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docs | CLI Configuration | docs-commands-cli-config | The general behavior of the Terraform CLI can be customized using the CLI configuration file. |
CLI Configuration File (.terraformrc
or terraform.rc
)
The CLI configuration file configures per-user settings for CLI behaviors, which apply across all Terraform working directories. This is separate from your infrastructure configuration.
Location
The configuration is placed in a single file whose location depends on the host operating system:
- On Windows, the file must be named named
terraform.rc
and placed in the relevant user's%APPDATA%
directory. The physical location of this directory depends on your Windows version and system configuration; use$env:APPDATA
in PowerShell to find its location on your system. - On all other systems, the file must be named
.terraformrc
(note the leading period) and placed directly in the home directory of the relevant user.
On Windows, beware of Windows Explorer's default behavior of hiding filename
extensions. Terraform will not recognize a file named terraform.rc.txt
as a
CLI configuration file, even though Windows Explorer may display its name
as just terraform.rc
. Use dir
from PowerShell or Command Prompt to
confirm the filename.
The location of the Terraform CLI configuration file can also be specified
using the TF_CLI_CONFIG_FILE
environment variable.
Configuration File Syntax
The configuration file uses the same HCL syntax as .tf
files, but with
different attributes and blocks. The following example illustrates the
general syntax; see the following section for information on the meaning
of each of these settings:
plugin_cache_dir = "$HOME/.terraform.d/plugin-cache"
disable_checkpoint = true
Available Settings
The following settings can be set in the CLI configuration file:
-
disable_checkpoint
— when set totrue
, disables upgrade and security bulletin checks that require reaching out to HashiCorp-provided network services. -
disable_checkpoint_signature
— when set totrue
, allows the upgrade and security bulletin checks described above but disables the use of an anonymous id used to de-duplicate warning messages. -
plugin_cache_dir
— enables plugin caching and specifies, as a string, the location of the plugin cache directory. -
credentials
— provides credentials for use with Terraform Enterprise. Terraform uses this when performing remote operations or state access with the remote backend and when accessing Terraform Enterprise's private module registry.This setting is a repeatable block, where the block label is a hostname (either
app.terraform.io
or the hostname of your private install) and the block body contains atoken
attribute. Whenever Terraform accesses state, modules, or remote operations from that hostname, it will authenticate with that API token.credentials "app.terraform.io" { token = "xxxxxx.atlasv1.zzzzzzzzzzzzz" }
~> Important: The token provided here must be a user token or a team token; organization tokens cannot be used for command-line Terraform actions.
-> Note: The credentials hostname must match the hostname in your module sources and/or backend configuration. If your Terraform Enterprise instance is available at multiple hostnames, use one of them consistently. (The SaaS version of Terraform Enterprise responds to API calls at both its newer hostname, app.terraform.io, and its historical hostname, atlas.hashicorp.com.)
Deprecated Settings
The following settings are supported for backward compatibility but are no longer recommended for use:
providers
- a configuration block that allows specifying the locations of specific plugins for each named provider. This mechanism is deprecated because it is unable to specify a version number for each plugin, and thus it does not co-operate with the plugin versioning mechanism. Instead, place the plugin executable files in the third-party plugins directory.