Book Image

HashiCorp Infrastructure Automation Certification Guide

By : Ravi Mishra
Book Image

HashiCorp Infrastructure Automation Certification Guide

By: Ravi Mishra

Overview of this book

Terraform is a highly sought-after technology for orchestrating infrastructure provisioning. This book is a complete reference guide to enhancing your infrastructure automation skills, offering up-to-date coverage of the HashiCorp infrastructure automation certification exam. This book is written in a clear and practical way with self-assessment questions and mock exams that will help you from a HashiCorp infrastructure automation certification exam perspective. This book covers end-to-end activities with Terraform, such as installation, writing its configuration file, Terraform modules, backend configurations, data sources, and infrastructure provisioning. You'll also get to grips with complex enterprise infrastructures and discover how to create thousands of resources with a single click. As you advance, you'll get a clear understanding of maintaining infrastructure as code (IaC) in Repo/GitHub, along with learning how to create, modify, and remove infrastructure resources as and when needed. Finally, you'll learn about Terraform Cloud and Enterprise and their enhanced features. By the end of this book, you'll have a handy, up-to-date desktop reference guide along with everything you need to pass the HashiCorp Certified: Terraform Associate exam with confidence.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
1
Section 1: The Basics
4
Section 2: Core Concepts
10
Section 3: Managing Infrastructure with Terraform
14
Chapter 11: Terraform Glossary

Summary

With the help of this chapter, you will now have a fair understanding of what Terraform is. Terraform is an IaC orchestration tool introduced by HashiCorp that is mainly used for the provisioning of infrastructure for your applications in code format. It is written in HCL, which is easily readable and understood, and we have also examined a number of different use cases, including multi-tier applications, SDNs, multi-cloud deployment, and resource schedulers, as well as examples of where you can use Terraform.

Moving on, you got to understand how Terraform differs from other IaCs, such as with ARM templates and CloudFormation, in terms of language, readability, modularity, error handling, and suchlike. Later, we explained Terraform architecture, and from there we got to know about how Terraform Core is used to communicate with Terraform plugins using RPCs, and by using Terraform Core, we would be able to run different Terraform CLI commands, including init, plan, and apply.

In the next chapter, we are going to discuss how you can install terraform.exe on a different machine, such as Windows, macOS, and Linux, which will help you in getting started with Terraform.