This project is the official Terraform Provider for STACKIT, which allows you to manage STACKIT resources through Terraform.
To install the STACKIT Terraform Provider, copy and paste this code into your Terraform configuration. Then, run terraform init
.
terraform {
required_providers {
stackit = {
source = "stackitcloud/stackit"
version = "X.X.X"
}
}
}
provider "stackit" {
# Configuration options
}
Check one of the examples in the examples folder.
To authenticate, you will need a service account. Create it in the STACKIT Portal and assign the necessary permissions to it, e.g. project.owner
. There are multiple ways to authenticate:
- Key flow (recommended)
- Token flow
When setting up authentication, the provider will always try to use the key flow first and search for credentials in several locations, following a specific order:
-
Explicit configuration, e.g. by setting the field
service_account_key_path
in the provider block (see example below) -
Environment variable, e.g. by setting
STACKIT_SERVICE_ACCOUNT_KEY_PATH
-
Credentials file
The provider will check the credentials file located in the path defined by the
STACKIT_CREDENTIALS_PATH
env var, if specified, or in$HOME/.stackit/credentials.json
as a fallback. The credentials file should be a JSON and each credential should be set using the name of the respective environment variable, as stated below in each flow. Example:{ "STACKIT_SERVICE_ACCOUNT_TOKEN": "foo_token", "STACKIT_SERVICE_ACCOUNT_KEY_PATH": "path/to/sa_key.json" }
The following instructions assume that you have created a service account and assigned the necessary permissions to it, e.g. `project.owner`.
To use the key flow, you need to have a service account key, which must have an RSA key-pair attached to it.
When creating the service account key, a new pair can be created automatically, which will be included in the service account key. This will make it much easier to configure the key flow authentication in the STACKIT Terraform Provider, by just providing the service account key.
Optionally, you can provide your own private key when creating the service account key, which will then require you to also provide it explicitly to the STACKIT Terraform Provider, additionally to the service account key. Check the STACKIT Knowledge Base for an example of how to create your own key-pair.
To configure the key flow, follow this steps:
- Create a service account key:
- Use the STACKIT Portal: go to the
Service Accounts
tab, choose aService Account
and go toService Account Keys
to create a key. For more details, see Create a service account key
-
Save the content of the service account key by copying it and saving it in a JSON file.
The expected format of the service account key is a JSON with the following structure:
{
"id": "uuid",
"publicKey": "public key",
"createdAt": "2023-08-24T14:15:22Z",
"validUntil": "2023-08-24T14:15:22Z",
"keyType": "USER_MANAGED",
"keyOrigin": "USER_PROVIDED",
"keyAlgorithm": "RSA_2048",
"active": true,
"credentials": {
"kid": "string",
"iss": "my-sa@sa.stackit.cloud",
"sub": "uuid",
"aud": "string",
(optional) "privateKey": "private key when generated by the SA service"
}
}
-
Configure the service account key for authentication in the provider by following one of the alternatives below:
- setting the fields in the provider block:
service_account_key
orservice_account_key_path
- setting the environment variable:
STACKIT_SERVICE_ACCOUNT_KEY_PATH
- setting
STACKIT_SERVICE_ACCOUNT_KEY_PATH
in the credentials file (see above)
- setting the fields in the provider block:
Optionally, only if you have provided your own RSA key-pair when creating the service account key, you also need to configure your private key (takes precedence over the one included in the service account key, if present). The private key must be PEM encoded and can be provided using one of the options below:
- setting the field in the provider block:
private_key
orprivate_key_path
- setting the environment variable:
STACKIT_PRIVATE_KEY_PATH
- setting
STACKIT_PRIVATE_KEY_PATH
in the credentials file (see above)
Using this flow is less secure since the token is long-lived. You can provide the token in several ways:
- Setting the field
service_account_token
in the provider - Setting the environment variable
STACKIT_SERVICE_ACCOUNT_TOKEN
- Setting it in the credentials file (see above)
To keep track of your Terraform state, you can configure an S3 backend using STACKIT Object Storage.
To do so, you need an Object Storage S3 bucket and credentials to access it. If you need to create them, check Getting Started - Object Storage.
Once you have everything setup, you can configure the backend by adding the following block to your Terraform configuration:
terraform {
backend "s3" {
bucket = "BUCKET_NAME"
key = "path/to/key"
endpoints = {
s3 = "https://object.storage.eu01.onstackit.cloud"
}
region = "eu01"
skip_credentials_validation = true
skip_region_validation = true
skip_s3_checksum = true
skip_requesting_account_id = true
secret_key = "SECRET_KEY"
access_key = "ACCESS_KEY"
}
}
Note: AWS specific checks must be skipped as they do not work on STACKIT. For details on what those validations do, see here.
To use beta resources in the STACKIT Terraform provider, follow these steps:
-
Provider Configuration Option
Set the
enable_beta_resources
option in the provider configuration. This is a boolean attribute that can be eithertrue
orfalse
.provider "stackit" { region = "eu01" enable_beta_resources = true }
-
Environment Variable
Set the
STACKIT_TF_ENABLE_BETA_RESOURCES
environment variable to"true"
or"false"
. Other values will be ignored and will produce a warning.export STACKIT_TF_ENABLE_BETA_RESOURCES=true
Note: The environment variable takes precedence over the provider configuration option. This means that if the
STACKIT_TF_ENABLE_BETA_RESOURCES
environment variable is set to a valid value ("true"
or"false"
), it will override theenable_beta_resources
option specified in the provider configuration.
For more details, please refer to the beta resources configuration guide.
Terraform acceptance tests are run using the command make test-acceptance-tf
. For all services,
- The env var
TF_ACC_PROJECT_ID
must be set with the ID of the STACKIT test project to test it. - Authentication is set as usual.
- Optionally, the env var
TF_ACC_XXXXXX_CUSTOM_ENDPOINT
(whereXXXXXX
is the uppercase name of the service) can be set to use endpoints other than the default value.
Additionally:
- For the Resource Manager service:
- A service account with permissions to create and delete projects is required
- The env var
TF_ACC_TEST_PROJECT_SERVICE_ACCOUNT_EMAIL
must be set as the email of the service account - The env var
TF_ACC_TEST_PROJECT_SERVICE_ACCOUNT_TOKEN
must be set as a valid token of the service account. Can also be set in the credentials file used by authentication (see Authentication for more details) - The env var
TF_ACC_PROJECT_ID
is ignored
- For the Load Balancer service:
- OpenStack credentials are required, as the acceptance tests use the OpenStack provider to set up the supporting infrastructure
- These can be obtained after creating a user token through the STACKIT Portal, in your project's Infrastructure API page
- The env var
TF_ACC_OS_USER_DOMAIN_NAME
must be set as the OpenStack user domain name - The env var
TF_ACC_OS_USER_NAME
must be set as the OpenStack username - The env var
TF_ACC_OS_PASSWORD
must be set as the OpenStack password
- OpenStack credentials are required, as the acceptance tests use the OpenStack provider to set up the supporting infrastructure
WARNING: Acceptance tests will create real resources, which may incur in costs.
For guidance on how to migrate to using this provider, please see our Migration Guide.
If you encounter any issues or have suggestions for improvements, please open an issue in the repository.
Your contribution is welcome! For more details on how to contribute, refer to our Contribution Guide.
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