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Terraform Cookbook

Terraform Cookbook

By : Mikael Krief
4.3 (9)
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Terraform Cookbook

Terraform Cookbook

4.3 (9)
By: Mikael Krief

Overview of this book

HashiCorp Configuration Language (HCL) has changed how we define and provision a data center infrastructure with the launch of Terraform—one of the most popular and powerful products for building Infrastructure as Code. This practical guide will show you how to leverage HashiCorp's Terraform tool to manage a complex infrastructure with ease. Starting with recipes for setting up the environment, this book will gradually guide you in configuring, provisioning, collaborating, and building a multi-environment architecture. Unlike other books, you’ll also be able to explore recipes with real-world examples to provision your Azure infrastructure with Terraform. Once you’ve covered topics such as Azure Template, Azure CLI, Terraform configuration, and Terragrunt, you’ll delve into manual and automated testing with Terraform configurations. The next set of chapters will show you how to manage a balanced and efficient infrastructure and create reusable infrastructure with Terraform modules. Finally, you’ll explore the latest DevOps trends such as continuous integration and continuous delivery (CI/CD) and zero-downtime deployments. By the end of this book, you’ll have developed the skills you need to get the most value out of Terraform and manage your infrastructure effectively.
Table of Contents (10 chapters)
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Creating an Ansible inventory with Terraform

Terraform is a very good Infrastructure-as-Code (IaC) tool that allows us to build complex infrastructure with code.

As we studied in Chapter 6, Provisioning Azure Infrastructure with Terraform, concerning the construction of virtual machines, on all cloud providers, the common objective of Terraform is to build a VM without configuring it, which includes the installation of its middleware and its administration.

Among the Configuration-as-Code (CaC) tools that allow us to use Terraform to configure a VM after its creation, there is Ansible (https://www.ansible.com/), which is very popular in the open source world (much like Chef and Puppet).

One of the advantages of Ansible is that it's agentless, which means you don't need to install an agent on the VMs you want to configure. Thus, to know which VMs to configure, Ansible uses a file called inventory, which contains the list of VMs that need configuring.

In this recipe, we will learn...

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