IMPORTANT - Due to Hashicorp licensing change Terraformize will no longer be able to update to new Terraform versions, as a result I'm pausing all work on Terraformize, this is done in part due to legal concerns as it's unclear if an Open source project would be considered a "competitive offer" and in part due to me not wishing to donate my time to HCP ecosystem now that they stopped giving back to the FOSS community
Apply\Destory Terraform modules via a simple REST API endpoint.
Github actions CI unit tests & auto dockerhub push status:
- REST API to run:
terraform apply
terraform destroy
terraform plan
- No code changes needed, supports 100% of all terraform modules unmodified
- Built in support for multiple terraform workspaces
- Can pass variables to the terraform run via the request body (passed as a -var arg to the
terraform apply
orterraform destroy
command) - Supports multiple module directories
- Automatically runs terraform init before changes
- Returned response includes all the logs of stdout & stderr of terraform for easy debugging
- Stateless (requires you use a non local terraform backend)
- Containerized
- Health check endpoint included
- support all terraform backends that support multiple workspaces
- No DB needed, all data stored at the terraform backend of your choosing
- terraformize scales out as much as you need risk-free (requires you use a backend that support state locking)
- AMD64, Arm & Arm64 support
- (Optional) Ability to have Terraform run on a separate thread and have it return the terraform run result to a (configurable per request) webhook in a non-blocking way
- (Optional) Ability to work off a RabbitMQ queue and have it return the terraform run result to a different queue
- Setting up SaaS clusters\products\etc for clients in a fully automatic way
- Each customer gets his own workspace and you just run the needed modules to create that customer products
- Devs don't have to know how the terraform module works, they just point to a rest API & know it creates everything they need
- CI/CD integration
- You can consider it as a terraform worker that is very easy to turn on via your CI/CD tool as it's just a REST request away
- Automatic system creation and\or scaling
- Easy to intergrate to autoscalers as it can run the same module with diffrent variables passed to the
terraform apply
command via the request body to scale services up\down as needed - Easy to give your company employees a self-service endpoint and have them create and\or remove infrastracutre themselves when it's just an API request away
- Easy to intergrate to autoscalers as it can run the same module with diffrent variables passed to the
- Seperate who writes the terraform modules to who use them easily
Running Terraformize is as simple as running a docker container
docker run -d -p 80:80 -v /path/to/my/terraform/module/dir:/www/terraform_modules/ naorlivne/terraformize
Feel free to skip to the end of the document for a working example that will explain how to use Terraformize
Terraformize uses sane defaults but they can all be easily changed:
value | envvar | default value | notes |
---|---|---|---|
basic_auth_user | BASIC_AUTH_USER | None | Basic auth username to use |
basic_auth_password | BASIC_AUTH_PASSWORD | None | Basic auth password to use |
auth_token | AUTH_TOKEN | None | bearer token to use |
terraform_binary_path | TERRAFORM_BINARY_PATH | None | The path to the terraform binary, if None will use the default OS PATH to find it |
terraform_modules_path | TERRAFORM_MODULES_PATH | /www/terraform_modules | The path to the parent directory where all terraform module directories will be stored at as subdirs |
parallelism | PARALLELISM | 10 | The number of parallel resource operations |
rabbit_url_connection_string | RABBIT_URL_CONNECTION_STRING | None | The URL paramters string to connect to RabbitMQ with, if unset RabbitMQ will not be used and only API will be possible |
rabbit_read_queue | RABBIT_READ_QUEUE | terraformize_read_queue | Name of the queue to read messages from |
rabbit_reply_queue | RABBIT_REPLY_QUEUE | terraformize_reply_queue | Name of the queue to respond with the run result to |
CONFIG_DIR | /www/config | The path to the directory where configuration files are stored at | |
HOST | 0.0.0.0 | The IP for gunicorn to bind to | |
PORT | 80 | The port for gunicorn to bind to | |
WORKER_CLASS | sync | The gunicorn class to use | |
WORKERS | 1 | Number of gunicorn workers | |
THREADS | 1 | Number of gunicorn threads | |
PRELOAD | False | If gunicorn should preload the code | |
LOG_LEVEL | error | The log level for gunicorn | |
TIMEOUT | 600 | The timeout for gunicorn, if your terraform run takes longer you will need to increase it |
The easiest way to change a default value is to pass the envvar key\value to the docker container with the -e
cli arg but if you want you can also create a configuration file with the settings you wish (in whatever of the standard format you desire) & place it in the /www/config folder inside the container.
Most providers also allow setting their configuration access_keys\etc via envvars use -e
cli args to configure them is ideal as well but should you wish to configure a file you can also easily mount\copy it into the container as well.
Terraformize supports 3 authentication methods:
- Basic auth - will require you to pass a
Authorization Basic your_user_pass_base64_combo
header with your_user_pass_base64_combo being the same asbasic_auth_user
&basic_auth_password
configured in Terraformize - Bearer auth - will require you to pass a
Authorization Bearer your_token
header with your_token being the same as theauth_token
configured in Terraformize - No auth - will be used if both the Basic auth & Bearer auth are disabled, note that the /v1/health health-check point never requires authentication
- POST /v1/module_folder_name/workspace_name
- runs
terraform apply
for you - takes care of auto approval of the run, auto init & workspace switching as needed
- takes variables which are passed to
terraform apply
as a JSON in the body of the message in the format of{"var_key1": "var_value1", "var_key2": "var_value2"}
- Returns 200 HTTP status code if everything is ok, 404 if you gave it a non existing module_folder_name path & 400 if the
terraform apply
ran but failed to make all needed modifications - Also returns a JSON body of
{"init_stdout": "...", "init_stderr": "...", "stderr": "...", "stdout": "..."}
with the stderr & stdout of theterraform apply
&terraform init
run - If you pass a
webhook
URL paramter with the address of the webhook terraformize will return a202
HTTP code with a body of{{'request_uuid': 'ec743bc4-0724-4f44-9ad3-5814071faddx'}}
to the request then work behind the scene to run terraform in a non blocking way, to result of the terraform run will be sent to the webhook address you configured along with the UUID of the request for you to know which request said result related to
- runs
- DELETE /v1/module_folder_name/workspace_name
- runs
terraform destroy
for you - takes care of auto approval of the run, auto init & workspace switching as needed
- takes variables which are passed to
terraform destroy
as a JSON in the body of the message in the format of{"var_key1": "var_value1", "var_key2": "var_value2"}
- Returns 200 HTTP status code if everything is ok, 404 if you gave it a non existing module_folder_name path & 400 if the
terraform destroy
ran but failed to make all needed modifications - Also returns a JSON body of
{"init_stdout": "...", "init_stderr": "...", "stderr": "...", "stdout": "..."}
with the stderr & stdout of theterraform destroy
&terraform init
run - In order to preserve the history of terraform runs in your backend the workspace is not deleted automatically, only the infrastructure is destroyed
- If you pass a
webhook
URL paramter with the address of the webhook terraformize will return a202
HTTP code with a body of{{'request_uuid': 'ec743bc4-0724-4f44-9ad3-5814071faddx'}}
to the request then work behind the scene to run terraform in a non blocking way, to result of the terraform run will be sent to the webhook address you configured along with the UUID of the request for you to know which request said result related to
- runs
- POST /v1/module_folder_name/workspace_name/plan
- runs
terraform plan
for you - takes care of auto approval of the run, auto init & workspace switching as needed
- takes variables which are passed to
terraform apply
as a JSON in the body of the message in the format of{"var_key1": "var_value1", "var_key2": "var_value2"}
- Returns 200 HTTP status code if everything is ok, 404 if you gave it a non existing module_folder_name path & 400 if the
terraform apply
ran but failed to plan all needed modifications - Also returns a JSON body of
{"init_stdout": "...", "init_stderr": "...", "stderr": "...", "stdout": "...", "exit_code": "0""}
with the stderr & stdout of theterraform apply
&terraform init
run - If you pass a
webhook
URL paramter with the address of the webhook terraformize will return a202
HTTP code with a body of{{'request_uuid': 'ec743bc4-0724-4f44-9ad3-5814071faddx'}}
to the request then work behind the scene to run terraform in a non blocking way, to result of the terraform run will be sent to the webhook address you configured along with the UUID of the request for you to know which request said result related to
- runs
- GET /v1/health
- Returns 200 HTTP status code
- Also returns a JSON body of {"healthy": true}
- Never needs auth
- Useful to monitoring the health of Terraformize service
if you prefer using RabbitMQ instead of the API then you'll need to configure the rabbit_url_connection_string
(examples can be seen at https://pika.readthedocs.io/en/stable/examples/using_urlparameters.html#using-urlparameters), Terrafromize will then use 2 Queues on rabbit (defined at the rabbit_read_queue
& rabbit_reply_queue
params), you don't have to create the queues manually, if need be they will be created.
Now all you need to do in order to have a terraform run is to publish a message to the rabbit_read_queue
with the following format:
{
"module_folder": "module_folder_name",
"workspace": "workspace_name",
"uuid": "unique_uuid_you_created_to_identify_the_request",
"run_type": "apply/destroy/plan",
"run_variables": {
"var_to_pass_to_terraform_key": "var_to_pass_to_terraform_value",
"another_var_to_pass_to_terraform_key": "another_var_to_pass_to_terraform_value"
}
}
Terraformize will then run terraform for you and will return the result of the terraform run to the rabbit_reply_queue
queue in the following format:
{
"uuid": "unique_uuid_you_created_to_identify_the_request",
"init_stdout": "...",
"init_stderr": "...",
"stderr": "...",
"stdout": "...",
"exit_code": 0
}
It's up to you to ensure the uuid
you pass is indeed unique.
- First we will need a terraform module so create a folder named terraformize_test:
Make sure not to
mkdir terraformize_test
cd
into the folder as we will be mounting it into the container from the parent folder in a couple of steps - Now we need a valid terraform configuration in it, if it works in terraform it will work with terraformize but for this example we will keep it simple with a single
terraformize_test/test.tf
file:resource "null_resource" "test" { count = 1 } variable "test_var" { description = "an example variable" default = "my_variable_default_value" } output "test" { value = var.test_var }
- We will also need to add the folder we created into the Terraformize container, this can be done by many different way (for example creating a container that copies our modules into a new image with the FROM base image being Terraformize base image) but for this example we will simply mount the folder path into the container as we run it:
docker run -d -p 80:80 -v `pwd`:/www/terraform_modules naorlivne/terraformize
- Now we can run the terraform module by simply calling it which will run
terraform apply
for us (notice how we are passing variables in the body):curl -X POST \ http://127.0.0.1/v1/terraformize_test/my_workspace \ -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \ -H 'cache-control: no-cache' \ -d '{ "test_var": "hello-world" }'
- And lets create another copy infra of the same module in another workspace:
curl -X POST \ http://127.0.0.1/v1/terraformize_test/my_other_workspace \ -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \ -H 'cache-control: no-cache' \ -d '{ "test_var": "hello-world" }'
- Now that we are done let's delete them both (this will run
terrafrom destroy
for us):curl -X DELETE \ http://127.0.0.1/v1/terraformize_test/my_workspace \ -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \ -H 'cache-control: no-cache' \ -d '{ "test_var": "hello-world" }' curl -X DELETE \ http://127.0.0.1/v1/terraformize_test/my_other_workspace \ -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \ -H 'cache-control: no-cache' \ -d '{ "test_var": "hello-world" }'