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Stacks for Terraform

The Terraform code pre-processor

What is Stacks for Terraform?

Stacks is a code pre-processor for Terraform. It implements a sustainable scaling pattern, prevents drift and boilerplate, all while plugging into your already existing Terraform pipeline.

Stacks was initially presented at SREcon23 Americas.

Warning: Stacks is under heavy development, many things may change.

What is a "stack"?

  • A stack is a set of Terraform resources you want to deploy one or more times.
  • Each instance of a stack is a layer. A stack has one or more layers, hence, the name "stacks".

Example

vpc/
│
├── base/
│   ├── vpc.tf
│   └── subnets.tf
│
├── layers/
│   ├── production/
│   │   └── layer.tfvars
│   └── staging/
│       ├── layer.tfvars
│       └── vpn.tf
│
└── stack.tfvars
  • This is an example stack called vpc.
  • It contains a base folder, containing the common Terraform configuration scoped for all layers in this stack.
  • It contains a layers folder with two layers, one called production and one called staging. Layer directories contain layer-specific Terraform configuration.
  • Finally, it contains an optional stack.tfvars file, which defines variables global to all layers in the stack. These variables can be overriden at the layer level through a layer-specific layer.tfvars.

How does Stacks work?

Stacks sits between you (the Terraform user) and Terraform. It's a code pre-processor. Here's an overview of Stacks inner workings:

  1. It takes your stack definitions (as shown above)
  2. For each layer:
  3. Joins the base code with the layer-specific code
  4. Applies a number of transformations
  5. Injects some extra configuration
  6. Bundles it up for Terraform to plan/apply on it

How to use Stacks?

First, you need to put the Stacks code somewhere close to your stack definitions. Here's an example (not necessarily what we recommend):

your-terraform-repository/
│
├── src/                          # the contents of the `src` directory
│   ├── helpers.py
│   ├── postinit.py
│   └── preinit.py
│
├── environments/                 # see the `example` directory on how to set this up
│   ├── production/
│   │   ├── backend.tfvars
│   │   └── environment.tfvars
│   └── staging/
│
└── stacks/                       # put your stack definitions here
    └── vpc/                      # the `vpc` stack shown above
        ├── base/
        │   ├── vpc.tf
        │   └── subnets.tf
        ├── layers/
        │   ├── production/
        │   │   └── layer.tfvars
        │   └── staging/
        │       ├── layer.tfvars
        │       └── vpn.tf
        └── stack.tfvars

You can find another example here with all the appropriate file contents.

Then you need to run Stacks in the layer you want to apply:

cd stacks/vpc/layers/production
python3 ../../../../src/preinit.py
cd stacks.out  # where the preinit output goes
terraform init
python3 ../../../../../src/postinit.py

Now you're ready to run any further terraform commands in the stacks.out directory.

Note: we recommend putting stacks.out in .gitignore to prevent it from being tracked by git.

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