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terraform-network-mirror

Simple example on how to create a Terraform Network Mirror.

How to use this Repo

  1. Run the create-mirror.sh script.
  2. (optional) Run the create-core.sh script.
  3. Run the Terraform for the S3 Bucket and objects.

Run the create-mirror.sh script

This script basically abuses the terraform providers mirror command to automagically create the mirror locally for each of our desired version constraints.

To run this script create a .json file such as the one in examples/test.json.

The format looks like this:

{
    "providers": [{
            "namespace": "hashicorp",
            "name": "aws",
            "versions": [
                "3.11.0",
                "3.12.0"
            ]
        }
    ]
}

Populate this with the providers you wish to have available in your network mirror.

Run the command, it will look something like this:

./create-mirror.sh examples/test.json

Note: Not all providers are in the hashicorp namespace.

Run the create-core.sh script

This script will download core versions of terraform in their zip format, which can be registered in TFE to pull internally, instead of the public internet.

To run this script create a .json file such as the one in examples/test.json.

The format looks like this:

{
    "core": [
        "0.14.7",
        "0.13.6",
        "0.11.14"
    ]
}

Populate this with the versions you wish to have available.

Run the command, it will look something like this:

./create-core.sh examples/test.json

sync provider versions with hashicorp:

./generate_settings_from_registry.sh hashicorp random
./create-mirror.sh ./hashicorp-random.json

Note: This configuration can live in the same file as the providers above.

Run the Terraform for one of the clouds

cd into either of the ["aws", "azure", "gcp"] folders to create a bucket and populate it with all the files generated in the previous step.

Open up main.tf and update the locals block to acceptable values, ensuring your bucketname has a unique name.

For simplicity, export environment variables for the provider credentials.

Apply the terraform by first running terraform init and then terraform apply.

You should end up with something like this at the end:

Apply complete! Resources: xx added, 0 changed, 0 destroyed.

Outputs:

terraform-mirror-url = https://tstraub-test-network-provider.s3.amazonaws.com/

Now you can use that url in your Terraform CLI Configuration:

provider_installation {
  network_mirror {
    url = "https://tstraub-test-network-provider.s3.amazonaws.com/"
  }
}

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