provider's namespace with
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its type name to produce compound local names with a dash:
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```hcl
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terraform {
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required_providers {
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# In the rare situation of using two providers that
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# have the same type name -- "http" in this example --
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# use a compound local name to distinguish them.
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hashicorp-http = {
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source = "hashicorp/http"
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version = "~> 2.0"
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}
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mycorp-http = {
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source = "mycorp/http"
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version = "~> 1.0"
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}
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}
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}
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# References to these providers elsewhere in the
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# module will use these compound local names.
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provider "mycorp-http" {
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# ...
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}
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data "http" "example" {
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provider = hashicorp-http
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#...
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}
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```
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Terraform won't be able to guess either provider's name from its resource types,
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so you'll need to specify a `provider` meta-argument for every affected
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resource. However, readers and maintainers of your module will be able to easily
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understand what's happening, and avoiding confusion is much more important than
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avoiding typing.
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## Version Constraints
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Each provider plugin has its own set of available versions, allowing the
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functionality of the provider to evolve over time. Each provider dependency you
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declare should have a [version constraint](/docs/language/expressions/version-constraints.html) given in
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the `version` argument so Terraform can select a single version per provider
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that all modules are compatible with.
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The `version` argument is optional; if omitted, Terraform will accept any
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version of the provider as compatible. However, we strongly recommend specifying
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a version constraint for every provider your module depends on.
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To ensure Terraform always installs the same provider versions for a given
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configuration, you can use Terraform CLI to create a
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[dependency lock file](/docs/language/dependency-lock.html)
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and commit it to version control along with your configuration. If a lock file
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is present, Terraform Cloud, CLI, and Enterprise will all obey it when
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installing providers.
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> **Hands-on:** Try the [Lock and Upgrade Provider Versions](https://learn.hashicorp.com/tutorials/terraform/provider-versioning) tutorial on HashiCorp Learn.
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### Best Practices for Provider Versions
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Each module should at least declare the minimum provider version it is known
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to work with, using the `>=` version constraint syntax:
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```hcl
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terraform {
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required_providers {
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mycloud = {
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source = "hashicorp/aws"
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version = ">= 1.0"
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}
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}
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}
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```
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A module intended to be used as the root of a configuration — that is, as the
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directory where you'd run `terraform apply` — should also specify the
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_maximum_ provider version it is intended to work with, to avoid accidental
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upgrades to incompatible new versions. The `~>` operator is a convenient
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shorthand for allowing only patch releases within a specific minor release:
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```hcl
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terraform {
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required_providers {
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mycloud = {
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source = "hashicorp/aws"
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version = "~> 1.0.4"
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}
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}
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}
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```
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Do not use `~>` (or other maximum-version constraints) for modules you intend to
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reuse across many configurations, even if you know the module isn't compatible
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with certain newer versions. Doing so can sometimes prevent errors, but more
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often it forces users of the module to update many modules simultaneously when
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performing routine upgrades. Specify a minimum version, document any known
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incompatibilities, and let the root module manage the maximum version.
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## Built-in Providers
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While most Terraform providers are distributed separately as plugins, there
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is currently one provider that is built in to Terraform itself, which
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provides
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[the `terraform_remote_state` data source](/docs/language/state/remote-state-data.html).
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Because this provider is built in to Terraform, you don't need to declare it
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in the `required_providers` block in order to use its features. However, for
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consistency it _does_ have a special provider source address, which is
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`terraform.io/builtin/terraform`. This address may sometimes appear in
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Terraform's error messages and other output in order to unambiguously refer
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to the built-in provider, as opposed to a hypothetical third-party provider
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with the type name "terraform".
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There is also an existing provider with the source address
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`hashicorp/terraform`, which is an older version of the now-built-in provider
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that was used by older versions of Terraform. `hashicorp/terraform` is not
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compatible with Terraform v0.11 or later and should never be declared in a
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`required_providers` block.
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## In-house Providers
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Anyone can develop and distribute their own Terraform providers. See
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the [Call APIs with Terraform Providers](https://learn.hashicorp.com/collections/terraform/providers)
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collection on HashiCorp Learn for more
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about provider development.
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Some organizations develop their own providers to configure
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proprietary systems, and wish to use these providers from Terraform without
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publishing them on the public Terraform Registry.
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One option for distributing such a provider is to run an in-house _private_
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registry, by implementing
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[the provider registry protocol](/docs/internals/provider-registry-protocol.html).
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Running an additional service just to distribute a single provider internally
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may be undesirable, so Terraform also supports
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[other provider installation methods](/docs/cli/config/config-file.html#provider-installation),
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including placing provider plugins directly in specific directories in the
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local filesystem, via _filesystem mirrors_.
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All providers must have a [source address](#source-addresses) that includes
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(or implies) the hostname of a registry, but that hostname does not need to
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provide an actual registry service. For in-house providers that you intend to
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distribute from a local filesystem directory, you can use an arbitrary hostname
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in a domain your organization controls.
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For example, if your corporate domain were `example.com` then you might choose
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to use `terraform.example.com` as your placeholder hostname, even if that
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hostname doesn't actually resolve in DNS. You can then choose any namespace and
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type you wish to represent your in-house provider under that hostname, giving
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a source address like `terraform.example.com/examplecorp/ourcloud`:
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```hcl
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terraform {
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required_providers {
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mycloud = {
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source = "terraform.example.com/examplecorp/ourcloud"
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version = ">= 1.0"
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}
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}
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}
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```
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To make version 1.0.0 of this provider available for installation from the
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local filesystem, choose one of the
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[implied local mirror directories](/docs/cli/config/config-file.html#implied-local-mirror-directories)
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and create a directory structure under it like this:
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```
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terraform.example.com/examplecorp/ourcloud/1.0.0
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```
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Under that `1.0.0` directory, create one additional directory representing the
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platform where you are running Terraform, such as `linux_amd64` for Linux on
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an AMD64/x64 processor, and then place the provider plugin executable and any
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other needed files in that directory.
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Thus, on a Windows system, the provider plugin executable file might be at the
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following path:
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```
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terraform.example.com/examplecorp/ourcloud/1.0.0/windows_amd64/terraform-provider-ourcloud.exe
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```
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If you later decide to switch to using a real private provider registry rather
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than distribute binaries out of band, you can deploy the registry server at
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`terraform.example.com` and retain the same namespace and type names, in which
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case your existing modules will require no changes to locate the same provider
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using your registry server.
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## v0.12-Compatible Provider Requirements
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Explicit provider source addresses were introduced with Terraform v0.13, so the
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full provider requirements syntax is not supported by Terraform v0.12.
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However, in order to allow writing modules that are compatible with both
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Terraform v0.12 and v0.13, versions of Terraform between v0.12.26 and v0.13
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will accept but ignore the `source` argument in a `required_providers` block.
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Consider the following example written for Terraform v0.13:
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```hcl
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terraform {
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required_providers {
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aws = {
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source = "hashicorp/aws"
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version = "~> 1.0"
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}
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}
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}
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```
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Terraform v0.12.26 will accept syntax like the above but will understand it
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in the same way as the following v0.12-style syntax:
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```hcl
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terraform {
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required_providers {
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aws = "~> 1.0"
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}
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}
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```
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In other words, Terraform v0.12.26 ignores the `source` argument and considers
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only the `version` argument, using the given [local name](#local-names) as the
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un-namespaced provider type to install.
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When writing a module that is compatible with both Terraform v0.12.26 and
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Terraform v0.13.0 or later, you must follow the following additional rules so
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that both versions will select the same provider to install:
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* Use only providers that can be automatically installed by Terraform v0.12.
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Third-party providers, such as community providers in the Terraform Registry,
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cannot be selected by Terraform v0.12 because it does not support the
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hierarchical source address namespace.
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* Ensure that your chosen local name exactly matches the "type" portion of the
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source address given in the `source` argument, such as both being "aws" in
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the examples above, because Terraform v0.12 will use the local name to
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determine which provider plugin to download and install.
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* If the provider belongs to the `hashicorp` namespace, as with the
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`hashicorp/aws` provider shown above, omit the `source` argument and allow
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Terraform v0.13 to select the `hashicorp` namespace by default.
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* Provider type names must always be written in lowercase. Terraform v0.13
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treats provider source addresses as case-insensitive, but Terraform v0.12
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considers its legacy-style provider names to be case-sensitive. Using
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lowercase will ensure that the name is selectable by both Terraform major
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versions.
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This compatibility mechanism is provided as a temporary transitional aid only.
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When Terraform v0.12 detects a use of the new `source` argument it doesn't
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understand, it will emit a warning to alert the user that it is disregarding
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the source address given in that argument.
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