In this tutorial, you learn how to store Terraform state in a Cloud Storage bucket.
By default, Terraform stores state
locally in a file named terraform.tfstate
. This default configuration can
make Terraform usage difficult for teams when multiple users run Terraform at
the same time and each machine has its own understanding of the current
infrastructure.
To help you avoid such issues, this page shows you how to configure a remote state that points to a Cloud Storage bucket. Remote state is a feature of Terraform backends.
Prepare the environment
Clone the GitHub repository containing Terraform samples:
git clone https://github.com/terraform-google-modules/terraform-docs-samples.git --single-branch
Change to the working directory:
cd terraform-docs-samples/storage/remote_terraform_backend_template
Review the Terraform files
Review the
main.tf
file:cat main.tf
The output is similar to the following
This file describes the following resources:
random_id
: This is appended to the Cloud Storage bucket name to ensure a unique name for the Cloud Storage bucket.google_storage_bucket
: The Cloud Storage bucket to store the state file. This bucket is configured to have the following properties:force_destroy
is set tofalse
to ensure that the bucket is not deleted if there are objects in it. This ensures that the state information in the bucket isn't accidentally deleted.public_access_prevention
is set toenforced
to make sure the bucket contents aren't accidentally exposed to the public.uniform_bucket_level_access
is set totrue
to allow controlling access to the bucket and its contents using IAM permissions instead of access control lists.versioning
is enabled to ensure that earlier versions of the state are preserved in the bucket.
local_file
: A local file. The contents of this file instructs Terraform to use Cloud Storage bucket as the remote backend once the bucket is created.
Provision the Cloud Storage bucket
Initialize Terraform:
terraform init
When you run
terraform init
for the first time, the Cloud Storage bucket that you specified in themain.tf
file doesn't exist yet, so Terraform initializes a local backend to store state in the local file system.Apply the configuration to provision resources described in the
main.tf
file:terraform apply
When prompted, enter
yes
.When you run
terraform apply
for the first time, Terraform provisions the Cloud Storage bucket for storing the state. It also creates a local file; the contents of this file instruct Terraform to use the Cloud Storage bucket as the remote backend to store state.
Migrate state to Cloud Storage bucket
Migrate Terraform state to the remote Cloud Storage backend:
terraform init -migrate-state
Terraform detects that you already have a state file locally and prompts you to migrate the state to the new Cloud Storage bucket. When prompted, enter
yes
.
After running this command, your Terraform state is stored in the Cloud Storage bucket. Terraform pulls the latest state from this bucket before running a command, and pushes the latest state to the bucket after running a command.