terraform/tools/terraform-bundle/README.md

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terraform-bundle tool for bundling Terraform with providers Normally "terraform init" will download and install the plugins necessary to work with a particular configuration, but sometimes Terraform is deployed in a network that, for one reason or another, cannot access the official plugin repository for automatic download. terraform-bundle provides an alternative method, allowing the auto-download process to be run out-of-band on a separate machine that _does_ have access to the repository. The result is a zip file that can be extracted onto the target system to install both the desired Terraform version and a selection of providers, thus avoiding the need for on-the-fly plugin installation. This is provided as a separate tool from Terraform because it is not something that most users will need. In the rare case where this is needed, we will for the moment assume that users are able to build this tool themselves. We may later release it in a pre-built form, if it proves to be generally useful. It uses the same API from the plugin/discovery package is is used by the auto-install behavior in "terraform init", so plugin versions are resolved in the same way. However, it's expected that several different Terraform configurations will run from the same bundle, so this tool allows the bundle to include potentially many versions of the same provider and thus allows each Terraform configuration to select from the available versions in the bundle, avoiding the need to upgrade all configurations to new provider versions in lockstep.
2017-07-05 18:44:50 +02:00
# terraform-bundle
`terraform-bundle` was a solution intended to help with the problem
of distributing Terraform providers to environments where direct registry
access is impossible or undesirable, created in response to the Terraform v0.10
change to distribute providers separately from Terraform CLI.
The Terraform v0.13 series introduced our intended longer-term solutions
to this need:
* [Alternative provider installation methods](https://www.terraform.io/docs/cli/config/config-file.html#provider-installation),
including the possibility of running server containing a local mirror of
providers you intend to use which Terraform can then use instead of the
origin registry.
* [The `terraform providers mirror` command](https://www.terraform.io/docs/cli/commands/providers/mirror.html),
built in to Terraform v0.13.0 and later, can automatically construct a
suitable directory structure to serve from a local mirror based on your
current Terraform configuration, serving a similar (though not identical)
purpose than `terraform-bundle` had served.
For those using Terraform CLI alone, without Terraform Cloud, we recommend
planning to transition to the above features instead of using
`terraform-bundle`.
## How to use `terraform-bundle`
However, if you need to continue using `terraform-bundle`
during a transitional period then you can use the version of the tool included
in the Terraform v0.15 branch to build bundles compatible with
Terraform v0.13.0 and later.
If you have a working toolchain for the Go programming language, you can
build a `terraform-bundle` executable as follows:
* `git clone --single-branch --branch=v0.15 --depth=1 https://github.com/hashicorp/terraform.git`
* `cd terraform`
* `go build -o ../terraform-bundle ./tools/terraform-bundle`
After running these commands, your original working directory will have an
executable named `terraform-bundle`, which you can then run.
For information
on how to use `terraform-bundle`, see
[the README from the v0.15 branch](https://github.com/hashicorp/terraform/blob/v0.15/tools/terraform-bundle/README.md).
You can follow a similar principle to build a `terraform-bundle` release
compatible with Terraform v0.12 by using `--branch=v0.12` instead of
`--branch=v0.15` in the command above. Terraform CLI versions prior to
v0.13 have different expectations for plugin packaging due to them predating
Terraform v0.13's introduction of automatic third-party provider installation.
## Terraform Enterprise Users
If you use Terraform Enterprise, the self-hosted distribution of
Terraform Cloud, you can use `terraform-bundle` as described above to build
custom Terraform packages with bundled provider plugins.
For more information, see
[Installing a Bundle in Terraform Enterprise](https://github.com/hashicorp/terraform/blob/v0.15/tools/terraform-bundle/README.md#installing-a-bundle-in-terraform-enterprise).