Store Terraform state in a Cloud Storage bucket


In this tutorial, you learn how to store Terraform state in a Cloud Storage bucket.

By default, Terraform stores state locally in a file named terraform.tfstate. This default configuration can make Terraform usage difficult for teams when multiple users run Terraform at the same time and each machine has its own understanding of the current infrastructure.

To help you avoid such issues, this page shows you how to configure a remote state that points to a Cloud Storage bucket. Remote state is a feature of Terraform backends.

Objectives

This tutorial shows you how to do the following:

  • Use Terraform to provision a Cloud Storage bucket to store Terraform state.
  • Add templating in the Terraform configuration file to migrate the state from the local backend to the Cloud Storage bucket.

Costs

In this document, you use the following billable components of Google Cloud:

To generate a cost estimate based on your projected usage, use the pricing calculator. New Google Cloud users might be eligible for a free trial.

When you finish the tasks that are described in this document, you can avoid continued billing by deleting the resources that you created. For more information, see Clean up.

Cloud Storage incurs costs for storage, read and write operations, network egress, and replication.

The Cloud Storage bucket in this tutorial has Object Versioning enabled to keep the history of your deployments. Enabling Object Versioning increases storage costs, which you can mitigate by configuring Object Lifecycle Management to delete old state versions.

Before you begin

  1. In the Google Cloud console, activate Cloud Shell.

    Activate Cloud Shell

    Cloud Shell is preinstalled with Terraform.

  2. If you're using a local shell, perform the following steps:

  3. Create or select a Google Cloud project.

    • Create a Google Cloud project:

      gcloud projects create PROJECT_ID

      Replace PROJECT_ID with a name for the Google Cloud project you are creating.

    • Select the Google Cloud project that you created:

      gcloud config set project PROJECT_ID

      Replace PROJECT_ID with your Google Cloud project name.

  4. Make sure that billing is enabled for your Google Cloud project.

  5. Enable the Cloud Storage API:

    gcloud services enable storage.googleapis.com
  6. Grant roles to your user account. Run the following command once for each of the following IAM roles: roles/storage.admin

    gcloud projects add-iam-policy-binding PROJECT_ID --member="USER_IDENTIFIER" --role=ROLE

    Alternately, you can create a custom IAM role that contains the following permissions:

    • storage.buckets.create
    • storage.buckets.list
    • storage.objects.get
    • storage.objects.create
    • storage.objects.delete
    • storage.objects.update

    As a best practice, we recommend that access to the bucket and the state files stored there is controlled. Only a small set of users (for example, the main cloud administrator and the person acting as the alternative or backup administrator) should have admin permissions for the bucket. The other developers should have permissions to only write and read objects in the bucket.

Prepare the environment

  1. Clone the GitHub repository containing Terraform samples:

    git clone https://github.com/terraform-google-modules/terraform-docs-samples.git --single-branch
    
  2. Change to the working directory:

    cd terraform-docs-samples/storage/remote_terraform_backend_template
    

Review the Terraform files

  1. Review the main.tf file:

    cat main.tf
    

    The output is similar to the following

    resource "random_id" "default" {
      byte_length = 8
    }
    
    resource "google_storage_bucket" "default" {
      name     = "${random_id.default.hex}-terraform-remote-backend"
      location = "US"
    
      force_destroy               = false
      public_access_prevention    = "enforced"
      uniform_bucket_level_access = true
    
      versioning {
        enabled = true
      }
    }
    
    resource "local_file" "default" {
      file_permission = "0644"
      filename        = "${path.module}/backend.tf"
    
      # You can store the template in a file and use the templatefile function for
      # more modularity, if you prefer, instead of storing the template inline as
      # we do here.
      content = <<-EOT
      terraform {
        backend "gcs" {
          bucket = "${google_storage_bucket.default.name}"
        }
      }
      EOT
    }

    This file describes the following resources:

    • random_id: This is appended to the Cloud Storage bucket name to ensure a unique name for the Cloud Storage bucket.
    • google_storage_bucket: The Cloud Storage bucket to store the state file. This bucket is configured to have the following properties:
      • force_destroy is set to false to ensure that the bucket is not deleted if there are objects in it. This ensures that the state information in the bucket isn't accidentally deleted.
      • public_access_prevention is set to enforced to make sure the bucket contents aren't accidentally exposed to the public.
      • uniform_bucket_level_access is set to true to allow controlling access to the bucket and its contents using IAM permissions instead of access control lists.
      • versioning is enabled to ensure that earlier versions of the state are preserved in the bucket.
    • local_file: A local file. The contents of this file instructs Terraform to use Cloud Storage bucket as the remote backend once the bucket is created.

Provision the Cloud Storage bucket

  1. Initialize Terraform:

    terraform init
    

    When you run terraform init for the first time, the Cloud Storage bucket that you specified in the main.tf file doesn't exist yet, so Terraform initializes a local backend to store state in the local file system.

  2. Apply the configuration to provision resources described in the main.tf file:

    terraform apply
    

    When prompted, enter yes.

    When you run terraform apply for the first time, Terraform provisions the Cloud Storage bucket for storing the state. It also creates a local file; the contents of this file instruct Terraform to use the Cloud Storage bucket as the remote backend to store state.

Migrate state to Cloud Storage bucket

  1. Migrate Terraform state to the remote Cloud Storage backend:

    terraform init -migrate-state
    

    Terraform detects that you already have a state file locally and prompts you to migrate the state to the new Cloud Storage bucket. When prompted, enter yes.

After running this command, your Terraform state is stored in the Cloud Storage bucket. Terraform pulls the latest state from this bucket before running a command, and pushes the latest state to the bucket after running a command.

Clean up

To avoid incurring charges to your Google Cloud account for the resources used in this tutorial, either delete the project that contains the resources, or keep the project and delete the individual resources.

Delete the project

To avoid incurring charges to your Google Cloud account for the resources used on this page, follow these steps.

  1. Open the main.tf file.

  2. In the google_storage_bucket.default resource, update the value of force_destroy to true.

  3. Apply the updated configuration:

    terraform apply
    

    When prompted, enter yes.

  4. Delete the state file:

    rm backend.tf
    
  5. Reconfigure the backend to be local:

    terraform init -migrate-state
    

    When prompted, enter yes.

  6. Run the following command to delete the Terraform resources:

    terraform destroy
    

    When prompted, enter yes.

What's next