Terragrunt is a thin wrapper for Terraform that provides extra tools for keeping your Terraform configurations DRY, working with multiple Terraform modules, and managing remote state. Check out Terragrunt: how to keep your Terraform code DRY and maintainable for a quick introduction to Terragrunt.
-
Install Terragrunt by going to the Releases Page, downloading the binary for your OS, renaming it to
terragrunt, and adding it to your PATH.- See the Install Terragrunt docs for other installation options.
-
Go into a folder with your Terraform configurations (
.tffiles) and create aterragrunt.hclfile that contains the configuration for Terragrunt (Terragrunt configuration uses the exact language, HCL, as Terraform). Here's an example of using Terragrunt to keep your Terraform backend configuration DRY (check out the Use cases section for other types of configuration Terragrunt supports):# terragrunt.hcl example remote_state { backend = "s3" config = { bucket = "my-terraform-state" key = "${path_relative_to_include()}/terraform.tfstate" region = "us-east-1" encrypt = true dynamodb_table = "my-lock-table" } }
-
Now, instead of running
terraformdirectly, run all the standard Terraform commands usingterragrunt:terragrunt get terragrunt plan terragrunt apply terragrunt output terragrunt destroy
Terragrunt forwards almost all commands, arguments, and options directly to Terraform, using whatever version of Terraform you already have installed. However, based on the settings in your
terragrunt.hclfile, Terragrunt can configure remote state, locking, extra arguments, and lots more. -
Terragrunt is a direct implementation of the ideas expressed in Terraform: Up & Running. Additional background reading that will help explain the motivation for Terragrunt include Terragrunt: how to keep your Terraform code DRY and maintainable, How to create reusable infrastructure with Terraform modules and How to use Terraform as a team.
-
Check out the terragrunt-infrastructure-modules-example and terragrunt-infrastructure-live-example repos for fully-working sample code that demonstrates how to use Terragrunt.
Note that third-party Terragrunt packages may not be updated with the latest version, but are often close. Please check your version against the latest available on the Releases Page.
You can install Terragrunt on macOS using Homebrew: brew install terragrunt.
You can install Terragrunt on Linux using Homebrew: brew install terragrunt.
You can install Terragrunt manually by going to the Releases Page,
downloading the binary for your OS, renaming it to terragrunt, and adding it to your PATH.
If you were using Terraform <= 0.11.x with Terragrunt <= 0.18.x, and you wish to upgrade to Terraform 0.12.x newer, you'll need to upgrade to Terragrunt 0.19.x or newer. Due to some changes in Terraform 0.12.x, this is a backwards incompatible upgrade that requires some manual migration steps. Check out our Upgrading to Terragrunt 0.19.x Guide for instructions.
We only support and test against the latest version of terraform, however older versions might still work.
Terragrunt supports the following use cases:
- Keep your Terraform code DRY
- Keep your remote state configuration DRY
- Keep your CLI flags DRY
- Execute Terraform commands on multiple modules at once
- Work with multiple AWS accounts
- Motivation
- Remote Terraform configurations
- How to use remote configurations
- Achieve DRY Terraform code and immutable infrastructure
- Working locally
- Important gotcha: working with relative file paths
- Using Terragrunt with private Git repos
Consider the following file structure, which defines three environments (prod, qa, stage) with the same infrastructure in each one (an app, a MySQL database, and a VPC):
└── live
├── prod
│ ├── app
│ │ └── main.tf
│ ├── mysql
│ │ └── main.tf
│ └── vpc
│ └── main.tf
├── qa
│ ├── app
│ │ └── main.tf
│ ├── mysql
│ │ └── main.tf
│ └── vpc
│ └── main.tf
└── stage
├── app
│ └── main.tf
├── mysql
│ └── main.tf
└── vpc
└── main.tf
The contents of each environment will be more or less identical, except perhaps for a few settings (e.g. the prod environment may run bigger or more servers). As the size of the infrastructure grows, having to maintain all of this duplicated code between environments becomes more error prone. You can reduce the amount of copy paste using Terraform modules, but even the code to instantiate a module and set up input variables, output variables, providers, and remote state can still create a lot of maintenance overhead.
How can you keep your Terraform code DRY so that you only have to define it once, no matter how many environments you have?
Terragrunt has the ability to download remote Terraform configurations. The idea is that you define the Terraform code
for your infrastructure just once, in a single repo, called, for example, modules:
└── modules
├── app
│ └── main.tf
├── mysql
│ └── main.tf
└── vpc
└── main.tf
This repo contains typical Terraform code, with one difference: anything in your code that should be different between
environments should be exposed as an input variable. For example, the app module might expose the following
variables:
variable "instance_count" {
description = "How many servers to run"
}
variable "instance_type" {
description = "What kind of servers to run (e.g. t2.large)"
}These variables allow you to run smaller/fewer servers in qa and stage to save money and larger/more servers in prod to ensure availability and scalability.
In a separate repo, called, for example, live, you define the code for all of your environments, which now consists
of just one terragrunt.hcl file per component (e.g. app/terragrunt.hcl, mysql/terragrunt.hcl, etc). This gives you
the following file layout:
└── live
├── prod
│ ├── app
│ │ └── terragrunt.hcl
│ ├── mysql
│ │ └── terragrunt.hcl
│ └── vpc
│ └── terragrunt.hcl
├── qa
│ ├── app
│ │ └── terragrunt.hcl
│ ├── mysql
│ │ └── terragrunt.hcl
│ └── vpc
│ └── terragrunt.hcl
└── stage
├── app
│ └── terragrunt.hcl
├── mysql
│ └── terragrunt.hcl
└── vpc
└── terragrunt.hcl
Notice how there are no Terraform configurations (.tf files) in any of the folders. Instead, each terragrunt.hcl
file specifies a terraform { ... } block that specifies from where to download the Terraform code, as well as the
environment-specific values for the input variables in that Terraform code. For example,
stage/app/terragrunt.hcl may look like this:
terraform {
# Deploy version v0.0.3 in stage
source = "git::git@github.com:foo/modules.git//app?ref=v0.0.3"
}
inputs = {
instance_count = 3
instance_type = "t2.micro"
}(Note: the double slash (//) in the source parameter is intentional and required. It's part of Terraform's Git
syntax for module sources. Terraform may display a "Terraform
initialized in an empty directory" warning, but you can safely ignore it.)
And prod/app/terragrunt.hcl may look like this:
terraform {
# Deploy version v0.0.1 in prod
source = "git::git@github.com:foo/modules.git//app?ref=v0.0.1"
}
inputs = {
instance_count = 10
instance_type = "m2.large"
}You can now deploy the modules in your live repo. For example, to deploy the app module in stage, you would do the
following:
cd live/stage/app
terragrunt apply
When Terragrunt finds the terraform block with a source parameter in live/stage/app/terragrunt.hcl file, it will:
-
Download the configurations specified via the
sourceparameter into the--terragrunt-download-dirfolder (by default.terragrunt-cachein the working directory, which we recommend adding to.gitignore). This downloading is done by using the same go-getter library Terraform uses, so thesourceparameter supports the exact same syntax as the module source parameter, including local file paths, Git URLs, and Git URLs withrefparameters (useful for checking out a specific tag, commit, or branch of Git repo). Terragrunt will download all the code in the repo (i.e. the part before the double-slash//) so that relative paths work correctly between modules in that repo. -
Copy all files from the current working directory into the temporary folder.
-
Execute whatever Terraform command you specified in that temporary folder.
-
Pass any variables defined in the
inputs = { ... }block as environment variables (prefixed withTF_VAR_to your Terraform code. Notice how theinputsblock instage/app/terragrunt.hcldeploys fewer and smaller instances than prod.
Check out the terragrunt-infrastructure-modules-example and terragrunt-infrastructure-live-example repos for fully-working sample code that demonstrates this new folder structure.
With this new approach, copy/paste between environments is minimized. The terragrunt.hcl files contain solely the
source URL of the module to deploy and the inputs to set for that module in the current environment. To create a
new environment, you copy an old one and update just the environment-specific inputs in the terragrunt.hcl files,
which is about as close to the "essential complexity" of the problem as you can get.
Just as importantly, since the Terraform module code is now defined in a single repo, you can version it (e.g., using Git
tags and referencing them using the ref parameter in the source URL, as in the stage/app/terragrunt.hcl and
prod/app/terragrunt.hcl examples above), and promote a single, immutable version through each environment (e.g.,
qa -> stage -> prod). This idea is inspired by Kief Morris' blog post Using Pipelines to Manage Environments with
Infrastructure as Code.
If you're testing changes to a local copy of the modules repo, you you can use the --terragrunt-source command-line
option or the TERRAGRUNT_SOURCE environment variable to override the source parameter. This is useful to point
Terragrunt at a local checkout of your code so you can do rapid, iterative, make-a-change-and-rerun development:
cd live/stage/app
terragrunt apply --terragrunt-source ../../../modules//app
(Note: the double slash (//) here too is intentional and required. Terragrunt downloads all the code in the folder
before the double-slash into the temporary folder so that relative paths between modules work correctly. Terraform may
display a "Terraform initialized in an empty directory" warning, but you can safely ignore it.)
The first time you set the source parameter to a remote URL, Terragrunt will download the code from that URL into a tmp folder.
It will NOT download it again afterwords unless you change that URL. That's because downloading code—and more importantly,
reinitializing remote state, redownloading provider plugins, and redownloading modules—can take a long time. To avoid adding 10-90
seconds of overhead to every Terragrunt command, Terragrunt assumes all remote URLs are immutable, and only downloads them once.
Therefore, when working locally, you should use the --terragrunt-source parameter and point it at a local file path as described
in the previous section. Terragrunt will copy the local files every time you run it, which is nearly instantaneous, and doesn't
require reinitializing everything, so you'll be able to iterate quickly.
If you need to force Terragrunt to redownload something from a remote URL, run Terragrunt with the --terragrunt-source-update flag
and it'll delete the tmp folder, download the files from scratch, and reinitialize everything. This can take a while, so avoid it
and use --terragrunt-source when you can!
One of the gotchas with downloading Terraform configurations is that when you run terragrunt apply in folder foo,
Terraform will actually execute in some temporary folder such as .terragrunt-cache/foo. That means you have to be
especially careful with relative file paths, as they will be relative to that temporary folder and not the folder where
you ran Terragrunt!
In particular:
-
Command line: When using file paths on the command line, such as passing an extra
-var-fileargument, you should use absolute paths:# Use absolute file paths on the CLI! terragrunt apply -var-file /foo/bar/extra.tfvars -
Terragrunt configuration: When using file paths directly in your Terragrunt configuration (
terragrunt.hcl), such as in anextra_argumentsblock, you can't use hard-coded absolute file paths, or it won't work on your teammates' computers. Therefore, you should utilize the Terragrunt built-in functionget_terragrunt_dir()to use a relative file path:terraform { source = "git::git@github.com:foo/modules.git//frontend-app?ref=v0.0.3" extra_arguments "custom_vars" { commands = [ "apply", "plan", "import", "push", "refresh" ] # With the get_terragrunt_dir() function, you can use relative paths! arguments = [ "-var-file=${get_terragrunt_dir()}/../common.tfvars", "-var-file=example.tfvars" ] } }
See the get_terragrunt_dir() documentation for more details.
The easiest way to use Terragrunt with private Git repos is to use SSH authentication.
Configure your Git account so you can use it with SSH
(see the guide for GitHub here)
and use the SSH URL for your repo, prepended with git::ssh://:
terraform {
source = "git::ssh://git@github.com/foo/modules.git//path/to/module?ref=v0.0.1"
}Look up the Git repo for your repository to find the proper format.
Note: In automated pipelines, you may need to run the following command for your
Git repository prior to calling terragrunt to ensure that the ssh host is registered
locally, e.g.:
$ ssh -T -oStrictHostKeyChecking=accept-new git@github.com || true
- Motivation
- Filling in remote state settings with Terragrunt
- Create remote state and locking resources automatically
Terraform supports remote state storage via a variety of
backends that you normally configure in your .tf files as follows:
terraform {
backend "s3" {
bucket = "my-terraform-state"
key = "frontend-app/terraform.tfstate"
region = "us-east-1"
encrypt = true
dynamodb_table = "my-lock-table"
}
}Unfortunately, the backend configuration does not support expressions, variables, or functions. This makes it hard to
keep your code DRY if you have multiple Terraform modules. For
example, consider the following folder structure, which uses different Terraform modules to deploy a backend app,
frontend app, MySQL database, and a VPC:
├── backend-app
│ └── main.tf
├── frontend-app
│ └── main.tf
├── mysql
│ └── main.tf
└── vpc
└── main.tf
To use remote state with each of these modules, you would have to copy/paste the exact same backend configuration
into each of the main.tf files. The only thing that would differ between the configurations would be the key
parameter: e.g., the key for mysql/main.tf might be mysql/terraform.tfstate and the key for
frontend-app/main.tf might be frontend-app/terraform.tfstate.
To keep your remote state configuration DRY, you can use Terragrunt. You still have to specify the backend you want
to use in each module, but instead of copying and pasting the configuration settings over and over again into each
main.tf file, you can leave them blank (this is known as partial
configuration):
terraform {
# The configuration for this backend will be filled in by Terragrunt
backend "s3" {}
}To fill in the settings via Terragrunt, create a terragrunt.hcl file in the root folder, plus one terragrunt.hcl
file in each of the Terraform modules:
├── terragrunt.hcl
├── backend-app
│ ├── main.tf
│ └── terragrunt.hcl
├── frontend-app
│ ├── main.tf
│ └── terragrunt.hcl
├── mysql
│ ├── main.tf
│ └── terragrunt.hcl
└── vpc
├── main.tf
└── terragrunt.hcl
In your root terragrunt.hcl file, you can define your entire remote state configuration just once in a
remote_state block (which supports all the same backend types
as Terraform), as follows:
remote_state {
backend = "s3"
config = {
bucket = "my-terraform-state"
key = "${path_relative_to_include()}/terraform.tfstate"
region = "us-east-1"
encrypt = true
dynamodb_table = "my-lock-table"
}
}In each of the child terragrunt.hcl files, such as mysql/terragrunt.hcl, you can tell Terragrunt to
automatically include all the settings from the root terragrunt.hcl file as follows:
include {
path = find_in_parent_folders()
}The include block tells Terragrunt to use the exact same Terragrunt configuration from the terragrunt.hcl file
specified via the path parameter. It behaves exactly as if you had copy/pasted the Terraform configuration from
the included file remote_state configuration into mysql/terragrunt.hcl, but this approach is much easier to
maintain!
The next time you run terragrunt, it will automatically configure all the settings in the
remote_state.config block, if they aren't configured already, by calling terraform
init.
The terragrunt.hcl files above use two Terragrunt built-in functions:
-
find_in_parent_folders(): This function returns the path to the firstterragrunt.hclfile it finds in the parent folders above the currentterragrunt.hclfile. In the example above, the call tofind_in_parent_folders()inmysql/terragrunt.hclwill return../terragrunt.hcl. This way, you don't have to hard code thepathparameter in every module. -
path_relative_to_include(): This function returns the relative path between the currentterragrunt.hclfile and the path specified in itsincludeblock. We typically use this in a rootterragrunt.hclfile so that each Terraform child module stores its Terraform state at a differentkey. For example, themysqlmodule will have itskeyparameter resolve tomysql/terraform.tfstateand thefrontend-appmodule will have itskeyparameter resolve tofrontend-app/terraform.tfstate.
See the Built-in Functions docs for more info.
Check out the terragrunt-infrastructure-modules-example and terragrunt-infrastructure-live-example repos for fully-working sample code that demonstrates how to use Terragrunt to manage remote state.
The child .hcl file's terraform settings will be merged into the parent file's terraform settings as follows:
- If an
extra_argumentsblock in the child has the same name as anextra_argumentsblock in the parent, then the child's block will override the parent's.- Specifying an empty
extra_argumentsblock in a child with the same name will effectively remove the parent's block.
- Specifying an empty
- If an
extra_argumentsblock in the child has a different name thanextra_argumentsblocks in the parent, then both the parent and child'sextra_argumentswill be effective.- The child's
extra_argumentswill be placed after the parent'sextra_argumentson the terraform command line. - Therefore, if a child's and parent's
extra_argumentsinclude.tfvarsfiles with the same variable defined, the value from the.tfvarsfile from the child'sextra_argumentswill be used by terraform.
- The child's
- If a
before_hookorafter_hookblock in the child has the same name as the hook block in the parent, then the child's block will override the parent's.- Specifying an empty hook block in a child with the same name will effectively remove the parent's block.
- If a
before_hookorafter_hookblock in the child has a different name than hook blocks in the parent, then both the parent and child's hook blocks will be effective. - The
sourcefield in the child will overridesourcefield in the parent
Other settings in the child .hcl file override the respective settings in the parent.
When you run terragrunt with remote_state configuration, it will automatically create the following resources if
they don't already exist:
-
S3 bucket: If you are using the S3 backend for remote state storage and the
bucketyou specify inremote_state.configdoesn't already exist, Terragrunt will create it automatically, with versioning, server-side encryption, and access logging enabled.In addition, you can let terragrunt tag the bucket with custom tags that you specify in
remote_state.config.s3_bucket_tags. -
DynamoDB table: If you are using the S3 backend for remote state storage and you specify a
dynamodb_table(a DynamoDB table used for locking) inremote_state.config, if that table doesn't already exist, Terragrunt will create it automatically, with server-side encryption enabled, including a primary key calledLockID.In addition, you can let terragrunt tag the DynamoDB table with custom tags that you specify in
remote_state.config.dynamodb_table_tags.
-
GCS bucket: If you are using the GCS backend for remote state storage and the
bucketyou specify inremote_state.configdoesn't already exist, Terragrunt will create it automatically, with versioning enabled. For this to work correctly you must also specifyprojectandlocationkeys inremote_state.config, so terragrunt knows where to create the bucket. You will also need to supply valid credentials using eitherremote_state.config.credentialsor by setting theGOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALSenvironment variable. If you want to skip creating the bucket entirely, simply setskip_bucket_creationtotrueand Terragrunt will assume the bucket has already been created. If you don't specifybucketinremote_statethen terragrunt will assume that you will passbucketthrough-backend-configinextra_arguments.We also strongly recommend you enable Cloud Audit Logs to audit and track API operations performed against the state bucket.
In addition, you can let Terragrunt label the bucket with custom labels that you specify in
remote_state.config.gcs_bucket_labels.
Note: If you specify a profile key in remote_state.config, Terragrunt will automatically use this AWS profile
when creating the S3 bucket or DynamoDB table.
Note: You can disable automatic remote state initialization by setting remote_state.disable_init, this will
skip the automatic creation of remote state resources and will execute terraform init passing the backend=false option.
This can be handy when running commands such as validate-all as part of a CI process where you do not want to initialize remote state.
The following example demonstrates using an environment variable to configure this option:
remote_state {
# ...
disable_init = tobool(get_env("TERRAGRUNT_DISABLE_INIT", "false"))
}For the s3 backend, the following config options can be used for S3-compatible object stores, as necessary:
remote_state {
# ...
skip_bucket_versioning = true # use only if the object store does not support versioning
skip_bucket_ssencryption = true # use only if non-encrypted Terraform State is required and/or the object store does not support server-side encryption
skip_bucket_accesslogging = true # use only if the cost for the extra object space is undesirable or the object store does not support access logging
enable_lock_table_ssencryption = true # use only if non-encrypted DynamoDB Lock Table for the Terraform State is required and/or the NoSQL database service does not support server-side encryption
shared_credentials_file = "/path/to/credentials/file"
skip_credentials_validation = true
skip_metadata_api_check = true
force_path_style = true
}If you experience an error for any of these configurations, confirm you are using Terraform v0.12.2 or greater.
Further, the config options s3_bucket_tags, dynamodb_table_tags, skip_bucket_versioning,
skip_bucket_ssencryption, skip_bucket_accesslogging, and enable_lock_table_ssencryption are only valid for
backend s3. They are used by terragrunt and are not passed on to
terraform. See section Create remote state and locking resources automatically.
For the gcs backend, the following config options can be used for GCS-compatible object stores, as necessary:
remote_state {
# ...
skip_bucket_versioning = true # use only if the object store does not support versioning
encryption_key = "GOOGLE_ENCRYPTION_KEY"
}If you experience an error for any of these configurations, confirm you are using Terraform v0.12.0 or greater.
Further, the config options gcs_bucket_labels and skip_bucket_versioning are only valid for the backend gcs. They are used by
terragrunt and are not passed on to terraform. See section Create remote state and locking resources automatically.
- Motivation
- Multiple extra_arguments blocks
- extra_arguments for init
- Required and optional var-files
- Handling whitespace
Sometimes you may need to pass extra CLI arguments every time you run certain terraform commands. For example, you
may want to set the lock-timeout setting to 20 minutes for all commands that may modify remote state so that
Terraform will keep trying to acquire a lock for up to 20 minutes if someone else already has the lock rather than
immediately exiting with an error.
You can configure Terragrunt to pass specific CLI arguments for specific commands using an extra_arguments block
in your terragrunt.hcl file:
terraform {
# Force Terraform to keep trying to acquire a lock for
# up to 20 minutes if someone else already has the lock
extra_arguments "retry_lock" {
commands = [
"init",
"apply",
"refresh",
"import",
"plan",
"taint",
"untaint"
]
arguments = [
"-lock-timeout=20m"
]
env_vars = {
TF_VAR_var_from_environment = "value"
}
}
}Each extra_arguments block includes an arbitrary name (in the example above, retry_lock), a list of commands to
which the extra arguments should be added, and a list of arguments or required_var_files or optional_var_files to
add. You can also pass custom environment variables using env_vars block, which stores environment variables in key
value pairs. With the configuration above, when you run terragrunt apply, Terragrunt will call Terraform as follows:
$ terragrunt apply
terraform apply -lock-timeout=20m
You can even use built-in functions such as get_terraform_commands_that_need_locking to automatically populate the lsit of Terraform commands that need locking:
terraform {
# Force Terraform to keep trying to acquire a lock for up to 20 minutes if someone else already has the lock
extra_arguments "retry_lock" {
commands = get_terraform_commands_that_need_locking()
arguments = ["-lock-timeout=20m"]
}
}You can specify one or more extra_arguments blocks. The arguments in each block will be applied any time you call
terragrunt with one of the commands in the commands list. If more than one extra_arguments block matches a
command, the arguments will be added in the order of appearance in the configuration. For example, in addition to
lock settings, you may also want to pass custom -var-file arguments to several commands:
terraform {
# Force Terraform to keep trying to acquire a lock for
# up to 20 minutes if someone else already has the lock
extra_arguments "retry_lock" {
commands = get_terraform_commands_that_need_locking()
arguments = ["-lock-timeout=20m"]
}
# Pass custom var files to Terraform
extra_arguments "custom_vars" {
commands = [
"apply",
"plan",
"import",
"push",
"refresh"
]
arguments = [
"-var", "foo=bar",
"-var", "region=us-west-1"
]
}
}With the configuration above, when you run terragrunt apply, Terragrunt will call Terraform as follows:
$ terragrunt apply
terraform apply -lock-timeout=20m -var foo=bar -var region=us-west-1
Extra arguments for the init command have some additional behavior and constraints.
In addition to being appended to the terraform init command that is run when you explicitly run terragrunt init,
extra_arguments for init will also be appended to the init commands that are automatically
run during other commands (see Auto-Init).
You must not specify the -from-module option (aka. the SOURCE argument for terraform < 0.10.0) or the DIR
argument in the extra_arguments for init. This option and argument will be provided automatically by terragrunt.
Here's an example of configuring extra_arguments for init in an environment in which terraform plugins are manually installed,
rather than relying on terraform to automatically download them.
terraform {
# ...
extra_arguments "init_args" {
commands = [
"init"
]
arguments = [
"-get-plugins=false",
"-plugin-dir=/my/terraform/plugin/dir",
]
}
}One common usage of extra_arguments is to include tfvars files. Instead of using arguments, it is simpler to use
either required_var_files or optional_var_files. Both options require only to provide the list of file to include.
The only difference is that required_var_files will add the extra argument -var-file=<your file> for each file
specified and if they don't exist, exit with an error. optional_var_files, on the other hand, will skip over files
that don't exists. This allows many conditional configurations based on environment variables as you can see in the
following example:
/my/tf
├── terragrunt.hcl
├── prod.tfvars
├── us-west-2.tfvars
├── backend-app
│ ├── main.tf
│ ├── dev.tfvars
│ └── terragrunt.hcl
├── frontend-app
│ ├── main.tf
│ ├── us-east-1.tfvars
│ └── terragrunt.hcl
terraform {
extra_arguments "conditional_vars" {
commands = [
"apply",
"plan",
"import",
"push",
"refresh"
]
required_var_files = [
"${get_parent_terragrunt_dir()}/terraform.tfvars"
]
optional_var_files = [
"${get_parent_terragrunt_dir()}/${get_env("TF_VAR_env", "dev")}.tfvars",
"${get_parent_terragrunt_dir()}/${get_env("TF_VAR_region", "us-east-1")}.tfvars",
"${get_terragrunt_dir()}/${get_env("TF_VAR_env", "dev")}.tfvars",
"${get_terragrunt_dir()}/${get_env("TF_VAR_region", "us-east-1")}.tfvars"
]
}See the get_terragrunt_dir() and get_parent_terragrunt_dir() documentation for more details.
With the configuration above, when you run terragrunt apply-all, Terragrunt will call Terraform as follows:
$ terragrunt apply-all
[backend-app] terraform apply -var-file=/my/tf/terraform.tfvars -var-file=/my/tf/backend-app/dev.tfvars
[frontend-app] terraform apply -var-file=/my/tf/terraform.tfvars -var-file=/my/tf/frontend-app/us-east-1.tfvars
$ TF_VAR_env=prod terragrunt apply-all
[backend-app] terraform apply -var-file=/my/tf/terraform.tfvars -var-file=/my/tf/prod.tfvars
[frontend-app] terraform apply -var-file=/my/tf/terraform.tfvars -var-file=/my/tf/prod.tfvars -var-file=/my/tf/frontend-app/us-east-1.tfvars
$ TF_VAR_env=prod TF_VAR_region=us-west-2 terragrunt apply-all
[backend-app] terraform apply -var-file=/my/tf/terraform.tfvars -var-file=/my/tf/prod.tfvars -var-file=/my/tf/us-west-2.tfvars
[frontend-app] terraform apply -var-file=/my/tf/terraform.tfvars -var-file=/my/tf/prod.tfvars -var-file=/my/tf/us-west-2.tfvars
The list of arguments cannot include whitespaces, so if you need to pass command line arguments that include
spaces (e.g. -var bucket=example.bucket.name), then each of the arguments will need to be a separate item in the
arguments list:
terraform {
extra_arguments "bucket" {
commands = [
"apply",
"plan",
"import",
"push",
"refresh"
]
arguments = [
"-var", "bucket=example.bucket.name",
]
}
}With the configuration above, when you run terragrunt apply, Terragrunt will call Terraform as follows:
$ terragrunt apply
terraform apply -var bucket=example.bucket.name
- Motivation
- The apply-all, destroy-all, output-all and plan-all commands
- Passing outputs between modules
- Dependencies between modules
- Testing multiple modules locally
Let's say your infrastructure is defined across multiple Terraform modules:
root
├── backend-app
│ └── main.tf
├── frontend-app
│ └── main.tf
├── mysql
│ └── main.tf
├── redis
│ └── main.tf
└── vpc
└── main.tf
There is one module to deploy a frontend-app, another to deploy a backend-app, another for the MySQL database, and so
on. To deploy such an environment, you'd have to manually run terraform apply in each of the subfolder, wait for it
to complete, and then run terraform apply in the next subfolder. How do you avoid this tedious and time-consuming
process?
To be able to deploy multiple Terraform modules in a single command, add a terragrunt.hcl file to each module:
root
├── backend-app
│ ├── main.tf
│ └── terragrunt.hcl
├── frontend-app
│ ├── main.tf
│ └── terragrunt.hcl
├── mysql
│ ├── main.tf
│ └── terragrunt.hcl
├── redis
│ ├── main.tf
│ └── terragrunt.hcl
└── vpc
├── main.tf
└── terragrunt.hcl
Now you can go into the root folder and deploy all the modules within it by using the apply-all command:
cd root
terragrunt apply-all
When you run this command, Terragrunt will recursively look through all the subfolders of the current working
directory, find all folders with a terragrunt.hcl file, and run terragrunt apply in each of those folders
concurrently.
Similarly, to undeploy all the Terraform modules, you can use the destroy-all command:
cd root
terragrunt destroy-all
To see the currently applied outputs of all of the subfolders, you can use the output-all command:
cd root
terragrunt output-all
Finally, if you make some changes to your project, you could evaluate the impact by using plan-all command:
Note: It is important to realize that you could get errors running plan-all if you have dependencies between your
projects and some of those dependencies haven't been applied yet.
Ex: If module A depends on module B and module B hasn't been applied yet, then plan-all will show the plan for B, but exit with an error when trying to show the plan for A.
cd root
terragrunt plan-all
If your modules have dependencies between them—for example, you can't deploy the backend-app until MySQL and redis are deployed—you'll need to express those dependencies in your Terragrunt configuration as explained in the next section.
Consider the following file structure:
root
├── backend-app
│ ├── main.tf
│ └── terragrunt.hcl
├── mysql
│ ├── main.tf
│ └── terragrunt.hcl
├── redis
│ ├── main.tf
│ └── terragrunt.hcl
└── vpc
├── main.tf
└── terragrunt.hcl
Suppose that you wanted to pass in the VPC ID of the VPC that is created from the vpc module in the folder structure
above to the mysql module as an input variable. Or if you wanted to pass in the subnet IDs of the private subnet that
is allocated as part of the vpc module.
You can use the dependency block to extract the output variables to access another module's output variables in
the terragrunt inputs attribute.
For example, suppose the vpc module outputs the ID under the name vpc_id. To access that output, you would specify
in mysql/terragrunt.hcl:
dependency "vpc" {
config_path = "../vpc"
}
inputs = {
vpc_id = dependency.vpc.outputs.vpc_id
}
When you apply this module, the output will be read from the vpc module and passed in as an input to the mysql
module right before calling terraform apply.
You can also specify multiple dependency blocks to access multiple different module output variables. For
example, in the above folder structure, you might want to reference the domain output of the redis and mysql
modules for use as inputs in the backend-app module. To access those outputs, you would specify in
backend-app/terragrunt.hcl:
dependency "mysql" {
config_path = "../mysql"
}
dependency "redis" {
config_path = "../redis"
}
inputs = {
mysql_url = dependency.mysql.outputs.domain
redis_url = dependency.redis.outputs.domain
}
Note that each dependency is automatically considered a dependency in Terragrunt. This means that when you run
apply-all on a config that has dependency blocks, Terragrunt will not attempt to deploy the config until all
the modules referenced in dependency blocks have been applied. So for the above example, the order for the
apply-all command would be:
- Deploy the VPC
- Deploy MySQL and Redis in parallel
- Deploy the backend-app
If any of the modules failed to deploy, then Terragrunt will not attempt to deploy the modules that depend on them.
Note: Not all blocks are able to access outputs passed by dependency blocks. See the section on
Configuration parsing order in this README for more information.
You can also specify dependencies explicitly. Consider the following file structure:
root
├── backend-app
│ ├── main.tf
│ └── terragrunt.hcl
├── frontend-app
│ ├── main.tf
│ └── terragrunt.hcl
├── mysql
│ ├── main.tf
│ └── terragrunt.hcl
├── redis
│ ├── main.tf
│ └── terragrunt.hcl
└── vpc
├── main.tf
└── terragrunt.hcl
Let's assume you have the following dependencies between Terraform modules:
backend-appdepends onmysql,redis, andvpcfrontend-appdepends onbackend-appandvpcmysqldepends onvpcredisdepends onvpcvpchas no dependencies
You can express these dependencies in your terragrunt.hcl config files using a dependencies block. For example,
in backend-app/terragrunt.hcl you would specify:
dependencies {
paths = ["../vpc", "../mysql", "../redis"]
}Similarly, in frontend-app/terragrunt.hcl, you would specify:
dependencies {
paths = ["../vpc", "../backend-app"]
}Once you've specified the dependencies in each terragrunt.hcl file, when you run the terragrunt apply-all or
terragrunt destroy-all, Terragrunt will ensure that the dependencies are applied or destroyed, respectively, in the
correct order. For the example at the start of this section, the order for the apply-all command would be:
- Deploy the VPC
- Deploy MySQL and Redis in parallel
- Deploy the backend-app
- Deploy the frontend-app
If any of the modules fail to deploy, then Terragrunt will not attempt to deploy the modules that depend on them. Once
you've fixed the error, it's usually safe to re-run the apply-all or destroy-all command again, since it'll be a
no-op for the modules that already deployed successfully, and should only affect the ones that had an error the last
time around.
To check all of your dependencies and validate the code in them, you can use the validate-all command.
If you are using Terragrunt to configure remote Terraform configurations and all
of your modules have the source parameter set to a Git URL, but you want to test with a local checkout of the code,
you can use the --terragrunt-source parameter:
cd root
terragrunt plan-all --terragrunt-source /source/modules
If you set the --terragrunt-source parameter, the xxx-all commands will assume that parameter is pointing to a
folder on your local file system that has a local checkout of all of your Terraform modules. For each module that is
being processed via a xxx-all command, Terragrunt will read in the source parameter in that module's terragrunt.hcl
file, parse out the path (the portion after the double-slash), and append the path to the --terragrunt-source
parameter to create the final local path for that module.
For example, consider the following terragrunt.hcl file:
terraform {
source = "git::git@github.com:acme/infrastructure-modules.git//networking/vpc?ref=v0.0.1"
}If you run terragrunt apply-all --terragrunt-source /source/infrastructure-modules, then the local path Terragrunt
will compute for the module above will be /source/infrastructure-modules//networking/vpc.
The most secure way to manage infrastructure in AWS is to use multiple AWS accounts. You define all your IAM users in one account (e.g., the "security" account) and deploy all of your infrastructure into a number of other accounts (e.g., the "dev", "stage", and "prod" accounts). To access those accounts, you login to the security account and assume an IAM role in the other accounts.
There are a few ways to assume IAM roles when using AWS CLI tools, such as Terraform:
-
One option is to create a named profile, each with a different role_arn parameter. You then tell Terraform which profile to use via the
AWS_PROFILEenvironment variable. The downside to using profiles is that you have to store your AWS credentials in plaintext on your hard drive. -
Another option is to use environment variables and the AWS CLI. You first set the credentials for the security account (the one where your IAM users are defined) as the environment variables
AWS_ACCESS_KEY_IDandAWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEYand runaws sts assume-role --role-arn <ROLE>. This gives you back a blob of JSON that contains newAWS_ACCESS_KEY_IDandAWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEYvalues you can set as environment variables to allow Terraform to use that role. The advantage of this approach is that you can store your AWS credentials in a secret store and never write them to disk in plaintext. The disadvantage is that assuming an IAM role requires several tedious steps. Worse yet, the credentials you get back from theassume-rolecommand are only good for up to 1 hour, so you have to repeat this process often. -
A final option is to modify your AWS provider with the assume_role configuration and your S3 backend with the role_arn parameter. You can then set the credentials for the security account (the one where your IAM users are defined) as the environment variables
AWS_ACCESS_KEY_IDandAWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEYand when you runterraform applyorterragrunt apply, Terraform/Terragrunt will assume the IAM role you specify automatically. The advantage of this approach is that you can store your AWS credentials in a secret store and never write them to disk in plaintext, and you get fresh credentials on every run ofapply, without the complexity of callingassume-role. The disadvantage is that you have to modify all your Terraform / Terragrunt code to set therole_arnparam and your Terraform backend configuration will change (and prompt you to manually confirm the update!) every time you change the IAM role you're using.
To avoid these frustrating trade-offs, you can configure Terragrunt to assume an IAM role for you, as described next.
To tell Terragrunt to assume an IAM role, just set the --terragrunt-iam-role command line argument:
terragrunt apply --terragrunt-iam-role "arn:aws:iam::ACCOUNT_ID:role/ROLE_NAME"Alternatively, you can set the TERRAGRUNT_IAM_ROLE environment variable:
export TERRAGRUNT_IAM_ROLE="arn:aws:iam::ACCOUNT_ID:role/ROLE_NAME"
terragrunt applyAdditionally, you can specify an iam_role property in the terragrunt config:
iam_role = "arn:aws:iam::ACCOUNT_ID:role/ROLE_NAME"Terragrunt will resolve the value of the option by first looking for the cli argument, then looking for the environment variable, then defaulting to the value specified in the config file.
Terragrunt will call the sts assume-role API on your behalf and expose the credentials it gets back as environment
variables when running Terraform. The advantage of this approach is that you can store your AWS credentials in a secret
store and never write them to disk in plaintext, you get fresh credentials on every run of Terragrunt, without the
complexity of calling assume-role yourself, and you don't have to modify your Terraform code or backend configuration
at all.
This section contains detailed documentation for the following aspects of Terragrunt:
- Inputs
- Locals
- AWS credentials
- AWS IAM policies
- Built-in Functions
- Before & After Hooks
- Auto-Init
- CLI options
- Configuration
- Configuration parsing order
- Formatting terragrunt.hcl
- Migrating from Terragrunt v0.11.x and Terraform 0.8.x and older
- Clearing the Terragrunt cache
- Contributing
- Developing Terragrunt
- License
You can set values for your module's input parameters by specifying an inputs block in terragrunt.hcl:
inputs = {
instance_type = "t2.micro"
instance_count = 10
tags = {
Name = "example-app"
}
}Whenever you run a Terragrunt command, Terragrunt will set any inputs you pass in as environment variables. For example,
with the terragrunt.hcl file above, running terragrunt apply is roughly equivalent to:
$ terragrunt apply
# Roughly equivalent to:
TF_VAR_instance_type="t2.micro" \
TF_VAR_instance_count=10 \
TF_VAR_tags='{"Name":"example-app"}' \
terraform apply
Note that Terragrunt will respect any TF_VAR_xxx variables you've manually set in your environment, ensuring that
anything in inputs will NOT be override anything you've already set in your environment.
You can use locals to bind a name to an expression, so you can reuse that expression without having to repeat it multiple times (keeping your Terragrunt configuration DRY).
config. For example, suppose that you need to use the AWS region in multiple inputs. You can bind the name aws_region
using locals:
locals {
aws_region = "us-east-1"
}
inputs = {
aws_region = local.aws_region
s3_endpoint = "com.amazonaws.${local.aws_region}.s3"
}
You can use any valid terragrunt expression in the locals configuration. The locals block also supports referencing other locals:
locals {
x = 2
y = 40
answer = local.x + local.y
}
Currently you can only reference locals defined in the same config file. terragrunt does not automatically include
locals defined in the parent config of an include block into the current context. If you wish to reuse variables
globally, consider using yaml or json files that are included and merged using the terraform built in functions
available to terragrunt.
For example, suppose you had the following directory tree:
.
├── terragrunt.hcl
├── mysql
│ └── terragrunt.hcl
└── vpc
└── terragrunt.hcl
Instead of adding the locals block to the parent terragrunt.hcl file, you can define a file common_vars.yaml
that contains the global variables you wish to pull in:
.
├── terragrunt.hcl
├── common_vars.yaml
├── mysql
│ └── terragrunt.hcl
└── vpc
└── terragrunt.hcl
You can then include them into the locals block of the child terragrunt config using yamldecode and file:
# child terragrunt.hcl
locals {
common_vars = yamldecode(file("${get_terragrunt_dir()}/${find_in_parent_folders("common_vars.yaml")}")),
region = "us-east-1"
}
This configuration will load in the common_vars.yaml file and bind it to the attribute common_vars so that it is available
in the current context. Note that because locals is a block, there currently is a way to merge the map into the top
level.
Terragrunt uses the official AWS SDK for Go, which means that it will automatically load credentials using the AWS standard approach. If you need help configuring your credentials, please refer to the Terraform docs.
Your AWS user must have an IAM policy which grants permissions for interacting with DynamoDB and S3. Terragrunt will automatically create the configured DynamoDB tables and S3 buckets for storing remote state if they do not already exist.
The following is an example IAM policy for use with Terragrunt. The policy grants the following permissions:
- all DynamoDB permissions in all regions for tables used by Terragrunt
- all S3 permissions for buckets used by Terragrunt
Before using this policy, make sure to replace 1234567890 with your AWS account id and terragrunt* with
your organization's naming convention for AWS resources for Terraform remote state.
{
"Version": "2012-10-17",
"Statement": [
{
"Sid": "AllowAllDynamoDBActionsOnAllTerragruntTables",
"Effect": "Allow",
"Action": "dynamodb:*",
"Resource": [
"arn:aws:dynamodb:*:1234567890:table/terragrunt*"
]
},
{
"Sid": "AllowAllS3ActionsOnTerragruntBuckets",
"Effect": "Allow",
"Action": "s3:*",
"Resource": [
"arn:aws:s3:::terragrunt*",
"arn:aws:s3:::terragrunt*/*"
]
}
]
}For a more minimal policy, for example when using a single bucket and DynamoDB table for multiple Terragrunt
users, you can use the following. Be sure to replace BUCKET_NAME and TABLE_NAME with the S3 bucket name
and DynamoDB table name respectively.
{
"Version": "2012-10-17",
"Statement": [
{
"Sid": "AllowCreateAndListS3ActionsOnSpecifiedTerragruntBucket",
"Effect": "Allow",
"Action": [
"s3:ListBucket",
"s3:GetBucketVersioning",
"s3:CreateBucket"
],
"Resource": "arn:aws:s3:::BUCKET_NAME"
},
{
"Sid": "AllowGetAndPutS3ActionsOnSpecifiedTerragruntBucketPath",
"Effect": "Allow",
"Action": [
"s3:PutObject",
"s3:GetObject"
],
"Resource": "arn:aws:s3:::BUCKET_NAME/some/path/here"
},
{
"Sid": "AllowCreateAndUpdateDynamoDBActionsOnSpecifiedTerragruntTable",
"Effect": "Allow",
"Action": [
"dynamodb:PutItem",
"dynamodb:GetItem",
"dynamodb:DescribeTable",
"dynamodb:DeleteItem",
"dynamodb:CreateTable"
],
"Resource": "arn:aws:dynamodb:*:*:table/TABLE_NAME"
}
]
}When the above is applied to an IAM user it will restrict them to creating the DynamoDB table if it doesn't already exist and allow updating records for state locking, and for the S3 bucket will allow creating the bucket if it doesn't already exist and only write files to the specified path.
Terragrunt allows you to use built-in functions anywhere in terragrunt.hcl, just like Terraform! The functions
currently available are:
- All Terraform built-in functions
- find_in_parent_folders()
- path_relative_to_include()
- path_relative_from_include()
- get_env(NAME, DEFAULT)
- get_terragrunt_dir()
- get_parent_terragrunt_dir()
- get_terraform_commands_that_need_vars()
- get_terraform_commands_that_need_input()
- get_terraform_commands_that_need_locking()
- get_terraform_commands_that_need_parallelism()
- get_aws_account_id()
- run_cmd()
All Terraform built-in functions are supported in Terragrunt config files:
terraform {
source = "../modules/${basename(get_terragrunt_dir())}"
}
remote_state {
backend = "s3"
config = {
bucket = trimspace(" my-terraform-bucket ")
region = join("-", ["us", "east", "1"])
key = format("%s/terraform.tfstate", path_relative_to_include())
}
}Note: Any file* functions (file, fileexists, filebase64, etc) are relative to the directory containing the
terragrunt.hcl file they're used in.
Given the following structure:
└── terragrunt
└── common.tfvars
├── assets
| └── mysql
| └── assets.txt
└── terragrunt.hcl
Then assets.txt could be read with the following function call:
file("assets/mysql/assets.txt")find_in_parent_folders() searches up the directory tree from the current terragrunt.hcl file and returns the
relative path to the first terragrunt.hcl in a parent folder or exit with an error if no such file is found. This is
primarily useful in an include block to automatically find the path to a parent terragrunt.hcl file:
include {
path = find_in_parent_folders()
}The function takes an optional name parameter that allows you to specify a different filename to search for:
include {
path = find_in_parent_folders("some-other-file-name.hcl")
}You can also pass an optional second fallback parameter which causes the function to return the fallback value
(instead of exiting with an error) if the file in the name parameter cannot be found:
include {
path = find_in_parent_folders("some-other-file-name.tfvars", "fallback.tfvars")
}path_relative_to_include() returns the relative path between the current terragrunt.hcl file and the path
specified in its include block. For example, consider the following folder structure:
├── terragrunt.hcl
└── prod
└── mysql
└── terragrunt.hcl
└── stage
└── mysql
└── terragrunt.hcl
Imagine prod/mysql/terragrunt.hcl and stage/mysql/terragrunt.hcl include all settings from the root
terragrunt.hcl file:
include {
path = find_in_parent_folders()
}The root terragrunt.hcl can use the path_relative_to_include() in its remote_state configuration to ensure
each child stores its remote state at a different key:
remote_state {
backend = "s3"
config = {
bucket = "my-terraform-bucket"
region = "us-east-1"
key = "${path_relative_to_include()}/terraform.tfstate"
}
}The resulting key will be prod/mysql/terraform.tfstate for the prod mysql module and
stage/mysql/terraform.tfstate for the stage mysql module.
path_relative_from_include() returns the relative path between the path specified in its include block and the
current terragrunt.hcl file (it is the counterpart of path_relative_to_include()). For example, consider the
following folder structure:
├── sources
| ├── mysql
| | └── *.tf
| └── secrets
| └── mysql
| └── *.tf
└── terragrunt
└── common.tfvars
├── mysql
| └── terragrunt.hcl
├── secrets
| └── mysql
| └── terragrunt.hcl
└── terragrunt.hcl
Imagine terragrunt/mysql/terragrunt.hcl and terragrunt/secrets/mysql/terragrunt.hcl include all settings from the
root terragrunt.hcl file:
include {
path = find_in_parent_folders()
}The root terragrunt.hcl can use the path_relative_from_include() in combination with path_relative_to_include()
in its source configuration to retrieve the relative terraform source code from the terragrunt configuration file:
terraform {
source = "${path_relative_from_include()}/../sources//${path_relative_to_include()}"
}The resulting source will be ../../sources//mysql for mysql module and ../../../sources//secrets/mysql for
secrets/mysql module.
Another use case would be to add extra argument to include the common.tfvars file for all subdirectories:
terraform {
extra_arguments "common_var" {
commands = [
"apply",
"plan",
"import",
"push",
"refresh"
]
arguments = [
"-var-file=${get_terragrunt_dir()}/${path_relative_from_include()}/common.tfvars",
]
}
}This allows proper retrieval of the common.tfvars from whatever the level of subdirectories we have.
get_env(NAME, DEFAULT) returns the value of the environment variable named NAME or DEFAULT if that environment
variable is not set. Example:
remote_state {
backend = "s3"
config = {
bucket = get_env("BUCKET", "my-terraform-bucket")
}
}Note that Terraform will read environment
variables that start with the
prefix TF_VAR_, so one way to share a variable named foo between Terraform and Terragrunt is to set its value
as the environment variable TF_VAR_foo and to read that value in using this get_env() built-in function.
get_terragrunt_dir() returns the directory where the Terragrunt configuration file (by default terragrunt.hcl) lives.
This is useful when you need to use relative paths with remote Terraform
configurations and you want those paths relative to your Terragrunt configuration
file and not relative to the temporary directory where Terragrunt downloads the code.
For example, imagine you have the following file structure:
/terraform-code
├── common.tfvars
├── frontend-app
│ └── terragrunt.hcl
Inside of /terraform-code/frontend-app/terragrunt.hcl you might try to write code that looks like this:
terraform {
source = "git::git@github.com:foo/modules.git//frontend-app?ref=v0.0.3"
extra_arguments "custom_vars" {
commands = [
"apply",
"plan",
"import",
"push",
"refresh"
]
arguments = [
"-var-file=../common.tfvars" # Note: This relative path will NOT work correctly!
]
}
}Note how the source parameter is set, so Terragrunt will download the frontend-app code from the modules repo
into a temporary folder and run terraform in that temporary folder. Note also that there is an extra_arguments
block that is trying to allow the frontend-app to read some shared variables from a common.tfvars file.
Unfortunately, the relative path (../common.tfvars) won't work, as it will be relative to the temporary folder!
Moreover, you can't use an absolute path, or the code won't work on any of your teammates' computers.
To make the relative path work, you need to use get_terragrunt_dir() to combine the path with the folder where
the terragrunt.hcl file lives:
terraform {
source = "git::git@github.com:foo/modules.git//frontend-app?ref=v0.0.3"
extra_arguments "custom_vars" {
commands = [
"apply",
"plan",
"import",
"push",
"refresh"
]
# With the get_terragrunt_dir() function, you can use relative paths!
arguments = [
"-var-file=${get_terragrunt_dir()}/../common.tfvars"
]
}
}For the example above, this path will resolve to /terraform-code/frontend-app/../common.tfvars, which is exactly
what you want.
get_parent_terragrunt_dir() returns the absolute directory where the Terragrunt parent configuration file (by default
terragrunt.hcl) lives. This is useful when you need to use relative paths with remote Terraform
configurations and you want those paths relative to your parent Terragrunt
configuration file and not relative to the temporary directory where Terragrunt downloads the code.
This function is very similar to get_terragrunt_dir() except it returns the root instead of the leaf of your terragrunt configuration folder.
/terraform-code
├── terragrunt.hcl
├── common.tfvars
├── app1
│ └── terragrunt.hcl
├── tests
│ ├── app2
│ | └── terragrunt.hcl
│ └── app3
│ └── terragrunt.hcl
terraform {
extra_arguments "common_vars" {
commands = [
"apply",
"plan",
"import",
"push",
"refresh"
]
arguments = [
"-var-file=${get_parent_terragrunt_dir()}/common.tfvars"
]
}
}The common.tfvars located in the terraform root folder will be included by all applications, whatever their relative location to the root.
get_terraform_commands_that_need_vars() returns the list of terraform commands that accept -var and -var-file
parameters. This function is used when defining extra_arguments.
terraform {
extra_arguments "common_var" {
commands = get_terraform_commands_that_need_vars()
arguments = ["-var-file=${get_aws_account_id()}.tfvars"]
}
}get_terraform_commands_that_need_input() returns the list of terraform commands that accept the -input=(true or false)
parameter. This function is used when defining extra_arguments.
terraform {
# Force Terraform to not ask for input value if some variables are undefined.
extra_arguments "disable_input" {
commands = get_terraform_commands_that_need_input()
arguments = ["-input=false"]
}
}get_terraform_commands_that_need_locking() returns the list of terraform commands that accept the -lock-timeout
parameter. This function is used when defining extra_arguments.
terraform {
# Force Terraform to keep trying to acquire a lock for up to 20 minutes if someone else already has the lock
extra_arguments "retry_lock" {
commands = get_terraform_commands_that_need_locking()
arguments = ["-lock-timeout=20m"]
}
}get_terraform_commands_that_need_parallelism() returns the list of terraform commands that accept the -parallelism
parameter. This function is used when defining extra_arguments.
terraform {
# Force Terraform to run with reduced parallelism
extra_arguments "parallelism" {
commands = get_terraform_commands_that_need_parallelism()
arguments = ["-parallelism=5"]
}
}get_aws_account_id() returns the AWS account id associated with the current set of credentials. Example:
remote_state {
backend = "s3"
config = {
bucket = "mycompany-${get_aws_account_id()}"
}
}This allows uniqueness of the storage bucket per AWS account (since bucket name must be globally unique).
It is also possible to configure variables specifically based on the account used:
terraform {
extra_arguments "common_var" {
commands = get_terraform_commands_that_need_vars()
arguments = ["-var-file=${get_aws_account_id()}.tfvars"]
}
}run_cmd(command, arg1, arg2...) runs a shell command and returns the stdout as the result of the interpolation. The
command is executed at the same folder as the terragrunt.hcl file. This is useful whenever you want to dynamically
fill in arbitrary information in your Terragrunt configuration.
As an example, you could write a script that determines the bucket and DynamoDB table name based on the AWS account, instead of hardcoding the name of every account:
remote_state {
backend = "s3"
config = {
bucket = run_cmd("./get_names.sh", "bucket")
dynamodb_table = run_cmd("./get_names.sh", "dynamodb")
}
}If the command you are running has the potential to output sensitive values, you may wish to redact the output from
appearing in the terminal. To do so, use the special --terragrunt-quiet argument which must be passed as the first
argument to run_cmd():
super_secret_value = run_cmd("--terragrunt-quiet", "./decrypt_secret.sh", "foo") Note: This will prevent terragrunt from displaying the output from the command in its output. However, the value could still be displayed in the Terraform output if Terraform does not treat it as a sensitive value.
Before Hooks or After Hooks are a feature of terragrunt that make it possible to define custom actions
that will be called either before or after execution of the terraform command.
Here's an example:
terraform {
before_hook "before_hook_1" {
commands = ["apply", "plan"]
execute = ["echo", "Foo"]
run_on_error = true
}
before_hook "before_hook_2" {
commands = ["apply"]
execute = ["echo", "Bar"]
run_on_error = false
}
before_hook "interpolation_hook_1" {
commands = ["apply", "plan"]
execute = ["echo", get_env("HOME", "HelloWorld")]
run_on_error = false
}
after_hook "after_hook_1" {
commands = ["apply", "plan"]
execute = ["echo", "Baz"]
run_on_error = true
}
after_hook "init_from_module" {
commands = ["init-from-module"]
execute = ["cp", "${get_parent_terragrunt_dir()}/foo.tf", "."]
}
}Hooks support the following arguments:
commands(required): theterraformcommands that will trigger the execution of the hook.execute(required): the shell command to execute.run_on_error(optional): if set to true, this hook will run even if a previous hook hit an error, or in the case of "after" hooks, if the Terraform command hit an error. Default is false.init_from_moduleandinit: This is not an argument, but a special name you can use for hooks that run during initialization. There are two stages of initialization: one is to download remote configurations usinggo-getter; the other is Auto-Init, which configures the backend and downloads provider plugins and modules. If you wish to execute a hook when Terragrunt is usinggo-getterto download remote configurations, name the hookinit_from_module. If you wish to execute a hook when Terragrunt is usingterraform initfor Auto-Init, name the hookinit.
Auto-Init is a feature of Terragrunt that makes it so that terragrunt init does not need to be called explicitly
before other terragrunt commands.
When Auto-Init is enabled (the default), terragrunt will automatically call
terraform init during other commands (e.g. terragrunt plan)
when terragrunt detects that:
terraform inithas never been called, orsourceneeds to be downloaded, or- the modules or remote state used by the module have changed since the previous call to
terraform init.
As mentioned above, extra_arguments can be configured to allow customization of the
terraform init command.
Note that there might be cases where terragrunt does not properly detect that terraform init needs be called.
In this case, terraform would fail. Running terragrunt init again corrects this situation.
For some use cases, it might be desirable to disable Auto-Init. For example, if each user wants to specify a different
-plugin-dir option to terraform init (and therefore it cannot be put in extra_arguments). To disable Auto-Init,
use the --terragrunt-no-auto-init command line option or set the TERRAGRUNT_AUTO_INIT environment variable to
false.
Disabling Auto-Init means that you must explicitly call terragrunt init prior to any other terragrunt commands for
a particular configuration. If Auto-Init is disabled, and terragrunt detects that terraform init needs to be called,
then terragrunt will fail.
Auto-Retry is a feature of terragrunt that will automatically address situations where a terraform command needs
to be re-run.
Terraform can fail with transient errors which can be addressed by simply retrying the command again. In the event
terragrunt finds one of these errors, the command will be re-run again automatically.
Example
$ terragrunt apply
...
Initializing provider plugins...
- Checking for available provider plugins on https://releases.hashicorp.com...
Error installing provider "template": error fetching checksums: Get https://releases.hashicorp.com/terraform-provider-template/1.0.0/terraform-provider-template_1.0.0_SHA256SUMS: net/http: TLS handshake timeout.
Terragrunt sees this error, and knows it is a transient error that can addressed by re-running the apply command.
auto-retry will try a maximum of three times to re-run the command, at which point it will deem the error as not
transient, and accept the terraform failure. Retries will occur when the error is encountered, pausing for 5 seconds
between retries.
Known errors that auto-retry will rerun, are maintained in the TerragruntOptions.RetryableErrors array. Future
upgrades to terragrunt may include the ability to configure auto-retry by specifying additional error strings and
configuring max retries and retry intervals the terragrunt config (PRs welcome!).
To disable auto-retry, use the --terragrunt-no-auto-retry command line option or set the TERRAGRUNT_AUTO_RETRY
environment variable to false.
Terragrunt forwards all arguments and options to Terraform. The only exceptions are --version, terragrunt-info and
arguments that start with the prefix --terragrunt-. The currently available options are:
-
--terragrunt-config: A custom path to theterragrunt.hclfile. May also be specified via theTERRAGRUNT_CONFIGenvironment variable. The default path isterragrunt.hclin the current directory (see Configuration for a slightly more nuanced explanation). This argument is not used with theapply-all,destroy-all,output-all,validate-all, andplan-allcommands. -
--terragrunt-tfpath: A custom path to the Terraform binary. May also be specified via theTERRAGRUNT_TFPATHenvironment variable. The default isterraformin a directory on your PATH. -
--terragrunt-no-auto-init: Don't automatically runterraform initwhen other commands are run (e.g.terragrunt apply). Useful if you want to pass custom arguments toterraform initthat are specific to a user or execution environment, and therefore cannot be specified asextra_arguments. For example,-plugin-dir. You must runterragrunt inityourself in this case if needed.terragruntwill fail if it detects thatinitis needed, but auto init is disabled. See Auto-Init -
--terragrunt-no-auto-retry: Don't automatically retry commands which fail with transient errors. See Auto-Retry -
--terragrunt-non-interactive: Don't show interactive user prompts. This will default the answer for all prompts to 'yes'. Useful if you need to run Terragrunt in an automated setting (e.g. from a script). May also be specified with the TF_INPUT environment variable. -
--terragrunt-working-dir: Set the directory where Terragrunt should execute theterraformcommand. Default is the current working directory. Note that for theapply-all,destroy-all,output-all,validate-all, andplan-allcommands, this parameter has a different meaning: Terragrunt will apply or destroy all the Terraform modules in the subfolders of theterragrunt-working-dir, runningterraformin the root of each module it finds. -
--terragrunt-download-dir: The path where to download Terraform code when using remote Terraform configurations. May also be specified via theTERRAGRUNT_DOWNLOADenvironment variable. Default is.terragrunt-cachein the working directory. We recommend adding this folder to your.gitignore. -
--terragrunt-source: Download Terraform configurations from the specified source into a temporary folder, and run Terraform in that temporary folder. May also be specified via theTERRAGRUNT_SOURCEenvironment variable. The source should use the same syntax as the Terraform module source parameter. If you specify this argument for theapply-all,destroy-all,output-all,validate-all, orplan-allcommands, Terragrunt will assume this is the local file path for all of your Terraform modules, and for each module processed by thexxx-allcommand, Terragrunt will automatically append the path ofsourceparameter in each module to the--terragrunt-sourceparameter you passed in. -
--terragrunt-source-update: Delete the contents of the temporary folder before downloading Terraform source code into it. Can also be enabled by setting theTERRAGRUNT_SOURCE_UPDATEenvironment variable totrue. -
--terragrunt-ignore-dependency-errors:*-allcommands continue processing components even if a dependency fails -
--terragrunt-iam-role: Assume the specified IAM role ARN before running Terraform or AWS commands. May also be specified via theTERRAGRUNT_IAM_ROLEenvironment variable. This is a convenient way to use Terragrunt and Terraform with multiple AWS accounts. -
--terragrunt-exclude-dir: Unix-style glob of directories to exclude when running*-allcommands. Modules under these directories will be excluded during execution of the commands. If a relative path is specified, it should be relative from--terragrunt-working-dir. Flag can be specified multiple times. -
--terragrunt-include-dir: Unix-style glob of directories to include when running*-allcommands. Only modules under these directories (and all dependent modules) will be included during execution of the commands. If a relative path is specified, it should be relative from--terragrunt-working-dir. Flag can be specified multiple times. -
--terragrunt-ignore-external-dependencies: Dont attempt to include any external dependencies when running*-allcommands
Terragrunt configuration is defined in a terragrunt.hcl file. This uses the same HCL syntax as Terraform itself.
Here's an example:
include {
path = find_in_parent_folders()
}
dependencies {
paths = ["../vpc", "../mysql", "../redis"]
}Terragrunt figures out the path to its config file according to the following rules:
- The value of the
--terragrunt-configcommand-line option, if specified. - The value of the
TERRAGRUNT_CONFIGenvironment variable, if defined. - A
terragrunt.hclfile in the current working directory, if it exists. - If none of these are found, exit with an error.
Terragrunt prevent_destroy boolean flag allows you to protect selected Terraform module. It will prevent destroy
or destroy-all command to actually destroy resources of the protected module. This is useful for modules you want
to carefully protect, such as a database, or a module that provides auth.
Example:
terraform {
source = "git::git@github.com:foo/modules.git//app?ref=v0.0.3"
}
prevent_destroy = trueThe terragrunt skip boolean flag can be used to protect modules you don't want any changes to or just to skip modules
that don't define any infrastructure by themselves. When set to true, all terragrunt commands will skip the selected
module.
Consider the following file structure:
root
├── terragrunt.hcl
├── prod
│ └── terragrunt.hcl
├── dev
│ └── terragrunt.hcl
└── qa
└── terragrunt.hcl
In some cases, the root level terragrunt.hcl file is solely used to DRY up your Terraform configuration by being
included in the other terragrunt.hcl files. In this case, you do not want the xxx-all commands to process the root
level terragrunt.hcl since it does not define any infrastructure by itself. To make the xxx-all commands skip the
root level terragrunt.hcl file, you can set skip = true:
skip = trueThe skip flag must be set explicitly in terragrunt modules that should be skipped. If you set skip = true in a
terragrunt.hcl file that is included by another terragrunt.hcl file, only the terragrunt.hcl file that explicitly
set skip = true will be skipped.
It is important to be aware of the terragrunt configuration parsing order when using features like locals and
dependency outputs, where you can reference attributes of other blocks in the config
in your inputs. For example, because locals are evaluated before dependency blocks, you can not bind outputs
from dependency into locals. On the other hand, for the same reason, you can use locals in the
dependency blocks.
Currently terragrunt parses the config in the following order:
localsblockincludeblockdependenciesblockdependencyblocks, including callingterragrunt outputon the dependent modules to retrieve the outputs- Everything else
- The config referenced by
include - A merge operation between the config referenced by
includeand the current config.
Blocks that are parsed earlier in the process will be made available for use in the parsing of later blocks. Similarly,
you cannot use blocks that are parsed later earlier in the process (e.g you can't reference dependency in
locals, include, or dependencies blocks).
Note that the parsing order is slightly different when using the -all flavors of the command. In the -all flavors of
the command, Terragrunt parses the configuration twice. In the first pass, it follows the following parsing order:
localsblock of all configurations in the treeincludeblock of all configurations in the treedependencyblocks of all configurations in the tree, but does NOT retrieve the outputsterraformblock of all configurations in the treedependenciesblock of all configurations in the tree
The results of this pass are then used to build the dependency graph of the modules in the tree. Once the graph is constructed, Terragrunt will loop through the modules and run the specified command. It will then revert to the single configuration parsing order specified above for each module as it runs the command.
This allows Terragrunt to avoid resolving dependency on modules that haven't been applied yet when doing a
clean deployment from scratch with apply-all.
You can rewrite terragrunt.hcl files to a canonical format using the hclfmt command built into terragrunt. Similar
to terraform fmt, this command applies a subset of the Terraform language style
conventions, along with other minor adjustments for
readability.
This command will recursively search for terragrunt.hcl files and format all of them under a given directory tree.
Consider the following file structure:
root
├── terragrunt.hcl
├── prod
│ └── terragrunt.hcl
├── dev
│ └── terragrunt.hcl
└── qa
└── terragrunt.hcl
If you run terragrunt hclfmt at the root, this will update:
root/terragrunt.hclroot/prod/terragrunt.hclroot/dev/terragrunt.hclroot/qa/terragrunt.hcl
Additionally, there's a flag --terragrunt-check. It allows to validating if files are properly formatted. It does not
rewrite files and in case of invalid format, it will return an error with exit status 0.
The terragrunt terraform_binary string option can be used to override the default terraform binary path (which is terraform).
The precedence is as follows: --terragrunt-tfpath command line option -> TERRAGRUNT_TFPATH env variable -> terragrunt.hcl in the module directory -> included terragrunt.hcl
The terragrunt terraform_version_constraint string overrides the default minimum supported version of terraform.
Terragrunt only officially supports the latest version of terraform, however in some cases an old terraform is needed.
For example:
terraform_version_constraint = ">= 0.11"Terragrunt creates a .terragrunt-cache folder in the current working directory as its scratch directory. It downloads
your remote Terraform configurations into this folder, runs your Terraform commands in this folder, and any modules and
providers those commands download also get stored in this folder. You can safely delete this folder any time and
Terragrunt will recreate it as necessary.
If you need to clean up a lot of these folders (e.g., after terragrunt apply-all), you can use the following commands
on Mac and Linux:
Recursively find all the .terragrunt-cache folders that are children of the current folder:
find . -type d -name ".terragrunt-cache"If you are ABSOLUTELY SURE you want to delete all the folders that come up in the previous command, you can recursively delete all of them as follows:
find . -type d -name ".terragrunt-cache" -prune -exec rm -rf {} \;Also consider setting the TERRAGRUNT_DOWNLOAD environment variable if you wish to place the cache directories
somewhere else.
Terragrunt is an open source project, and contributions from the community are very welcome! Please check out the Contribution Guidelines and Developing Terragrunt for instructions.
To run Terragrunt locally, use the go run command:
go run main.go plan- Terragrunt uses
dep, a vendor package management tool for golang. See the dep repo for installation instructions.
Note: The tests in the dynamodb folder for Terragrunt run against a real AWS account and will add and remove
real data from DynamoDB. DO NOT hit CTRL+C while the tests are running, as this will prevent them from cleaning up
temporary tables and data in DynamoDB. We are not responsible for any charges you may incur.
Before running the tests, you must configure your AWS credentials and AWS IAM policies.
To run all the tests:
go test -v ./...To run only the tests in a specific package, such as the package remote:
cd remote
go test -vAnd to run a specific test, such as TestToTerraformRemoteConfigArgsNoBackendConfigs in package remote:
cd remote
go test -v -run TestToTerraformRemoteConfigArgsNoBackendConfigsIf you set the TERRAGRUNT_DEBUG environment variable to "true", the stack trace for any error will be printed to
stdout when you run the app.
Additionally, newer features introduced in v0.19.0 (such as locals and dependency blocks) can output more verbose
logging if you set the TG_LOG environment variable to debug.
In this project, we try to ensure that:
- Every error has a stacktrace. This makes debugging easier.
- Every error generated by our own code (as opposed to errors from Go built-in functions or errors from 3rd party libraries) has a custom type. This makes error handling more precise, as we can decide to handle different types of errors differently.
To accomplish these two goals, we have created an errors package that has several helper methods, such as
errors.WithStackTrace(err error), which wraps the given error in an Error object that contains a stacktrace. Under
the hood, the errors package is using the go-errors library, but this may
change in the future, so the rest of the code should not depend on go-errors directly.
Here is how the errors package should be used:
- Any time you want to create your own error, create a custom type for it, and when instantiating that type, wrap it
with a call to
errors.WithStackTrace. That way, any time you call a method defined in the Terragrunt code, you know the error it returns already has a stacktrace and you don't have to wrap it yourself. - Any time you get back an error object from a function built into Go or a 3rd party library, immediately wrap it with
errors.WithStackTrace. This gives us a stacktrace as close to the source as possible. - If you need to get back the underlying error, you can use the
errors.IsErroranderrors.Unwrapfunctions.
Every source file in this project should be formatted with go fmt. There are few helper scripts and targets in the
Makefile that can help with this (mostly taken from the terraform repo):
-
make fmtcheckChecks to see if all source files are formatted. Exits 1 if there are unformatted files.
-
make fmtFormats all source files with
gofmt. -
make install-pre-commit-hookInstalls a git pre-commit hook that will run all of the source files through
gofmt.
To ensure that your changes get properly formatted, please install the git pre-commit hook with make install-pre-commit-hook.
To release a new version, just go to the Releases Page and create a new release. The CircleCI job for this repo has been configured to:
- Automatically detect new tags.
- Build binaries for every OS using that tag as a version number.
- Upload the binaries to the release in GitHub.
See .circleci/config.yml for details.
This code is released under the MIT License. See LICENSE.txt.