The hashicorp/setup-terraform
action is a JavaScript action that sets up Terraform CLI in your GitHub Actions workflow by:
- Downloading a specific version of Terraform CLI and adding it to the
PATH
. - Configuring the Terraform CLI configuration file with a Terraform Cloud/Enterprise hostname and API token.
- Installing a wrapper script to wrap subsequent calls of the
terraform
binary and expose its STDOUT, STDERR, and exit code as outputs namedstdout
,stderr
, andexitcode
respectively. (This can be optionally skipped if subsequent steps in the same job do not need to access the results of Terraform commands.)
After you've used the action, subsequent steps in the same job can run arbitrary Terraform commands using the GitHub Actions run
syntax. This allows most Terraform commands to work exactly like they do on your local command line.
This action can be run on ubuntu-latest
, windows-latest
, and macos-latest
GitHub Actions runners. When running on windows-latest
the shell should be set to Bash. When running on self-hosted GitHub Actions runners, NodeJS must be previously installed with the version specified in the action.yml
.
The default configuration installs the latest version of Terraform CLI and installs the wrapper script to wrap subsequent calls to the terraform
binary:
steps:
- uses: hashicorp/setup-terraform@v3
A specific version of Terraform CLI can be installed:
steps:
- uses: hashicorp/setup-terraform@v3
with:
terraform_version: "1.1.7"
Credentials for Terraform Cloud (app.terraform.io) can be configured:
steps:
- uses: hashicorp/setup-terraform@v3
with:
cli_config_credentials_token: ${{ secrets.TF_API_TOKEN }}
Credentials for Terraform Enterprise (TFE) can be configured:
steps:
- uses: hashicorp/setup-terraform@v3
with:
cli_config_credentials_hostname: 'terraform.example.com'
cli_config_credentials_token: ${{ secrets.TF_API_TOKEN }}
The wrapper script installation can be skipped by setting the terraform_wrapper
variable to false
:
steps:
- uses: hashicorp/setup-terraform@v3
with:
terraform_wrapper: false
Subsequent steps can access outputs when the wrapper script is installed:
steps:
- uses: hashicorp/setup-terraform@v3
- run: terraform init
- id: plan
run: terraform plan -no-color
- run: echo ${{ steps.plan.outputs.stdout }}
- run: echo ${{ steps.plan.outputs.stderr }}
- run: echo ${{ steps.plan.outputs.exitcode }}
Outputs can be used in subsequent steps to comment on the pull request:
Notice: There's a limit to the number of characters inside a GitHub comment (65535).
Due to that limitation, you might end up with a failed workflow run even if the plan succeeded.
Another approach is to append your plan into the $GITHUB_STEP_SUMMARY environment variable which supports markdown.
defaults:
run:
working-directory: ${{ env.tf_actions_working_dir }}
permissions:
pull-requests: write
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v3
- uses: hashicorp/setup-terraform@v3
- name: Terraform fmt
id: fmt
run: terraform fmt -check
continue-on-error: true
- name: Terraform Init
id: init
run: terraform init
- name: Terraform Validate
id: validate
run: terraform validate -no-color
- name: Terraform Plan
id: plan
run: terraform plan -no-color
continue-on-error: true
- uses: actions/github-script@v6
if: github.event_name == 'pull_request'
env:
PLAN: "terraform\n${{ steps.plan.outputs.stdout }}"
with:
github-token: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
script: |
const output = `#### Terraform Format and Style 🖌\`${{ steps.fmt.outcome }}\`
#### Terraform Initialization ⚙️\`${{ steps.init.outcome }}\`
#### Terraform Validation 🤖\`${{ steps.validate.outcome }}\`
<details><summary>Validation Output</summary>
\`\`\`\n
${{ steps.validate.outputs.stdout }}
\`\`\`
</details>
#### Terraform Plan 📖\`${{ steps.plan.outcome }}\`
<details><summary>Show Plan</summary>
\`\`\`\n
${process.env.PLAN}
\`\`\`
</details>
*Pusher: @${{ github.actor }}, Action: \`${{ github.event_name }}\`, Working Directory: \`${{ env.tf_actions_working_dir }}\`, Workflow: \`${{ github.workflow }}\`*`;
github.rest.issues.createComment({
issue_number: context.issue.number,
owner: context.repo.owner,
repo: context.repo.repo,
body: output
})
Instead of creating a new comment each time, you can also update an existing one:
defaults:
run:
working-directory: ${{ env.tf_actions_working_dir }}
permissions:
pull-requests: write
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v3
- uses: hashicorp/setup-terraform@v3
- name: Terraform fmt
id: fmt
run: terraform fmt -check
continue-on-error: true
- name: Terraform Init
id: init
run: terraform init
- name: Terraform Validate
id: validate
run: terraform validate -no-color
- name: Terraform Plan
id: plan
run: terraform plan -no-color
continue-on-error: true
- uses: actions/github-script@v6
if: github.event_name == 'pull_request'
env:
PLAN: "terraform\n${{ steps.plan.outputs.stdout }}"
with:
github-token: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
script: |
// 1. Retrieve existing bot comments for the PR
const { data: comments } = await github.rest.issues.listComments({
owner: context.repo.owner,
repo: context.repo.repo,
issue_number: context.issue.number,
})
const botComment = comments.find(comment => {
return comment.user.type === 'Bot' && comment.body.includes('Terraform Format and Style')
})
// 2. Prepare format of the comment
const output = `#### Terraform Format and Style 🖌\`${{ steps.fmt.outcome }}\`
#### Terraform Initialization ⚙️\`${{ steps.init.outcome }}\`
#### Terraform Validation 🤖\`${{ steps.validate.outcome }}\`
<details><summary>Validation Output</summary>
\`\`\`\n
${{ steps.validate.outputs.stdout }}
\`\`\`
</details>
#### Terraform Plan 📖\`${{ steps.plan.outcome }}\`
<details><summary>Show Plan</summary>
\`\`\`\n
${process.env.PLAN}
\`\`\`
</details>
*Pusher: @${{ github.actor }}, Action: \`${{ github.event_name }}\`, Working Directory: \`${{ env.tf_actions_working_dir }}\`, Workflow: \`${{ github.workflow }}\`*`;
// 3. If we have a comment, update it, otherwise create a new one
if (botComment) {
github.rest.issues.updateComment({
owner: context.repo.owner,
repo: context.repo.repo,
comment_id: botComment.id,
body: output
})
} else {
github.rest.issues.createComment({
issue_number: context.issue.number,
owner: context.repo.owner,
repo: context.repo.repo,
body: output
})
}
The action supports the following inputs:
cli_config_credentials_hostname
- (optional) The hostname of a Terraform Cloud/Enterprise instance to place within the credentials block of the Terraform CLI configuration file. Defaults toapp.terraform.io
.cli_config_credentials_token
- (optional) The API token for a Terraform Cloud/Enterprise instance to place within the credentials block of the Terraform CLI configuration file.terraform_version
- (optional) The version of Terraform CLI to install. Instead of a full version string, you can also specify a constraint string (see Semver Ranges for available range specifications). Examples are:"<1.2.0"
,"~1.1.0"
,"1.1.7"
(all three installing the latest available1.1
version). Prerelease versions can be specified and a range will stay within the given tag such asbeta
orrc
. If no version is given, it will default tolatest
.terraform_wrapper
- (optional) Whether to install a wrapper to wrap subsequent calls of theterraform
binary and expose its STDOUT, STDERR, and exit code as outputs namedstdout
,stderr
, andexitcode
respectively. Defaults totrue
.
This action does not configure any outputs directly. However, when you set the terraform_wrapper
input
to true
, the following outputs are available for subsequent steps that call the terraform
binary:
stdout
- The STDOUT stream of the call to theterraform
binary.stderr
- The STDERR stream of the call to theterraform
binary.exitcode
- The exit code of the call to theterraform
binary.
By using the software in this repository (the "Software"), you acknowledge that: (1) the Software is still in development, may change, and has not been released as a commercial product by HashiCorp and is not currently supported in any way by HashiCorp; (2) the Software is provided on an "as-is" basis, and may include bugs, errors, or other issues; (3) the Software is NOT INTENDED FOR PRODUCTION USE, use of the Software may result in unexpected results, loss of data, or other unexpected results, and HashiCorp disclaims any and all liability resulting from use of the Software; and (4) HashiCorp reserves all rights to make all decisions about the features, functionality and commercial release (or non-release) of the Software, at any time and without any obligation or liability whatsoever.
All source code files (excluding autogenerated files like package.json
, prose, and files excluded in .copywrite.hcl) must have a license header at the top.
This can be autogenerated by installing the HashiCorp copywrite
tool and running copywrite headers
in the root of the repository.