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docs Modules - Configuration Language docs-config-modules Modules allow multiple resources to be grouped together and encapsulated.

Modules

-> Note: This page is about Terraform 0.12 and later. For Terraform 0.11 and earlier, see 0.11 Configuration Language: Modules.

A module is a container for multiple resources that are used together.

Every Terraform configuration has at least one module, known as its root module, which consists of the resources defined in the .tf files in the main working directory.

A module can call other modules, which lets you include the child module's resources into the configuration in a concise way. Modules can also be called multiple times, either within the same configuration or in separate configurations, allowing resource configurations to be packaged and re-used.

This page describes how to call one module from another. Other pages in this section of the documentation describe the different elements that make up modules, and there is further information about how modules can be used, created, and published in the dedicated Modules section. You can also learn more about how to use and create modules with our hands-on modules track on learn.hashicorp.com.

Calling a Child Module

To call a module means to include the contents of that module into the configuration with specific values for its input variables. Modules are called from within other modules using module blocks:

module "servers" {
  source = "./app-cluster"

  servers = 5
}

A module that includes a module block like this is the calling module of the child module.

The label immediately after the module keyword is a local name, which the calling module can use to refer to this instance of the module.

Within the block body (between { and }) are the arguments for the module. Most of the arguments correspond to input variables defined by the module, including the servers argument in the above example. Terraform also defines a few meta-arguments that are reserved by Terraform and used for its own purposes; we will discuss those throughout the rest of this section.

All modules require a source argument, which is a meta-argument defined by Terraform CLI. Its value is either the path to a local directory of the module's configuration files, or a remote module source that Terraform should download and use. This value must be a literal string with no template sequences; arbitrary expressions are not allowed. For more information on possible values for this argument, see Module Sources.

The same source address can be specified in multiple module blocks to create multiple copies of the resources defined within, possibly with different variable values.

After adding, removing, or modifying module blocks, you must re-run terraform init to allow Terraform the opportunity to adjust the installed modules. By default this command will not upgrade an already-installed module; use the -upgrade option to instead upgrade to the newest available version.

Accessing Module Output Values

The resources defined in a module are encapsulated, so the calling module cannot access their attributes directly. However, the child module can declare output values to selectively export certain values to be accessed by the calling module.

For example, if the ./app-cluster module referenced in the example above exported an output value named instance_ids then the calling module can reference that result using the expression module.servers.instance_ids:

resource "aws_elb" "example" {
  # ...

  instances = module.servers.instance_ids
}

For more information about referring to named values, see Expressions.

Module Versions

We recommend explicitly constraining the acceptable version numbers for each external module to avoid unexpected or unwanted changes.

Use the version attribute in the module block to specify versions:

module "consul" {
  source  = "hashicorp/consul/aws"
  version = "0.0.5"

  servers = 3
}

The version attribute value may either be a single explicit version or a version constraint expression. Constraint expressions use the following syntax to specify a range of versions that are acceptable:

  • >= 1.2.0: version 1.2.0 or newer
  • <= 1.2.0: version 1.2.0 or older
  • ~> 1.2.0: any non-beta version >= 1.2.0 and < 1.3.0, e.g. 1.2.X
  • ~> 1.2: any non-beta version >= 1.2.0 and < 2.0.0, e.g. 1.X.Y
  • >= 1.0.0, <= 2.0.0: any version between 1.0.0 and 2.0.0 inclusive

When depending on third-party modules, references to specific versions are recommended since this ensures that updates only happen when convenient to you.

For modules maintained within your organization, a version range strategy may be appropriate if a semantic versioning methodology is used consistently or if there is a well-defined release process that avoids unwanted updates.

Version constraints are supported only for modules installed from a module registry, such as the Terraform Registry or Terraform Cloud's private module registry. Other module sources can provide their own versioning mechanisms within the source string itself, or might not support versions at all. In particular, modules sourced from local file paths do not support version; since they're loaded from the same source repository, they always share the same version as their caller.

Other Meta-arguments

Along with the source meta-argument described above, module blocks have some more meta-arguments that have special meaning across all modules, described in more detail in other sections:

  • version - (Optional) A version constraint string that specifies which versions of the referenced module are acceptable. The newest version matching the constraint will be used. version is supported only for modules retrieved from module registries.

  • providers - (Optional) A map whose keys are provider configuration names that are expected by child module and whose values are corresponding provider names in the calling module. This allows provider configurations to be passed explicitly to child modules. If not specified, the child module inherits all of the default (un-aliased) provider configurations from the calling module.

In addition to the above, the argument names depends_on and lifecycle are not currently used by Terraform but are reserved for planned future features.

Since modules are a complex feature in their own right, further detail about how modules can be used, created, and published is included in the dedicated section on modules.

Providers within Modules

In a configuration with multiple modules, there are some special considerations for how resources are associated with provider configurations.

While in principle provider blocks can appear in any module, it is recommended that they be placed only in the root module of a configuration, since this approach allows users to configure providers just once and re-use them across all descendent modules.

Each resource in the configuration must be associated with one provider configuration, which may either be within the same module as the resource or be passed from the parent module. Providers can be passed down to descendent modules in two ways: either implicitly through inheritance, or explicitly via the providers argument within a module block. These two options are discussed in more detail in the following sections.

In all cases it is recommended to keep explicit provider configurations only in the root module and pass them (whether implicitly or explicitly) down to descendent modules. This avoids the provider configurations from being "lost" when descendent modules are removed from the configuration. It also allows the user of a configuration to determine which providers require credentials by inspecting only the root module.

Provider configurations are used for all operations on associated resources, including destroying remote objects and refreshing state. Terraform retains, as part of its state, a reference to the provider configuration that was most recently used to apply changes to each resource. When a resource block is removed from the configuration, this record in the state is used to locate the appropriate configuration because the resource's provider argument (if any) is no longer present in the configuration.

As a consequence, it is required that all resources created for a particular provider configuration must be destroyed before that provider configuration is removed, unless the related resources are re-configured to use a different provider configuration first.

Provider Version Constraints in Modules

To declare that a module requires particular versions of a specific provider, use a required_providers block inside a terraform block:

terraform {
  required_providers {
    aws = ">= 2.7.0"
  }
}

Shared modules should constrain only the minimum allowed version, using a >= constraint. This specifies the minimum version the provider is compatible with while allowing users to upgrade to newer provider versions without altering the module source code.

Implicit Provider Inheritance

For convenience in simple configurations, a child module automatically inherits default (un-aliased) provider configurations from its parent. This means that explicit provider blocks appear only in the root module, and downstream modules can simply declare resources for that provider and have them automatically associated with the root provider configurations.

For example, the root module might contain only a provider block and a module block to instantiate a child module:

provider "aws" {
  region = "us-west-1"
}

module "child" {
  source = "./child"
}

The child module can then use any resource from this provider with no further provider configuration required:

resource "aws_s3_bucket" "example" {
  bucket = "provider-inherit-example"
}

This approach is recommended in the common case where only a single configuration is needed for each provider across the entire configuration.

In more complex situations there may be multiple provider instances, or a child module may need to use different provider settings than its parent. For such situations, it's necessary to pass providers explicitly as we will see in the next section.

Passing Providers Explicitly

When child modules each need a different configuration of a particular provider, or where the child module requires a different provider configuration than its parent, the providers argument within a module block can be used to define explicitly which provider configs are made available to the child module. For example:

# The default "aws" configuration is used for AWS resources in the root
# module where no explicit provider instance is selected.
provider "aws" {
  region = "us-west-1"
}

# A non-default, or "aliased" configuration is also defined for a different
# region.
provider "aws" {
  alias  = "usw2"
  region = "us-west-2"
}

# An example child module is instantiated with the _aliased_ configuration,
# so any AWS resources it defines will use the us-west-2 region.
module "example" {
  source    = "./example"
  providers = {
    aws = "aws.usw2"
  }
}

The providers argument within a module block is similar to the provider argument within a resource as described for multiple provider instances, but is a map rather than a single string because a module may contain resources from many different providers.

Once the providers argument is used in a module block, it overrides all of the default inheritance behavior, so it is necessary to enumerate mappings for all of the required providers. This is to avoid confusion and surprises that may result when mixing both implicit and explicit provider passing.

Additional provider configurations (those with the alias argument set) are never inherited automatically by child modules, and so must always be passed explicitly using the providers map. For example, a module that configures connectivity between networks in two AWS regions is likely to need both a source and a destination region. In that case, the root module may look something like this:

provider "aws" {
  alias  = "usw1"
  region = "us-west-1"
}

provider "aws" {
  alias  = "usw2"
  region = "us-west-2"
}

module "tunnel" {
  source    = "./tunnel"
  providers = {
    aws.src = "aws.usw1"
    aws.dst = "aws.usw2"
  }
}

In the providers map, the keys are provider names as expected by the child module, while the values are the names of corresponding configurations in the current module. The subdirectory ./tunnel must then contain proxy configuration blocks like the following, to declare that it requires configurations to be passed with these from the providers block in the parent's module block:

provider "aws" {
  alias = "src"
}

provider "aws" {
  alias = "dst"
}

Each resource should then have its own provider attribute set to either "aws.src" or "aws.dst" to choose which of the two provider instances to use.

Proxy Configuration Blocks

A proxy configuration block is one that is either completely empty or that contains only the alias argument. It serves as a placeholder for provider configurations passed between modules. Although an empty proxy configuration block is valid, it is not necessary: proxy configuration blocks are needed only to establish which alias provider configurations a child module is expecting.

A proxy configuration block must not include the version argument. To specify version constraints for a particular child module without creating a local module configuration, use the required_providers setting inside a terraform block.

Multiple Instances of a Module

Use the count or for_each arguments to create multiple instances of a module. These arguments have the same syntax and type constraints as count and for_each as defined for managed resources.

# my_buckets.tf
module "bucket" {
  for_each = toset(["assets", "media"])
  source   = "./publish_bucket"
  name     = "${each.key}_bucket"
}
# publish_bucket/bucket-and-cloudfront.tf
variable "name" {} # this is the input parameter of the module

resource "aws_s3_bucket" "example" {
  # ...
}

resource "aws_iam_user" "deploy_user" {
  # ...
}

This example defines a local child module in the ./publish_bucket subdirectory. That module has configuration to create an S3 bucket. The module wraps the bucket and all the other implementation details required to configure a bucket.

We declare multiple module instances by using the for_each attribute, which accepts a map (with string keys) or a set of strings as its value. Additionally, we use the each.key in our module block, because the each object is available when we have declared for_each on the module block. When using the count argument, the count object is available.

Resources from child modules are prefixed with module.module_name[module index] when displayed in plan output and elsewhere in the UI. For a module with without count or for_each, the address will not contain the module index as the module's name suffices to reference the module.

In our example, the ./publish_bucket module contains aws_s3_bucket.example, and so the two instances of this module produce S3 bucket resources with resource addresses of module.bucket["assets"].aws_s3_bucket.example and module.bucket["media"].aws_s3_bucket.example respectively. These full addresses are used within the UI and on the command line, but only outputs from a module can be referenced from elsewhere in your configuration.

When refactoring an existing configuration to introduce modules, moving resource blocks between modules causes Terraform to see the new location as an entirely separate resource to the old. Always check the execution plan after performing such actions to ensure that no resources are surprisingly deleted.

Limitations when using module expansion

Modules using count or for_each cannot include configured provider blocks within the module. Only proxy configuration blocks are allowed.

If a module contains proxy configuration blocks, the calling module block must be have the corresponding providers passed to the providers argument. If you attempt to use count or for_each with a module that does not satify this requirement, you will see an error:

Error: Module does not support count

  on main.tf line 15, in module "child":
  15:   count = 2

Module "child" cannot be used with count because it contains a nested provider
configuration for "aws", at child/main.tf:2,10-15.

This module can be made compatible with count by changing it to receive all of
its provider configurations from the calling module, by using the "providers"
argument in the calling module block.

Assuming the child module only has proxy configuration blocks, the calling module block could be adjusted like so to remove this error:

provider "aws" {
  region = "us-east-1"
  alias  = "east"
}

module "child" {
  count = 2
  providers = {
    aws = aws.east
  }
}

Note how we are now passing the providers to the child module.

In addition, modules using count or for_each cannot pass different sets of providers to different instances. For example, you cannot interpolate variables in the providers block on a module.

This is because when a module instance is destroyed (such as a key-value being removed from the for_each map), the appropriate provider must be available in order to perform the destroy. You can pass different sets of providers to different module instances by using multiple module blocks:

# my_buckets.tf

provider "aws" {
  alias  = "usw1"
  region = "us-west-1"
}

provider "aws" {
  alias  = "usw2"
  region = "us-west-2"
}

provider "google" {
  alias       = "usw1"
  credentials = "${file("account.json")}"
  project     = "my-project-id"
  region      = "us-west1"
  zone        = "us-west1-a"
}

provider "google" {
  alias       = "usw2"
  credentials = "${file("account.json")}"
  project     = "my-project-id"
  region      = "us-west2"
  zone        = "us-west2-a"
}

module "bucket_w1" {
  source    = "./publish_bucket"
  providers = {
    aws.src    = "aws.usw1"
    google.src = "google.usw2"
  }
}

module "bucket_w2" {
  source    = "./publish_bucket"
  providers = {
    aws.src    = "aws.usw2"
    google.src = "google.usw2"
  }
}

Each module block may optionally have different providers passed to it using the providers argument. This can be useful in situations where, for example, a duplicated set of resources must be created across several regions or datacenters.

Tainting resources within a module

The taint command can be used to taint specific resources within a module:

$ terraform taint module.salt_master.aws_instance.salt_master

It is not possible to taint an entire module. Instead, each resource within the module must be tainted separately.