Skip to content

Terraform module that provision an S3 bucket to store the `terraform.tfstate` file and a DynamoDB table to lock the state file to prevent concurrent modifications and state corruption.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

twofivetechnology/terraform-aws-tfstate-backend

 
 

Repository files navigation

README Header

Cloud Posse

terraform-aws-tfstate-backend Codefresh Build Status Latest Release Slack Community

Terraform module to provision an S3 bucket to store terraform.tfstate file and a DynamoDB table to lock the state file to prevent concurrent modifications and state corruption.

The module supports the following:

  1. Forced server-side encryption at rest for the S3 bucket
  2. S3 bucket versioning to allow for Terraform state recovery in the case of accidental deletions and human errors
  3. State locking and consistency checking via DynamoDB table to prevent concurrent operations
  4. DynamoDB server-side encryption

https://www.terraform.io/docs/backends/types/s3.html

NOTE: The operators of the module (IAM Users) must have permissions to create S3 buckets and DynamoDB tables when performing terraform plan and terraform apply

NOTE: This module cannot be used to apply changes to the mfa_delete feature of the bucket. Changes regarding mfa_delete can only be made manually using the root credentials with MFA of the AWS Account where the bucket resides. Please see: hashicorp/terraform-provider-aws#62


This project is part of our comprehensive "SweetOps" approach towards DevOps.

Terraform Open Source Modules

It's 100% Open Source and licensed under the APACHE2.

We literally have hundreds of terraform modules that are Open Source and well-maintained. Check them out!

Usage

IMPORTANT: The master branch is used in source just as an example. In your code, do not pin to master because there may be breaking changes between releases. Instead pin to the release tag (e.g. ?ref=tags/x.y.z) of one of our latest releases.

  1. Define the module in your .tf file using local state:

     module "terraform_state_backend" {
       source        = "git::https://github.com/cloudposse/terraform-aws-tfstate-backend.git?ref=master"
       namespace     = "eg"
       stage         = "test"
       name          = "terraform"
       attributes    = ["state"]
       region        = "us-east-1"
     }
  2. terraform init

  3. terraform apply. This will create the state bucket and locking table.

  4. Then add a backend that uses the new bucket and table:

     backend "s3" {
        region         = "us-east-1"
        bucket         = "< the name of the S3 bucket >"
        key            = "terraform.tfstate"
        dynamodb_table = "< the name of the DynamoDB table >"
        encrypt        = true
       }
     }
    
     module "another_module" {
       source = "....."
     }
  5. terraform init. Terraform will detect that you're trying to move your state into S3 and ask, "Do you want to copy existing state to the new backend?" Enter "yes". Now state is stored in the bucket and the DynamoDB table will be used to lock the state to prevent concurrent modifications.


s3-bucket-with-terraform-state

Makefile Targets

Available targets:

  help                                Help screen
  help/all                            Display help for all targets
  help/short                          This help short screen
  lint                                Lint terraform code

Inputs

Name Description Type Default Required
acl The canned ACL to apply to the S3 bucket string private no
additional_tag_map Additional tags for appending to each tag map map(string) <map> no
attributes Additional attributes (e.g. state) list(string) <list> no
billing_mode DynamoDB billing mode string PROVISIONED no
block_public_acls Whether Amazon S3 should block public ACLs for this bucket bool true no
block_public_policy Whether Amazon S3 should block public bucket policies for this bucket string true no
context Default context to use for passing state between label invocations object <map> no
delimiter Delimiter to be used between namespace, environment, stage, name and attributes string - no
enable_point_in_time_recovery Enable DynamoDB point-in-time recovery bool false no
enable_server_side_encryption Enable DynamoDB server-side encryption bool true no
environment Environment, e.g. 'prod', 'staging', 'dev', 'pre-prod', 'UAT' string `` no
force_destroy A boolean that indicates the S3 bucket can be destroyed even if it contains objects. These objects are not recoverable bool false no
ignore_public_acls Whether Amazon S3 should ignore public ACLs for this bucket bool true no
label_order The naming order of the id output and Name tag list(string) <list> no
mfa_delete A boolean that indicates that versions of S3 objects can only be deleted with MFA. ( Terraform cannot apply changes of this value; hashicorp/terraform-provider-aws#629 ) bool false no
name Solution name, e.g. 'app' or 'jenkins' string terraform no
namespace Namespace, which could be your organization name or abbreviation, e.g. 'eg' or 'cp' string `` no
prevent_unencrypted_uploads Prevent uploads of unencrypted objects to S3 bool true no
profile AWS profile name as set in the shared credentials file string `` no
read_capacity DynamoDB read capacity units string 5 no
regex_replace_chars Regex to replace chars with empty string in namespace, environment, stage and name. By default only hyphens, letters and digits are allowed, all other chars are removed string /[^a-zA-Z0-9-]/ no
region AWS Region the S3 bucket should reside in string - yes
restrict_public_buckets Whether Amazon S3 should restrict public bucket policies for this bucket bool true no
role_arn The role to be assumed string `` no
s3_bucket_name S3 bucket name. If not provided, the name will be generated by the label module in the format namespace-stage-name string `` no
stage Stage, e.g. 'prod', 'staging', 'dev', OR 'source', 'build', 'test', 'deploy', 'release' string `` no
tags Additional tags (e.g. map('BusinessUnit','XYZ') map(string) <map> no
terraform_backend_config_file_name Name of terraform backend config file string terraform.tf no
terraform_backend_config_file_path The path to terrafrom project directory string `` no
terraform_backend_config_template_file The path to the template used to generate the config file string `` no
terraform_state_file The path to the state file inside the bucket string terraform.tfstate no
terraform_version The minimum required terraform version string 0.12.2 no
write_capacity DynamoDB write capacity units string 5 no

Outputs

Name Description
dynamodb_table_arn DynamoDB table ARN
dynamodb_table_id DynamoDB table ID
dynamodb_table_name DynamoDB table name
s3_bucket_arn S3 bucket ARN
s3_bucket_domain_name S3 bucket domain name
s3_bucket_id S3 bucket ID
terraform_backend_config Rendered Terraform backend config file

Share the Love

Like this project? Please give it a ★ on our GitHub! (it helps us a lot)

Are you using this project or any of our other projects? Consider leaving a testimonial. =)

Related Projects

Check out these related projects.

Help

Got a question? We got answers.

File a GitHub issue, send us an email or join our Slack Community.

README Commercial Support

DevOps Accelerator for Startups

We are a DevOps Accelerator. We'll help you build your cloud infrastructure from the ground up so you can own it. Then we'll show you how to operate it and stick around for as long as you need us.

Learn More

Work directly with our team of DevOps experts via email, slack, and video conferencing.

We deliver 10x the value for a fraction of the cost of a full-time engineer. Our track record is not even funny. If you want things done right and you need it done FAST, then we're your best bet.

  • Reference Architecture. You'll get everything you need from the ground up built using 100% infrastructure as code.
  • Release Engineering. You'll have end-to-end CI/CD with unlimited staging environments.
  • Site Reliability Engineering. You'll have total visibility into your apps and microservices.
  • Security Baseline. You'll have built-in governance with accountability and audit logs for all changes.
  • GitOps. You'll be able to operate your infrastructure via Pull Requests.
  • Training. You'll receive hands-on training so your team can operate what we build.
  • Questions. You'll have a direct line of communication between our teams via a Shared Slack channel.
  • Troubleshooting. You'll get help to triage when things aren't working.
  • Code Reviews. You'll receive constructive feedback on Pull Requests.
  • Bug Fixes. We'll rapidly work with you to fix any bugs in our projects.

Slack Community

Join our Open Source Community on Slack. It's FREE for everyone! Our "SweetOps" community is where you get to talk with others who share a similar vision for how to rollout and manage infrastructure. This is the best place to talk shop, ask questions, solicit feedback, and work together as a community to build totally sweet infrastructure.

Newsletter

Sign up for our newsletter that covers everything on our technology radar. Receive updates on what we're up to on GitHub as well as awesome new projects we discover.

Office Hours

Join us every Wednesday via Zoom for our weekly "Lunch & Learn" sessions. It's FREE for everyone!

zoom

Contributing

Bug Reports & Feature Requests

Please use the issue tracker to report any bugs or file feature requests.

Developing

If you are interested in being a contributor and want to get involved in developing this project or help out with our other projects, we would love to hear from you! Shoot us an email.

In general, PRs are welcome. We follow the typical "fork-and-pull" Git workflow.

  1. Fork the repo on GitHub
  2. Clone the project to your own machine
  3. Commit changes to your own branch
  4. Push your work back up to your fork
  5. Submit a Pull Request so that we can review your changes

NOTE: Be sure to merge the latest changes from "upstream" before making a pull request!

Copyright

Copyright © 2017-2020 Cloud Posse, LLC

License

License

See LICENSE for full details.

Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one
or more contributor license agreements.  See the NOTICE file
distributed with this work for additional information
regarding copyright ownership.  The ASF licenses this file
to you under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the
"License"); you may not use this file except in compliance
with the License.  You may obtain a copy of the License at

  https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0

Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing,
software distributed under the License is distributed on an
"AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY
KIND, either express or implied.  See the License for the
specific language governing permissions and limitations
under the License.

Trademarks

All other trademarks referenced herein are the property of their respective owners.

About

This project is maintained and funded by Cloud Posse, LLC. Like it? Please let us know by leaving a testimonial!

Cloud Posse

We're a DevOps Professional Services company based in Los Angeles, CA. We ❤️ Open Source Software.

We offer paid support on all of our projects.

Check out our other projects, follow us on twitter, apply for a job, or hire us to help with your cloud strategy and implementation.

Contributors

Andriy Knysh
Andriy Knysh
Erik Osterman
Erik Osterman
Maarten van der Hoef
Maarten van der Hoef
Vladimir
Vladimir

README Footer Beacon

About

Terraform module that provision an S3 bucket to store the `terraform.tfstate` file and a DynamoDB table to lock the state file to prevent concurrent modifications and state corruption.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • HCL 69.8%
  • Go 14.5%
  • Makefile 13.9%
  • Smarty 1.8%