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* add hcl * wip * Proofread --------- Co-authored-by: Boris Verkhovskiy <boris.verk@gmail.com>
369 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
369 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
---
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category: tool
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tool: HCL
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contributors:
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- ["Romans Malinovskis" , "http://github.com/romaninsh"]
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filename: terraform.txt
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---
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## Introduction
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HCL (Hashicorp Configuration Language) is a high-level configuration language used in tools from
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Hashicorp (such as Terraform). HCL/Terraform is widely used in provisioning cloud infastructure and
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configuring platforms/services through APIs. This document focuses on HCL 0.13 syntax.
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HCL is a declarative language and Terraform will consume all `*.tf` files in the current folder, so code
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placement and sequence has no significance. Sub-folders can be consumed through modules.
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This guide is focused on HCL specifics, you should already be familiar with what Terraform is.
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```terraform
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// Top-level HCL file will interactively ask user values for the variables
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// which do not have a default value
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variable "ready" {
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description = "Ready to learn?"
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type = bool
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// default = true
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}
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// Module block consults a specified folder for *.tf files, would
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// effectively prefix all resources IDs with "module.learn-basics."
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module "learn-basics" {
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source = "./learn-basics"
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ready_to_learn = var.ready
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}
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output "knowledge" {
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value = module.learn-basics.knowledge
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}
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```
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## learn-basics
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```terraform
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// Variables are not automatically passed into modules
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// and can be typeless.
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variable "ready" {
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}
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// It is good practice to define a type though. There are 3 primitive types -
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// 3 collection types and 2 structural types. Structural types define
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// types recursively
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variable "structural-types" {
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type = object({
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object: object({
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can-be-nested: bool
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}),
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tuple: tuple([int, string])
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})
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default = {
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object = { can-be-nested: true }
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tuple = [3, "cm"]
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}
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}
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// Collection types may specify a type, but can also be "any".
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variable "list" {
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type: list(string)
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default = ["red", "green", "blue"]
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}
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variable "map" {
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type: map(any)
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default = {
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red = "#FF0000"
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"green" = "#00FF00"
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}
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}
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variable "favourites" {
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type: set
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default = ["red", "blue"]
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}
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// When the type is not specified or is a mix of scalars
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// they will be converted to strings.
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// Use modern IDEs for type completion features. It does not matter
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// in which file and in which order you define a variable, it becomes
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// accessible from anywhere.
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// Default values for variables may not use expressions, but you can
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// use locals for that. You don't specify types for locals. With locals
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// you can create intermediate products from other variables, modules,
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// and functions.
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locals {
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ready = var.ready ? "yes": "no"
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yaml = yamldecode(file("${path.module}/file-in-current-folder.yaml"))
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}
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// 'locals' blocks can be defined multiple times, but all variables,
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// resources and local names should be unique
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locals {
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set = toset(var.map)
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}
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module "more-resources" {
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source = "../more-learning"
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yaml-data = local.yaml
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}
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// Modules can declare outputs, that can be optionally referenced
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// (see above), typically outputs appear at the bottom of the file or
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// in "outputs.tf".
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output "knowledge" {
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value = "types so far, more to come"
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}
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```
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Terraform exists for managing cloud "resources". A resource could be anything as long as it
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can be created and destroyed through an API call. (compute instance, distribution,
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DNS record, S3 bucket, SSL certificate or permission grant). Terraform relies on "providers"
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for implementing specific vendor APIs. For example the "aws" provider enables use of resources
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for managing AWS cloud resources.
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When `terraform` is invoked (`terraform apply`) it will validate code, create all resources
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in memory, load their existing state from a file (state file), refresh against the current
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cloud APIs and then calculate the differences. Based on the differences, Terraform proposes
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a "plan" - series of create, modify or delete actions to bring your infrastructrue in
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alignment with an HCL definition.
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Terraform will also automatically calculate dependencies between resources and will maintain
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the correct create / destroy order. Failure during execution allows you to retry the entire
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process, which will usually pick off where things finished.
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## more-learning
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Time to introduce resources.
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```terraform
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variable "yaml-data" {
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// config is sourced from a .yaml file, so technically it is a
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// map(any), but we can narrow down type like this:
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type = map(string)
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}
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// You do not need to explicitly define providers, they all have reasonable
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// defaults with environment variables. Using a resource that relies on a
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// provider will also transparently initialize it (when you invoke terraform init)
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resource "aws_s3_bucket" "bucket" {
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bucket = "abc"
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}
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// You can also create provider aliases
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provider "aws" {
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alias = "as-role"
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assume_role {
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role_arn = ".."
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}
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}
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// then use them to create resources
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resource "aws_s3_bucket_object" "test-file" {
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// all resources have attributes that can be referenced. Some of those
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// will be available right away (like bucket) and others may only
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// become available after the plan begins executing. The test-file resource
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// will be created only after aws_s3_bucket.bucket finishes being created
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// depends_on = aws_s3_bucket.bucket
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bucket = aws_s3_bucket.bucket.bucket
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key = "index.html"
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content = file("${path.module}/index.html")
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// you can also manually specify provider alias
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provider = aws.as-role
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}
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// Each resource will receive an ID in state, like "aws_s3_bucket.bucket".
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// When resources are created inside a module, their state ID is prepended
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// with module.<module-name>
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module "learn-each" {
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source = "../learn-each"
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}
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// Nesting modules like this may not be the best practice, and it's only
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// used here for illustration purposes
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```
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## learn-each
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Terraform offers some great features for creating series of objects:
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```terraform
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locals {
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list = ["red", "green", "blue"]
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}
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resource "aws_s3_bucket" "badly-coloured-bucket" {
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count = count(local.list)
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bucket_prefix = "${local.list[count.index]}-"
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}
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// will create 3 buckets, prefixed with "red-", etc. and followed by
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// a unique identifier. Some resources will automatically generate
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// a random name if not specified. The actual name of the resource
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// (or bucket in this example) can be referenced as attributes
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output "red-bucket-name" {
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value = aws_s3_bucket.badly-coloured-bucket[0].bucket
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}
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// note that bucket resource ID will be "aws_s3_bucket.badly-coloured-bucket[0]"
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// through to 2, because they are list index elements. If you remove "red" from
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// the list, however, it will re-create all the buckets as they would now
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// have new IDs. A better way is to use for_each
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resource "aws_s3_bucket" "coloured-bucket" {
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// for_each only supports maps and sets
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for_each = toset(local.list)
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bucket_prefix = "${each.value}-"
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}
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// the name for this resource would be aws_s3_bucket.coloured-bucket[red]
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output "red-bucket-name2" {
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value = aws_s3_bucket.badly-coloured-bucket["red"].bucket
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}
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output "all-bucket-names" {
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// returns a list containing bucket names - using a "splat expression"
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value = aws_s3_bucket.coloured-bucket[*].bucket
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}
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// there are other splat expressions:
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output "all-bucket-names2" {
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value = [for b in aws_s3_bucket.coloured-bucket: b.bucket]
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}
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// can also include a filter
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output "filtered-bucket-names" {
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value = [for b in aws_s3_bucket.coloured-bucket:
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b.bucket if length(b.bucket) < 10 ]
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}
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// here are some ways to generate maps {red: "red-123123.."}
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output "bucket-map" {
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value = {
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for b in aws_s3_bucket.coloured-bucket:
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trimsuffix(b.bucket_prefix, '-')
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=> b.bucket
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}
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}
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// as of Terraform 0.13 it is now also possible to use count/each for modules
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variable "learn-functions" {
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type = bool
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default = true
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}
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module "learn-functions" {
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count = var.learn-functions ? 1: 0
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source = "../learn-functions"
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}
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```
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This is now popular syntax that works in Terraform 0.13 that allows including modules conditionally.
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## learn-functions
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Terraform does not allow you to define your own functions, but there's an extensive list of built-in functions
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```terraform
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locals {
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list = ["one", "two", "three"]
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upper_list = [for x in local.list : upper(x) ] // "ONE", "TWO", "THREE"
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map = {for x in local.list : x => upper(x) } // "one":"ONE", "two":"TWO", "three":"THREE"
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filtered_list = [for k, v in local.map : substr(v, 0, 2) if k != "two" } // "ON", "TH"
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prefixed_list = [for v in local.filtered_list : "pre-${k}" } // "pre-ON", "pre-TH"
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joined_list = join(local.upper_list,local. filtered_list) // "ONE", "TWO", "THREE", "pre-ON", "pre-TH"
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// Set is very similar to List, but element order is irrelevant
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joined_set = toset(local.joined_list) // "ONE", "TWO", "THREE", "pre-ON", "pre-TH"
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map_again = map(slice(local.joined_list, 0, 4)) // "ONE":"TWO", "THREE":"pre-ON"
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}
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// Usually list manipulation can be useful either for a resource with for_each or
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// to specify a dynamic block for a resource. This creates a bucket with some tags:
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resource "aws_s3_bucket" "bucket" {
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name = "test-bucket"
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tags = local.map_again
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}
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// this is identical to:
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// resource "aws_s3_bucket" "bucket" {
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// name = "test-bucket"
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// tags = {
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// ONE = "TWO"
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// THREE = "pre-ON"
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// }
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// }
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// Some resources also contain dynamic blocks. The next example uses a "data" block
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// to look up 3 buckets (red, green and blue), then creates a policy that contains
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// read-only access to the red and green buckets and full access to the blue bucket.
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locals {
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buckets = {
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red = "read-only"
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green = "read-only"
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blue = "full"
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}
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// we could load buckets from a file:
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// bucket = file('bucket.json')
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actions = {
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"read-only" = ["s3:GetObject", "s3:GetObjectVersion"],
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"full" = ["s3:GetObject", "s3:GetObjectVersion", "s3:PutObject", "s3:PutObjectVersion"]
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}
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// we will look up actions, so that we don't have to repeat actions
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}
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// use a function to convert map keys into set
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data "aws_s3_bucket" "bucket" {
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for_each = toset(keys(local.buckets))
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bucket = each.value
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}
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// create json for our policy
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data "aws_iam_policy_document" "role_policy" {
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statement {
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effect = "Allow"
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actions = [
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"ec2:*",
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]
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resources = ["*"]
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}
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dynamic "statement" {
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for_each = local.buckets
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content {
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effect = "Allow"
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actions = lookup(local.actions, statement.value, null)
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resources = [data.aws_s3_bucket.bucket[statement.key]]
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}
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}
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}
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// and this actually creates the AWS policy with permissions to all buckets
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resource "aws_iam_policy" "policy" {
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policy = data.aws_iam_policy_document.role_policy.json
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}
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```
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## Additional Resources
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- [Terraform tips & tricks](https://blog.gruntwork.io/terraform-tips-tricks-loops-if-statements-and-gotchas-f739bbae55f9)
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- [Building Dynamic Outputs with Terraform Expressions and Functions](https://www.thegreatcodeadventure.com/building-dynamic-outputs-with-terraform-for_each-for-and-zipmap/)
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