Skip to content

grabx/terraform-provider-restapi

 
 

Repository files navigation

Build Status Coverage Status Go Report Card

Terraform provider for generic REST APIs

Maintenance Note

This provider is largely feature-complete and in maintenance mode.

  • It's not dead - it's just slow moving and updates must be done very carefully
  • We encourage community participation with open issues for usage and remain welcoming of pull requests
  • Code updates happen sporadically throughout the year, driven primarily by security fixes and PRs
  • Because of the many API variations and flexibility of this provider, detailed per-API troubleshooting cannot be guaranteed

 

About This Provider

This terraform provider allows you to interact with APIs that may not yet have a first-class provider available by implementing a "dumb" REST API client.

This provider is essentially created to be a terraform-wrapped cURL client. Because of this, you need to know quite a bit about the API you are interacting with as opposed to full-featured terraform providers written with a specific API in mind.

There are a few requirements about how the API must work for this provider to be able to do its thing:

  • The API is expected to support the following HTTP methods:
    • POST: create an object
    • GET: read an object
    • PUT: update an object
    • DELETE: remove an object
  • An "object" in the API has a unique identifier the API will return
  • Objects live under a distinct path such that for the path /api/v1/things...
    • POST on /api/v1/things creates a new object
    • GET, PUT and DELETE on /api/v1/things/{id} manages an existing object

Have a look at the examples directory for some use cases.

 

Provider Documentation

This provider has only a few moving components, but LOTS of configurable parameters:

 

Usage

  • Try to set as few parameters as possible to begin with. The more complicated the configuration gets, the more difficult troubleshooting can become.
  • Play with the fakeserver cli tool (included in releases) to get a feel for how this API client is expected to work. Also see the examples directory directory for some working use cases with fakeserver.
  • By default, data isn't considered sensitive. If you want to hide the data this provider submits as well as the data returned by the API, you would need to set environment variable API_DATA_IS_SENSITIVE=true.
  • The *_path elements are for very specific use cases where one might initially create an object in one location, but read/update/delete it on another path. For this reason, they allow for substitution to be done by the provider internally by injecting the id somewhere along the path. This is similar to terraform's substitution syntax in the form of ${variable.name}, but must be done within the provider due to structure. The only substitution available is to replace the string {id} with the internal (terraform) id of the object as learned by the id_attribute.

 

Troubleshooting

Because this provider is just a terraform-wrapped cURL, the API details and the go implementation of this client are often leaked to you. This means you, as the user, will have a bit more troubleshooting on your hands than would typically be required of a full-fledged provider if you experience issues.

Here are some tips for troubleshooting that may be helpful...

 

Debug log

Rely heavily on the debug log. The debug log, enabled by setting the environment variable TF_LOG=1 and enabling the debug parameter on the provider, is the best way to figure out what is happening.

If an unexpected error occurs, enable debug log and review the output:

  • Does the API return an odd HTTP response code? This is common for bad requests to the API. Look closely at the HTTP request details.
  • Does an unexpected golang 'unmarshaling' error occur? Take a look at the debug log and see if anything other than a hash (for resources) or an array (for the datasource) is being returned. For example, the provider cannot cope with cases where a JSON object is requested, but an array of JSON objects is returned.

 

Importing existing resources

This provider supports importing existing resources into the terraform state. Import is done according to the various provider/resource configuation settings to contact the API server and obtain data. That is: if a custom read method, path, or id attribute is defined, the provider will honor those settings to pull data in.

To import data: terraform import restapi.Name /path/to/resource.

See a concrete example here.

 

Installation

There are two standard methods of installing this provider detailed in Terraform's documentation. You can place the file in the directory of your .tf file in terraform.d/plugins/{OS}_{ARCH}/ or place it in your home directory at ~/.terraform.d/plugins/{OS}_{ARCH}/.

The released binaries are named terraform-provider-restapi_vX.Y.Z-{OS}-{ARCH} so you know which binary to install. You may need to rename the binary you use during installation to just terraform-provider-restapi_vX.Y.Z.

Once downloaded, be sure to make the plugin executable by running chmod +x terraform-provider-restapi_vX.Y.Z-{OS}-{ARCH}.

 

Contributing

Pull requests are always welcome! Please be sure the following things are taken care of with your pull request:

  • go fmt is run before pushing
  • Be sure to add a test case for new functionality (or explain why this cannot be done)
  • Run the scripts/test.sh script to be sure everything works
  • Ensure new attributes can also be set by environment variables

Development environment requirements:

  • Golang v1.11 or newer is installed and go is in your path
  • Terraform is installed and terraform is in your path

To make development easy, you can use the Docker image druggeri/tdk as a development environment:

docker run -it --name tdk --rm -v "$HOME/go":/root/go druggeri/tdk
go get github.com/Mastercard/terraform-provider-restapi
cd ~/go/src/github.com/Mastercard/terraform-provider-restapi
#Hack hack hack

About

A terraform provider to manage objects in a RESTful API

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Go 94.3%
  • Shell 5.7%