Provider
Providers are Terraform plugins that define resources and data sources for practitioners to use. You serve your providers with a provider server so they can interact with Terraform.
This page explains how to migrate a provider server, definition, and schema from SDKv2 to the plugin Framework.
Serving the Provider
You must update your provider's main.go
file to serve Framework providers. Refer to Provider Servers in the Framework documentation for details.
SDKv2
In SDKv2, the provider package's main
function serves the provider by calling plugin.Serve
.
The following code shows a basic implementation for serving an SDKv2 provider.
func main() {
plugin.Serve(
&plugin.ServeOpts{
ProviderFunc: provider.New,
ProviderAddr: "registry.terraform.io/<namespace>/<provider_name>",
},
)
}
Framework
In the Framework, you serve your provider by calling providerserver.Serve
in your provider package's main
function.
Refer to Provider Servers in the Framework documentation for details.
The following code shows an equivalent implementation for serving a provider in the Framework.
func main() {
err := providerserver.Serve(
context.Background(),
provider.New,
providerserver.ServeOpts{
Address: "registry.terraform.io/<namespace>/<provider_name>",
},
)
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
}
Muxing
Muxing lets you use two versions of the same provider concurrently, with each serving different resources or data sources. Refer to the Combining and Translating documentation for full details about muxing configuration. Use muxing when you want to release a version of your provider with only some of the resources and data sources migrated to the Framework. You may want to do this if your provider manages a large number of resources and data sources.
The following example shows how to set up muxing for a provider that uses protocol version 5 to maintain compatibility
with Terraform >= 0.12.0. The example also shows how to use the debug
flag to optionally run the provider in debug
mode.
func main() {
ctx := context.Background()
var debug bool
flag.BoolVar(&debug, "debug", false, "set to true to run the provider with support for debuggers like delve")
flag.Parse()
providers := []func() tfprotov5.ProviderServer{
providerserver.NewProtocol5(provider.New()),
provider.Provider().GRPCProvider,
}
muxServer, err := tf5muxserver.NewMuxServer(ctx, providers...)
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
var serveOpts []tf5server.ServeOpt
if debug {
serveOpts = append(serveOpts, tf5server.WithManagedDebug())
}
err = tf5server.Serve(
"registry.terraform.io/<namespace>/<provider_name>",
muxServer.ProviderServer,
serveOpts...,
)
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
}
Provider Definition
Providers built with SDKv2 use a schema.Provider
struct to define their behavior, while Framework providers use a
type that implements the provider.Provider
interface, which you must define. Refer to Providers in the Framework documentation for details.
SDKv2
The ProviderFunc
field on
plugin.ServeOpts
requires a pointer to schema.Provider
. This is typically satisfied by calling a function that
returns a pointer to schema.Provider
.
The ResourcesMap
and DataSourcesMap
fields each contain a map of strings to functions that each return a pointer
to a schema.Resource
struct.
The following example shows a basic implementation of an SDKv2 provider.
func New() *schema.Provider {
return &schema.Provider{
Schema: map[string]*schema.Schema{},
ConfigureContextFunc: configureContextFunc(),
ResourcesMap: map[string]*schema.Resource{
"resource_example": resourceExample(),
},
DataSourcesMap: map[string]*schema.Resource{
"dataSource_example": dataSourceExample(),
},
/* ... */
}
}
Framework
In the Framework, the second argument to your provider.Serve
function requires a function that returns a type
satisfying the provider.Provider
interface.
The following code shows a typical implementation. In this implementation, the Resources
method returns a slice
of functions that return types that implement the resource.Resource
interface. The DataSources
method returns a
slice of functions that return types that implement the datasource.DataSource
interface.
Refer to the Resources and
Data Sources pages in this guide to implement these functions for your
provider.
type provider struct {
}
func New() provider.Provider {
return &provider{}
}
func (p *provider) GetSchema(ctx context.Context) (tfsdk.Schema, diag.Diagnostics) {
return tfsdk.Schema{}, nil
}
func (p *provider) Configure(ctx context.Context, req provider.ConfigureRequest, resp *provider.ConfigureResponse) {
}
func (p *provider) Resources(ctx context.Context) []func() resource.Resource {
return []func() resource.Resource {
func() resource.Resource {
return resourceExample{},
},
}
}
func (p *provider) GetDataSources(ctx context.Context) []func() datasource.DataSource {
return []func() datasource.DataSource {
func() datasource.DataSource {
return dataSourceExample{},
},
}
}
Migration Notes
Remember the following differences between SDKv2 and the Framework when completing the migration.
- In SDKv2, your provider's
New
function returns aschema.Provider
struct. In the Framework,New
returns a type that you define which satisfies theprovider.Provider
interface. - In SDKv2,
Schema
is a field onschema.Provider
that containsmap[string]*schema.Schema
, which maps attribute names toschema.Schema
structs. In the Framework,GetSchema
is a function you define on your provider'sprovider.Provider
interface that returns your provider'stfsdk.Schema
struct. - In SDKv2,
ConfigureContextFunc
is a field onschema.Provider
containing a function that configures the provider. In the Framework,Configure
is a function you define on your provider that configures your provider. - In SDKv2,
ResourcesMap
is a field onschema.Provider
containingmap[string]*schema.Resource
, which maps resource names toschema.Resource
structs. In the Framework,Resources
is a method you define on your provider that returns[]func() resource.Resource
, which creates resource types that you define, which satisfy theresource.Resource
interface. - In SDKv2,
DataSourcesMap
is a field onschema.Provider
containingmap[string]*schema.Resource
, which maps data source names toschema.Resource
structs (data sources and resources both useschema.Resource
). In the Framework,DataSources
is a method you define on your provider that returns[]func() datasource.DataSource
, which creates data source types that you define, which satisfy thedatasource.DataSource
interface.
Example
The following examples show how to migrate portions of the tls provider.
For a complete example, clone the
terraform-provider-tls
repository and compare provider.go
in
v3.4.0
with the file after the migration.
SDKv2
The following example shows how to set up a provider schema, configuration, resources, and data sources using SDKv2.
func New() (*schema.Provider, error) {
return &schema.Provider{
Schema: map[string]*schema.Schema{
"proxy": {
/* ... */
},
},
ConfigureContextFunc: configureProvider,
ResourcesMap: map[string]*schema.Resource{
"tls_private_key": resourcePrivateKey(),
/* ... */
},
DataSourcesMap: map[string]*schema.Resource{
"tls_public_key": dataSourcePublicKey(),
/* ... */
},
}, nil
}
Framework
The following shows the same section of provider code after the migration.
var _ provider.Provider = (*provider)(nil)
func New() provider.Provider {
return &provider{}
}
func (p *provider) Resources(_ context.Context) []func() resource.Resource {
return []func() resource.Resource{
func() resource.Resource {
return &privateKeyResource{}
},
/* ... */
}
}
func (p *provider) DataSources(_ context.Context) []func() datasource.DataSource {
return []func() datasource.DataSource{
func() datasource.DataSource {
return &publicKeyDataSource{},
},
/* ... */
}
}
func (p *provider) GetSchema(_ context.Context) (tfsdk.Schema, diag.Diagnostics) {
return tfsdk.Schema{
Attributes: map[string]tfsdk.Attribute{
"proxy": {
/* ... */
},
},
}, nil
}
func (p *provider) Configure(ctx context.Context, req provider.ConfigureRequest, res *provider.ConfigureResponse) {
/* ... */
}
Provider Schema
A provider schema defines the attributes and behaviors of the provider itself. For example, a provider that connects to a third-party API may define attributes for the base URL or a required authentication token.
SDKv2
In SDKv2, you implement a provider Schema by populating the Schema
field on the schema.Provider
struct. The Schema
field contains a map[string]*schema.Schema
. Each map entry represents the name of the attribute and pointer to a
schema.Schema
struct that defines that attribute's behavior.
The following example defines the provider schema in the Schema
field within the schema.Provider
struct.
func New() *schema.Provider {
return &schema.Provider{
Schema: map[string]*schema.Schema{
/* ... */
},
Framework
In the Framework, the GetSchema
function returns the provider schema. The GetSchema
function is part of the
provider.Provider
interface that your provider must implement. GetSchema
returns a struct containing fields for
Attributes
and Blocks
. These Attributes
and Blocks
contain map[string]tfsdk.Attribute
and
map[string]tfsdk.Block
, respectively. Refer to Providers - GetSchema in the
Framework documentation for details.
The following code shows the GetSchema
function, which returns the provider schema.
func (p *provider) GetSchema(ctx context.Context) (tfsdk.Schema, diag.Diagnostics) {
return tfsdk.Schema{
/* ... */
}, nil
}
Refer to the Attributes and Blocks pages in this migration guide to learn how to migrate those fields to the Framework.
Migration Notes
Remember the following differences between SDKv2 and the Framework when completing the migration.
- In SDKv2,
schema.Schema
is a struct that defines attributes and behaviors (e.g.,Type
,Optional
). In the Frameworktfsdk.Schema
is a struct that includestfsdk.Attributes
, which are structs that define attributes and behaviors (e.g.,Type
,Optional
).
Example
The following examples show how to migrate portions of the tls provider.
For a complete example, clone the
terraform-provider-tls
repository and compare provider.go
in
v3.4.0
with the file after the migration.
This example also shows how to use a nested block and a nested attribute for the SDKv2 and Framework examples, respectively. Refer to the Blocks with Computed Fields page in this guide for more details.
SDKv2
The following example from the provider.go
file shows the configuration of the url
attribute for the provider'sproxy
configuration block.
Schema: map[string]*schema.Schema{
"proxy": {
Type: schema.TypeList,
Optional: true,
MaxItems: 1,
Elem: &schema.Resource{
Schema: map[string]*schema.Schema{
"url": {
Type: schema.TypeString,
Optional: true,
ValidateDiagFunc: validation.ToDiagFunc(validation.IsURLWithScheme(SupportedProxySchemesStr())),
ConflictsWith: []string{"proxy.0.from_env"},
Description: "URL used to connect to the Proxy. " +
fmt.Sprintf("Accepted schemes are: `%s`. ", strings.Join(SupportedProxySchemesStr(), "`, `")),
},
/* ... */
Framework
The following shows the same section of provider code after the migration.
This code implements the url
attribute for the proxy
block with the Framework.
func (p *provider) GetSchema(_ context.Context) (tfsdk.Schema, diag.Diagnostics) {
return tfsdk.Schema{
Attributes: map[string]tfsdk.Attribute{
"proxy": {
Optional: true,
Attributes: tfsdk.SingleNestedAttributes(map[string]tfsdk.Attribute{
"url": {
Type: types.StringType,
Optional: true,
Validators: []tfsdk.AttributeValidator{
attribute_validator.UrlWithScheme(supportedProxySchemesStr()...),
schemavalidator.ConflictsWith(path.MatchRelative().AtParent().AtName("from_env")),
},
MarkdownDescription: "URL used to connect to the Proxy. " +
fmt.Sprintf("Accepted schemes are: `%s`. ", strings.Join(supportedProxySchemesStr(), "`, `")),
},