README ¶
Terragrunt
Terragrunt is a thin wrapper for Terraform that supports locking and enforces best practices for Terraform state:
- Locking: Terragrunt can use Amazon's DynamoDB as a distributed locking mechanism to ensure that two team members working on the same Terraform state files do not overwrite each other's changes. DynamoDB is part of the AWS free tier, so using it as a locking mechanism should not cost you anything.
- Remote state management: A common mistake when using Terraform is to forget to configure remote state or to configure it incorrectly. Terragrunt can prevent these sorts of errors by automatically configuring remote state for everyone on your team.
Other types of locking mechanisms and automation for more best practices may be added in the future.
Motivation
When you use Terraform to provision infrastructure, it records the state of your infrastructure in state files. In order to make changes to your infrastructure, everyone on your team needs access to these state files. You could check the files into version control (not a great idea, as the state files may contain secrets) or use a supported remote state backend to store the state files in a shared location such as S3, Consul, or etcd. All of these options have two problems:
- They do not provide locking. If two team members run
terraform apply
on the same state files at the same time, they may overwrite each other's changes. The official solution to this problem is to use Hashicorp's Atlas, but that can be a fairly expensive option, and it requires you to use a SaaS platform for all Terraform operations. - They are error prone. Very often, you do a fresh checkout of a bunch of Terraform templates from version control, forget to enable remote state storage before applying them, and end up creating a bunch of duplicate resources. Sometimes you do remember to enable remote state storage, but you use the wrong configuration (e.g. the wrong S3 bucket name or key) and you end up overwriting the state for a totally different set of templates.
The goal of Terragrunt is to take Terraform, which is a fantastic tool, and make it even better for teams by providing a simple, free locking mechanism, and enforcing best practices around CLI usage. Check out Add Automatic Remote State Locking and Configuration to Terraform with Terragrunt for more info.
Install
- Install Terraform and make sure it is in your PATH.
- Install Terragrunt by going to the Releases Page, downloading
the binary for your OS, renaming it to
terragrunt
, and adding it to your PATH.
Quick start
Go into the folder with your Terraform templates and create a .terragrunt
file. This file uses the same
HCL syntax as Terraform. Here is an example .terragrunt
file that configures
Terragrunt to use DynamoDB for locking and to automatically manage remote
state for you using the S3 backend:
# Configure Terragrunt to use DynamoDB for locking
dynamoDbLock = {
stateFileId = "my-app"
}
# Configure Terragrunt to automatically store tfstate files in an S3 bucket
remoteState = {
backend = "s3"
backendConfigs = {
encrypt = "true"
bucket = "my-bucket"
key = "terraform.tfstate"
region = "us-east-1"
}
}
Once you check this .terragrunt
file into source control, everyone on your team can use Terragrunt to run all the
standard Terraform commands:
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, before running Terraform, Terragrunt will ensure your remote state is
configured according to the settings in the .terragrunt
file. Moreover, for the apply
and destroy
commands,
Terragrunt will first try to acquire a lock using DynamoDB:
terragrunt apply
[terragrunt] 2016/05/30 16:55:28 Configuring remote state for the s3 backend
[terragrunt] 2016/05/30 16:55:28 Running command: terraform remote config -backend s3 -backend-config=key=terraform.tfstate -backend-config=region=us-east-1 -backend-config=encrypt=true -backend-config=bucket=my-bucket
Initialized blank state with remote state enabled!
[terragrunt] 2016/05/30 16:55:29 Attempting to acquire lock for state file my-app in DynamoDB
[terragrunt] 2016/05/30 16:55:30 Attempting to create lock item for state file my-app in DynamoDB table terragrunt_locks
[terragrunt] 2016/05/30 16:55:30 Lock acquired!
[terragrunt] 2016/05/30 16:55:30 Running command: terraform apply
terraform apply
aws_instance.example: Creating...
ami: "" => "ami-0d729a60"
instance_type: "" => "t2.micro"
[...]
Apply complete! Resources: 1 added, 0 changed, 0 destroyed.
[terragrunt] 2016/05/27 00:39:19 Attempting to release lock for state file my-app in DynamoDB
[terragrunt] 2016/05/27 00:39:19 Lock released!
Locking using DynamoDB
Terragrunt can use Amazon's DynamoDB to acquire and release locks. DynamoDB supports strongly consistent reads as well as conditional writes, which are all the primitives we need for a very basic distributed lock system. It's also part of AWS's free tier, and given the tiny amount of data we are working with and the relatively small number of times per day you're likely to run Terraform, it should be a free option for teams already using AWS. We take no responsibility for any charges you may incur.
DynamoDB locking prerequisites
To use DynamoDB for locking, you must:
-
Set your AWS credentials in the environment using one of the following options:
- Set your credentials as the environment variables
AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID
andAWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY
(and alsoAWS_SESSION_TOKEN
if using STS temporary credentials) - Run
aws configure
and fill in the details it asks for. - Run Terragrunt on an EC2 instance with an IAM Role.
- Set your credentials as the environment variables
-
Your AWS user must have an IAM policy granting all DynamoDB actions (
dynamodb:*
) on the tableterragrunt_locks
(see the DynamoDB locking configuration for how to configure this table name).Here is an example IAM policy that grants the necessary permissions on the
terragrunt_locks
table in regionus-west-2
for an account with account id1234567890
:{ "Version": "2012-10-17", "Statement": [ { "Sid": "ReadWriteToDynamoDB", "Effect": "Allow", "Action": "dynamodb:*", "Resource": "arn:aws:dynamodb:us-west-2:1234567890:table/terragrunt_locks" } ] }
DynamoDB locking configuration
For DynamoDB locking, Terragrunt supports the following settings in .terragrunt
:
dynamoDbLock = {
stateFileId = "my-app"
awsRegion = "us-east-1"
tableName = "terragrunt_locks"
maxLockRetries = 360
}
stateFileId
: (Required) A unique id for the state file for these Terraform templates. Many teams have more than one set of templates, and therefore more than one state file, so this setting is used to disambiguate locks for one state file from another.awsRegion
: (Optional) The AWS region to use. Default:us-east-1
.tableName
: (Optional) The name of the table in DynamoDB to use to store lock information. Default:terragrunt_locks
.maxLockRetries
: (Optional) The maximum number of times to retry acquiring a lock. Terragrunt waits 10 seconds between retries. Default: 360 retries (one hour).
How DynamoDB locking works
When you run terragrunt apply
or terragrunt destroy
, Terragrunt does the following:
- Create the
terragrunt_locks
table if it doesn't already exist. - Try to write an item to the
terragrunt_locks
table withstateFileId
equal to the id specified in your.terragrunt
file. This item will include useful metadata about the lock, such as who created it (e.g. your username) and when. - Note that the write is a conditional write that will fail if an item with the same
stateFileId
already exists.- If the write succeeds, it means we have a lock!
- If the write does not succeed, it means someone else has a lock. Keep retrying every 10 seconds until we get a lock.
- Run
terraform apply
orterraform destroy
. - When Terraform is done, delete the item from the
terragrunt_locks
table to release the lock.
Cleaning up old locks
If Terragrunt is shut down before it releases a lock (e.g. via CTRL+C
or a crash), the lock might not be deleted, and
will prevent future changes to your state files. To clean up old locks, you can use the release-lock
command:
terragrunt release-lock
Are you sure you want to forcibly remove the lock for stateFileId "my-app"? (y/n): y
Managing remote state
Terragrunt can automatically manage remote state for you, preventing manual errors such as forgetting to enable remote state or using the wrong settings.
Remote state management prerequisites
Terragrunt works with all backends supported by Terraform. Check out the Terraform remote state docs for the requirements to use a particular remote state backend.
Remote state management configuration
For remote state management, Terragrunt supports the following settings in .terragrunt
:
remoteState = {
backend = "s3"
backendConfigs = {
key1 = "value1"
key2 = "value2"
key3 = "value3"
}
}
backend
: (Required) The name of the remote state backend to use (e.g. s3, consul).backendConfigs
: (Optional) A map of additional key/value pairs to pass to the backend. Each backend requires different key/value pairs, so consult the Terraform remote state docs for details.
Developing terragrunt
Running locally
To run Terragrunt locally, use the go run
command:
go run main.go plan
Running tests
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 as explained in the DynamoDB locking prerequisites section.
To run all the tests:
go test -v -parallel 128 $(glide novendor)
To run only the tests in a specific package, such as the package remote
:
cd remote
go test -v -parallel 128
And to run a specific test, such as TestToTerraformRemoteConfigArgsNoBackendConfigs
in package remote
:
cd remote
go test -v -parallel 128 -run TestToTerraformRemoteConfigArgsNoBackendConfigs
Debug logging
If 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.
Error handling
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.IsError
anderrors.Unwrap
functions.
Releasing new versions
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 circle.yml
and _ci/build-and-push-release-asset.sh
for details.
License
This code is released under the MIT License. See LICENSE.txt.
TODO
- Add a check that modules have been downloaded using
terraform get
. - Add a check that all local changes have been committed before running
terraform apply
. - Consider implementing alternative locking mechanisms, such as using Git instead of DynamoDB.
- Consider embedding the Terraform Go code within Terragrunt instead of calling out to it.
- Add a
show-lock
command. - Add a command to automatically set up best-practices remote state storage in a versioned, encrypted, S3 bucket.
- Add a command to list the different versions of state available in a versioned S3 bucket and to diff any two state files.
Documentation ¶
There is no documentation for this package.