254 lines
9.8 KiB
Markdown
254 lines
9.8 KiB
Markdown
---
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layout: "docs"
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page_title: "Provider Plugins"
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sidebar_current: "docs-plugins-provider"
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description: |-
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A provider in Terraform is responsible for the lifecycle of a resource: create, read, update, delete. An example of a provider is AWS, which can manage resources of type `aws_instance`, `aws_eip`, `aws_elb`, etc.
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---
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# Provider Plugins
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A provider in Terraform is responsible for the lifecycle of a resource:
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create, read, update, delete. An example of a provider is AWS, which
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can manage resources of type `aws_instance`, `aws_eip`, `aws_elb`, etc.
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The primary reasons to care about provider plugins are:
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* You want to add a new resource type to an existing provider.
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* You want to write a completely new provider for managing resource
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types in a system not yet supported.
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* You want to write a completely new provider for custom, internal
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systems such as a private inventory management system.
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~> **Advanced topic!** Plugin development is a highly advanced
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topic in Terraform, and is not required knowledge for day-to-day usage.
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If you don't plan on writing any plugins, we recommend not reading
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this section of the documentation.
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If you're interested in provider development, then read on. The remainder
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of this page will assume you're familiar with
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[plugin basics](/docs/plugins/basics.html) and that you already have
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a basic development environment setup.
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## Low-Level Interface
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The interface you must implement for providers is
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[ResourceProvider](https://github.com/hashicorp/terraform/blob/master/terraform/resource_provider.go).
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This interface is extremely low level, however, and we don't recommend
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you implement it directly. Implementing the interface directly is error
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prone, complicated, and difficult.
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Instead, we've developed some higher level libraries to help you out
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with developing providers. These are the same libraries we use in our
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own core providers.
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## helper/schema
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The `helper/schema` library is a framework we've built to make creating
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providers extremely easy. This is the same library we use to build most
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of the core providers.
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To give you an idea of how productive you can become with this framework:
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we implemented the Google Cloud provider in about 6 hours of coding work.
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This isn't a simple provider, and we did have knowledge of
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the framework beforehand, but it goes to show how expressive the framework
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can be.
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The GoDoc for `helper/schema` can be
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[found here](https://godoc.org/github.com/hashicorp/terraform/helper/schema).
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This is API-level documentation but will be extremely important
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for you going forward.
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## Provider
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The first thing to do in your plugin is to create the
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[schema.Provider](https://godoc.org/github.com/hashicorp/terraform/helper/schema#Provider) structure.
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This structure implements the `ResourceProvider` interface. We
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recommend creating this structure in a function to make testing easier
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later. Example:
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```
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func Provider() *schema.Provider {
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return &schema.Provider{
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...
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}
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}
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```
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Within the `schema.Provider`, you should initialize all the fields. They
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are documented within the godoc, but a brief overview is here as well:
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* `Schema` - This is the configuration schema for the provider itself.
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You should define any API keys, etc. here. Schemas are covered below.
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* `ResourcesMap` - The map of resources that this provider supports.
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All keys are resource names and the values are the
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[schema.Resource](https://godoc.org/github.com/hashicorp/terraform/helper/schema#Resource) structures implementing this resource.
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* `ConfigureFunc` - This function callback is used to configure the
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provider. This function should do things such as initialize any API
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clients, validate API keys, etc. The `interface{}` return value of
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this function is the `meta` parameter that will be passed into all
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resource [CRUD](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Create,_read,_update_and_delete)
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functions. In general, the returned value is a configuration structure
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or a client.
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As part of the unit tests, you should call `InternalValidate`. This is used
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to verify the structure of the provider and all of the resources, and reports
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an error if it is invalid. An example test is shown below:
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```
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func TestProvider(t *testing.T) {
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if err := Provider().InternalValidate(); err != nil {
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t.Fatalf("err: %s", err)
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}
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}
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```
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Having this unit test will catch a lot of beginner mistakes as you build
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your provider.
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## Resources
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Next, you'll want to create the resources that the provider can manage.
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These resources are put into the `ResourcesMap` field of the provider
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structure. Again, we recommend creating functions to instantiate these.
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An example is shown below.
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```
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func resourceComputeAddress() *schema.Resource {
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return &schema.Resource {
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...
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}
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}
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```
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Resources are described using the
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[schema.Resource](https://godoc.org/github.com/hashicorp/terraform/helper/schema#Resource)
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structure. This structure has the following fields:
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* `Schema` - The configuration schema for this resource. Schemas are
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covered in more detail below.
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* `Create`, `Read`, `Update`, and `Delete` - These are the callback
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functions that implement CRUD operations for the resource. The only
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optional field is `Update`. If your resource doesn't support update, then
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you may keep that field nil.
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The CRUD operations in more detail, along with their contracts:
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* `Create` - This is called to create a new instance of the resource.
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Terraform guarantees that an existing ID is not set on the resource
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data. That is, you're working with a new resource. Therefore, you are
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responsible for calling `SetId` on your `schema.ResourceData` using a
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value suitable for your resource. This ensures whatever resource
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state you set on `schema.ResourceData` will be persisted in local state.
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If you neglect to `SetId`, no resource state will be persisted.
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* `Read` - This is called to resync the local state with the remote state.
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Terraform guarantees that an existing ID will be set. This ID should be
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used to look up the resource. Any remote data should be updated into
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the local data. **No changes to the remote resource are to be made.**
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* `Update` - This is called to update properties of an existing resource.
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Terraform guarantees that an existing ID will be set. Additionally,
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the only changed attributes are guaranteed to be those that support
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update, as specified by the schema. Be careful to read about partial
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states below.
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* `Delete` - This is called to delete the resource. Terraform guarantees
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an existing ID will be set.
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* `Exists` - This is called to verify a resource still exists. It is
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called prior to `Read`, and lowers the burden of `Read` to be able
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to assume the resource exists. If the resource is no longer present in
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remote state, calling `SetId` with an empty string will signal its removal.
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## Schemas
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Both providers and resources require a schema to be specified. The schema
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is used to define the structure of the configuration, the types, etc. It is
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very important to get correct.
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In both provider and resource, the schema is a `map[string]*schema.Schema`.
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The key of this map is the configuration key, and the value is a schema for
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the value of that key.
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Schemas are incredibly powerful, so this documentation page won't attempt
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to cover the full power of them. Instead, the API docs should be referenced
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which cover all available settings.
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We recommend viewing schemas of existing or similar providers to learn
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best practices. A good starting place is the
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[core Terraform providers](https://github.com/hashicorp/terraform/tree/master/builtin/providers).
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## Resource Data
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The parameter to provider configuration as well as all the CRUD operations
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on a resource is a
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[schema.ResourceData](https://godoc.org/github.com/hashicorp/terraform/helper/schema#ResourceData).
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This structure is used to query configurations as well as to set information
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about the resource such as its ID, connection information, and computed
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attributes.
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The API documentation covers ResourceData well, as well as the core providers
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in Terraform.
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**Partial state** deserves a special mention. Occasionally in Terraform, create or
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update operations are not atomic; they can fail halfway through. As an example,
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when creating an AWS security group, creating the group may succeed,
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but creating all the initial rules may fail. In this case, it is incredibly
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important that Terraform record the correct _partial state_ so that a
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subsequent `terraform apply` fixes this resource.
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Most of the time, partial state is not required. When it is, it must be
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specifically enabled. An example is shown below:
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```
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func resourceUpdate(d *schema.ResourceData, meta interface{}) error {
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// Enable partial state mode
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d.Partial(true)
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if d.HasChange("tags") {
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// If an error occurs, return with an error,
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// we didn't finish updating
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if err := updateTags(d, meta); err != nil {
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return err
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}
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d.SetPartial("tags")
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}
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if d.HasChange("name") {
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if err := updateName(d, meta); err != nil {
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return err
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}
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d.SetPartial("name")
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}
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// We succeeded, disable partial mode
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d.Partial(false)
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return nil
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}
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```
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In the example above, it is possible that setting the `tags` succeeds,
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but setting the `name` fails. In this scenario, we want to make sure
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that only the state of the `tags` is updated. To do this the
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`Partial` and `SetPartial` functions are used.
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`Partial` toggles partial-state mode. When disabled, all changes are merged
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into the state upon result of the operation. When enabled, only changes
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enabled with `SetPartial` are merged in.
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`SetPartial` tells Terraform what state changes to adopt upon completion
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of an operation. You should call `SetPartial` with every key that is safe
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to merge into the state. The parameter to `SetPartial` is a prefix, so
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if you have a nested structure and want to accept the whole thing,
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you can just specify the prefix.
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