1

I'm new to terraform and when looking for variables in the documentation it doesn't show exactly what I need which is rather simple.

Given something like this

resource "snowflake_schema" "one" {
  database = data.terraform_remote_state.databases.outputs.database_name
  name     = upper("one")
}

resource "snowflake_schema" "two" {
  database = data.terraform_remote_state.databases.outputs.database_name
  name     = upper("two")
}

resource "snowflake_schema" "three" {
  database = data.terraform_remote_state.databases.outputs.database_name
  name     = upper("three")
}

I'd like to create a variable database name at the top of the file and pass it to each resource like this:

database_name = data.terraform_remote_state.databases.outputs.database_name


resource "snowflake_schema" "one" {
  database = database_name
  name     = upper("one")
}

resource "snowflake_schema" "two" {
  database = database_name
  name     = upper("two")
}

resource "snowflake_schema" "three" {
  database = database_name
  name     = upper("three")
}

What's the correct syntax to do that in terraform?

1 Answer 1

2

If you want to assign an attribute expression output to a module scope variable without the capability to directly modify its value with inputs, then you can use Terraform locals. In this case, you would do something like:

locals {
  database_name = data.terraform_remote_state.databases.outputs.database_name
}

to initialize. Then you can reference the assigned local variable value like:

resource "snowflake_schema" "one" {
  database = local.database_name
  name     = upper("one")
}

as if it were a Map type.

Sign up to request clarification or add additional context in comments.

Comments

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Start asking to get answers

Find the answer to your question by asking.

Ask question

Explore related questions

See similar questions with these tags.