page_title: "Red Hat Cloud Services Provider"
subcategory: ""
description: |-
Please note that this Terraform provider and its modules are open source and will continue to iterate features, gradually maturing this code.
If you encounter any issues, please report them in this repo.
Introduction
The Red Hat Cloud Services Terraform provider allows Terraform to manage Red Hat OpenShift Service on AWS (ROSA) clusters and relevant resources.
For more information about ROSA, see the Red Hat documentation here.
Prerequisites
Provider documentation
See the Terraform Registry documentation for instructions on using this provider.
The following items are limitations with the current release of the OCM Terraform provider:
- The latest version is not backward compatible with version 1.0.1.
- When creating a cluster, the cluster uses AWS credentials configured on your local machine. These credentials provide access to the AWS API for validating your account.
- When creating a machine pool, you need to specify your replica count. You must define either the
replicas= "<count>"
variable or provide values for the following variables to build the machine pool:
min_replicas = "<count>"
max_replicas="<count>"
autoscaling_enabled=true
- The htpasswd identity provider does not support creating the identity provider with multiple users or adding additional users to the existing identity provider.
- The S3 bucket that is created as part of the OIDC configuration must be created in the same region as your OIDC provider.
- The Terraform provider does not support auto-generated
operator_role_prefix
. You must provide your operator_role_prefix
when creating the account roles.
Examples
The example Terraform files are all considered in development:
Prior to creating clusters
Cluster creation examples
Post cluster installation
If you want to build a local Red Hat Cloud Services provider to develop improvements for the Red Hat Cloud Services provider, you can run terraform plan
against your local build with:
-
Run make install
in the repository root directory. After running make install
you will find the rhcs provider binary file in the directory:
<HOME>/.terraform.d/plugins/terraform.local/local/rhcs/<VERSION>/<TARGET_ARCH>
For example, the following location would contain the terraform-rhcs-provider
binary file:
~/.terraform.d/plugins/terraform.local/local/rhcs/0.0.1/linux_amd64
-
You now need to update your main.tf
to the location of the local provider by pointing the required_providers rhcs to the local terraform directory.
terraform {
required_providers {
rhcs = {
source = "terraform.local/local/rhcs"
version = ">=0.0.1"
}
}
}
provider "rhcs" {
token = var.token
url = var.url
}
Testing binary
If you want to locally test the provider binary without building from sources, you can pull the latest
binary container image and copy the binary file to your local by running make binary
or the whole background command if you need to make custom changes:
podman run --pull=always --rm registry.ci.openshift.org/ci/rhcs-tf-bin:latest cat /root/terraform-provider-rhcs > ~/terraform-provider-rhcs && chmod +x ~/terraform-provider-rhcs
You can also use specific commit images by substituting latest
for the desired commit SHA.
Binary image only runs on AMD64 architectures up to now.