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Upgrading to Terraform v0.15

Terraform v0.15 is a major release and so it includes some small changes in behavior that you may need to consider when upgrading. This guide is intended to help with that process.

The goal of this guide is to cover the most common upgrade concerns and issues that would benefit from more explanation and background. The exhaustive list of changes will always be the Terraform Changelog. After reviewing this guide, we recommend reviewing the Changelog to check for specific notes about less-commonly-used features.

This guide is also not intended as an overview of the new features in Terraform v0.15. This release includes other enhancements that don't need any special attention during upgrade, but those are described in the changelog and elsewhere in the Terraform documentation.

This guide focuses on changes from v0.14 to v0.15. Terraform supports upgrade tools and features only for one major release upgrade at a time, so if you are currently using a version of Terraform prior to v0.14 please upgrade through the latest minor releases of all of the intermediate versions first, reviewing the previous upgrade guides for any considerations that may be relevant to you.

Unlike the previous few Terraform major releases, v0.15's upgrade concerns are largely conclusions of deprecation cycles left over from previous releases, many of which already had deprecation warnings in v0.14. If you previously responded to those while using Terraform v0.14 then you hopefully won't need to many any special changes to upgrade, although we still recommend reviewing the content below to confirm, particularly if you see new errors or unexpected behavior after upgrading from Terraform v0.14.

-> If you run into any problems during upgrading that are not addressed by the information in this guide, please feel free to start a topic in The Terraform community forum, describing the problem you've encountered in enough detail that other readers may be able to reproduce it and offer advice.

Upgrade guide sections:

Legacy Configuration Language Features

Terraform v0.12 introduced new syntax for a variety of existing Terraform language features that were intended to make the language easier to read and write and, in some cases, to better allow for future changes to the language.

Many of the old forms remained available but deprecated from v0.12 through to v0.14, with these deprecations finally concluding in the v0.15 release. Those who used the terraform 0.12upgrade command when upgrading from Terraform v0.11 to v0.12 will have had these updated automatically, but we've summarized the changes below to help with any remaining legacy forms you might encounter while upgrading to Terraform v0.15:

  • The built-in functions list and map were replaced with first-class syntax [ ... ] and { ... } in Terraform v0.12, and we've now removed the deprecated functions in order to resolve the ambiguity with the syntax used to declare list and map type constraints inside variable blocks.

    If you need to update a module which was using the list function, you can get the same result by replacing list(...) with tolist([...]). For example:

    - list("a", "b", "c")
    + tolist(["a", "b", "c"])
    

    If you need to update a module which was using the map function, you can get the same result by replacing map(...) with tomap([...]). For example:

    - map("a", 1, "b", 2)
    + tomap({ a = 1, b = 2 })
    

    The above examples include the type conversion functions tolist and tomap to ensure that the result will always be of the same type as before. However, in most situations those explicit type conversions won't be necessary because Terraform can infer the necessary type conversions automatically from context. In those cases, you can just use the [ ... ] or { ... } syntax directly, without a conversion function.

  • In variable declaration blocks, the type argument previously accepted v0.11-style type constraints given as quoted strings. This legacy syntax is removed in Terraform v0.15.

    To update an old-style type constraint to the modern syntax, start by removing the quotes so that the argument is a bare keyword rather than a string:

    variable "example" {
      type = string
    }
    

    Additionally, if the previous type constraint was either "list" or "map", add a type argument to specify the element type of the collection. Terraform v0.11 typically supported only collections of strings, so in most cases you can set the element type to string:

    variable "example" {
      type = list(string)
    }
    
    variable "example" {
      type = map(string)
    }
    
  • In lifecycle blocks nested inside resource blocks, Terraform previously supported a legacy value ["*"] for the ignore_changes argument, which is removed in Terraform v0.15.

    Instead, use the all keyword to indicate that you wish to ignore changes to all of the resource arguments:

      lifecycle {
        ignore_changes = all
      }
    
  • Finally, Terraform v0.11 and earlier required all non-constant expressions to be written using string interpolation syntax, even if the result was not a string. Terraform v0.12 introduced a less confusing syntax where arguments can accept any sort of expression without any special wrapping, and so the interpolation-style syntax has been redundant and deprecated in recent Terraform versions.

    For this particular change we have not made the older syntax invalid, but we do still recommend updating interpolation-only expressions to bare expressions to improve readability:

    - example = "${var.foo}"
    + example = var.foo
    

    This only applies to arguments where the value is a single expression without any string concatenation. You must continue to use the ${ ... } syntax for situations where you are combining string values together into a larger string.

    The terraform fmt command can detect and repair simple examples of the legacy interpolation-only syntax, and so we'd recommend running terraform fmt on your modules once you've addressed any of the other situations above that could block configuration parsing in order to update your configurations to the typical Terraform language style conventions.

Alternative Provider Configurations Within Modules

Terraform's provider configuration scheme includes the idea of a "default" (unaliased) provider configuration along with zero or more alternative (aliased) provider configurations.

The required_providers block now has a new field for providers to indicate aliased configuration names, replacing the need for an empty "proxy configuration block" as a placeholder. In order to declare configuration aliases, add the desired names to the configuration_aliases argument for the provider requirements.

terraform {
  required_providers {
    aws = {
      source  = "hashicorp/aws"
      version = ">= 2.7.0"
      configuration_aliases = [ aws.alternate ]
    }
  }
}

Warnings will be emitted now where empty configuration blocks are present but no longer required, though they continue to work unchanged in the 0.15 release. There are a few cases where existing configurations may return new errors:

  • The providers map in a module call cannot override a provider configured within the module. This is not a supported configuration, but was previously missed in validation and now returns an error.

  • A provider alias within a module that has no configuration requires a provider configuration be supplied in the module providers map.

  • All entries in the providers map in a module call must correspond to a provider name within the module. Passing in a configuration to an undeclared provider is now an error.

Commands Accepting a Configuration Directory Argument

A subset of Terraform's CLI commands have historically accepted a final positional argument to specify which directory contains the root module of the configuration, overriding the default behavior of expecting to find it in the current working directory.

However, the design of that argument was flawed in a number of ways due to it being handled at the wrong level of abstraction: it only changed where Terraform looks for configuration and not any of the other files that Terraform might search for, and that could therefore violate assumptions that Terraform configurations might make about the locations of different files, leading to confusing error messages. It was also not possible to support this usage pattern across all commands due to those commands using positional arguments in other ways.

To address these design flaws, Terraform v0.14 introduced a new global option -chdir which you can use before the subcommand name, causing Terraform to run the subcommand as if the given directory had been the current working directory:

$ terraform -chdir=example init

This command causes the Terraform process to actually change its current working directory to the given directory before launching the subcommand, and so now any relative paths accessed by the subcommand will be treated as relative to that directory, including (but not limited to) the following key directory conventions:

  • As with the positional arguments that -chdir replaces, Terraform will look for the root module's .tf and .tf.json files in the given directory.

  • The .tfvars and .tfvars.json files that Terraform automatically searches for, and any relative paths given in -var-file options, will be searched in the given directory.

  • The .terraform directory which Terraform creates to retain the working directory internal state will appear in the given directory, rather than the current working directory.

After treating the v0.14 releases as a migration period for this new behavior, Terraform CLI v0.15 no longer accepts configuration directories on any command except terraform fmt. (terraform fmt is special compared to the others because it primarily deals with configuration files in isolation, rather than modules or configurations as a whole.)

If you built automation which previously relied on overriding the configuration directory alone, you will need to transition to using the -chdir command line option before upgrading to Terraform v0.15.

Since the -chdir argument behavior is more comprehensive than the positional arguments it has replaced, you may need to make some further changes in the event that your automation was relying on the limitations of the old mechanism:

  • If your system depends on the .terraform directory being created in the real current working directory while using a root module defined elsewhere, you can use the TF_DATA_DIR environment variable to specify the absolute path where Terraform should store its working directory internal state:

    TF_DATA_DIR="$PWD/.terraform"
    
  • If your system uses .tfvars or .tfvars.json files either implicitly found or explicitly selected in the current working directory, you must either move those variables files into the root module directory or specify your files from elsewhere explicitly using the -var-file command line option:

    terraform plan -var-file="$PWD/example.tfvars"
    

As a special case for backward compatibility, Terraform ensures that the language expression path.cwd will return the original working directory, before overriding with -chdir, so that existing configurations referring to files in that directory can still work. If you want to refer to files in the directory given in -chdir then you can use path.root, which returns the directory containing the configuration's root module.

Microsoft Windows Terminal Support

Until the first Windows 10 update, Microsoft Windows had a console window implementation with an API incompatible with the virtual terminal approach taken on all other platforms that Terraform supports.

Previous versions of Terraform accommodated this by using an API translation layer which could convert a subset of typical virtual terminal sequences into corresponding Windows Console API function calls, but as a result this has prevented Terraform from using more complex terminal features such as progress indicators that update in place, menu prompts, etc.

Over the course of several updates to Windows 10, Microsoft has introduced virtual terminal support similar to other platforms and now recommends the virtual terminal approach for console application developers. In response to that recommendation, Terraform v0.15 no longer includes the terminal API translation layer and consequently it will, by default, produce incorrectly-formatted output on Windows 8 and earlier, and on non-updated original retail Windows 10 systems.

If you need to keep using Terraform on an older version of Windows, there are two possible workarounds available in the v0.15.0 release:

  • Run Terraform commands using the -no-color command line option to disable the terminal formatting sequences.

    This will cause the output to be unformatted plain text, but as a result will avoid the output being interspersed with uninterpreted terminal control sequences.

  • Alternatively, you can use Terraform v0.15.0 in various third-party virtual terminal implementations for older Windows versions, including ConEmu, Cmder, and mintty.

Although we have no immediate plans to actively block running Terraform on older versions of Windows, we will not be able to test future versions of Terraform on those older versions and so later releases may contain unintended regressions. We recommend planning an upgrade to a modern Windows release on any system where you expect to continue using Terraform CLI.

Other Minor Command Line Behavior Changes

Finally, Terraform v0.15 includes a small number of minor changes to the details of some commands and command line arguments, as part of a general cleanup of obsolete features and improved consistency:

  • Interrupting Terraform commands with your operating system's interrupt signal (SIGINT on Unix systems) will now cause Terraform to exit with a non-successful exit code. Previously it would, in some cases, exit with a success code.

    This signal is typically sent to Terraform when you press Ctrl+C or similar interrupt keyboard shortcuts in an interactive terminal, but might also be used by automation in order to gracefully cancel a long-running Terraform operation.

  • The -lock and -lock-timeout options are no longer available for the terraform init command. Locking applies to operations that can potentially change remote objects, to help ensure that two concurrent Terraform processes don't try to run conflicting operations, but terraform init does not interact with any providers in order to possibly effect such changes.

    These options didn't do anything in the terraform init command before, and so you can remove them from any automated calls with no change in behavior.

  • The -verify-plugins and -get-plugins options to terraform init are no longer available. These have been non-functional since Terraform v0.13, with the introduction of the new Terraform Registry-based provider installer, because in practice there are very few operations Terraform can perform which both require a terraform init but can also run without valid provider plugins installed.

    If you were using these options in automated calls to terraform init, remove them from the command line for compatibility with Terraform v0.15. There is no longer an option to initialize without installing the required provider plugins.

  • The terraform destroy command no longer accepts the option -force. This was a previous name for the option in earlier Terraform versions, but we've since adopted -auto-approve for consistency with the terraform apply command.

    If you are using -force in an automated call to terraform destroy, change to using -auto-approve instead.