Book Image

Terraform Cookbook - Second Edition

By : Mikael Krief
4.5 (2)
Book Image

Terraform Cookbook - Second Edition

4.5 (2)
By: Mikael Krief

Overview of this book

Imagine effortlessly provisioning complex cloud infrastructure across various cloud platforms, all while ensuring robustness, reusability, and security. Introducing the Terraform Cookbook, Second Edition - your go-to guide for mastering Infrastructure as Code (IaC) effortlessly. This new edition is packed with real-world examples for provisioning robust Cloud infrastructure mainly across Azure but also with a dedicated chapter for AWS and GCP. You will delve into manual and automated testing with Terraform configurations, creating and managing a balanced, efficient, reusable infrastructure with Terraform modules. You will learn how to automate the deployment of Terraform configurations through continuous integration and continuous delivery (CI/CD), unleashing Terraform's full potential. New chapters have been added that describe the use of Terraform for Docker and Kubernetes, and explain how to test Terraform configurations using different tools to check code and security compliance. The book devotes an entire chapter to achieving proficiency in Terraform Cloud, covering troubleshooting strategies for common issues and offering resolutions to frequently encountered errors. Get the insider knowledge to boost productivity with Terraform - the indispensable guide for anyone adopting Infrastructure as Code solutions.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
16
Other Books You May Enjoy
17
Index

Fixing cycle errors

In Chapter 2, Writing Terraform Configurations, in the Managing Terraform resource dependencies recipe, we learned how to use implicit and explicit Terraform dependencies.

In some cases, when we use lots of dependencies between resources, we can get a cycle error between Terraform resources (such as cases where the resource depends on itself within the chain of dependencies).

To understand the concept of Terraform dependencies and cycle errors, read this explanation: https://serverfault.com/a/1005791

Let’s get started!

Getting ready

For this recipe, we will start with the following configuration in main.tf (it’s only a part of the configuration):

resource "azurerm_linux_virtual_machine" "vm" {
  name                            = "myvmdemo-${random_string.str.result}"
  network_interface_ids           = [azurerm_network_interface.nic.id]
  resource_group_name             = azurerm_resource_group...