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Using Terraform Modules and Remote Storage

Terraform is a popular infrastructure-as-code software tool built by HashiCorp. You use it to provision all kinds of infrastructure and services, including New Relic dashboards and alerts.

In this guide, you learn to use Terraform modules in your New Relic configurations. Specifically, you will create modules, import data, store modules on Github, and manage state remotely Amazon S3.

In the video, we review additional steps installing Terraform and set up New Relic alerts. If you need help getting started with Terraform, the Getting started with New Relic and Terraform shows how to install Terraform, set up New Relic alerts, and specify a notification channel.

Before you begin

To use this guide, you should have some basic knowledge of both New Relic and Terraform. If you haven't deployed a New Relic open source agent yet, install New Relic for your application. Also, install the Terraform CLI.

Start by initializing a working directory:

bash
$
mkdir terraform-config && cd terraform-config

To follow the examples in this gude, the accompanying example code is available on GitHub

bash
$
git clone https://github.com/jsbnr/nr-terraform-intro-example.git

Creating a Terraform Module

Terraform modules allow you to reuse, share, and store your Terraform configurations using version control like Github. In the next steps, you will move your New Relic configurations into a reusable module.

First, in your project root, create a new directory to store your modules named modules:

bash
$
mkdir modules && cd modules

In the modules directory, create a new directory for a new module called HostConditions and create a new file named main.tf:

bash
$
mkdir HostConditions && cd HostConditions
$
touch main.tf

Remove the two alert conditions from the root project's main.tf file and copy it to the new main.tf file in the HostConditions directory.

In the root directory's main.tf file call the new module using a module block:

module "HostConditions" {
source = "./modules/HostConditions"
}

Try testing your configurations, run terraform plan and terraform init:

bash
# Example output
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Initializing modules...
- HostConditions in
Error: Unreadable module directory
Unable to evaluate directory symlink: lstat modules/HostConditions: no such
file or directory
Error: Failed to read module directory
Module directory does not exist or cannot be read.
Error: Unreadable module directory
Unable to evaluate directory symlink: lstat modules/HostConditions: no such
file or directory
Error: Failed to read module directory
Module directory does not exist or cannot be read.

You see an error in your console due to the lack of provider details in your modules directory. To fix the error, create a copy of the root provider.tf in your HostConditions directory :

provider "newrelic" {
account_id = 12345 # Your New Relic account ID
api_key = "NRAK-zzzzzz" # Your New Relic user key
region = "US" # US or EU (defaults to US)
}

Try testing your configurations, run terraform plan and terraform init:

bash
# Example output
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Error: Reference to undeclared resource
on modules/HostConditions/main.tf line 2, in resource "newrelic_infra_alert_condition"
"cpuhot":
2: policy_id = newrelic_alert_policy.DemoPolicy.id
A managed resource "newrelic_alert_policy" "DemoPolicy" has not been declared
in module.HostConditions.
Error: Reference to undeclared resource
on modules/HostConditions/main.tf line 24, in resource "newrelic_infra_alert_condition"
"highDiskUsage":
24: policy_id = newrelic_alert_policy.DemoPolicy.id
A managed resource "newrelic_alert_policy" "DemoPolicy" has not been declared
in module.HostConditions.

Terraform init no longer shows an error, but running terraform plan still causes an error to occur.

The error is due to the policy id used in the ./modules/HostConditions/provider.tf doesn't exist. A variable is needed to pass into the module.

Create a Variable

Variables pass details into your module and set default values.

First, at the top of your HostConditions/provider.tf create a new variable:

variable "providerId" {}

Next, in the resource block, replace the existing policyId with the new variable:

var.policy

Passing a variable into a module

To make a module dynamic, you will pass your variables into the module using the module resource block.

In the root directory main.tf, update the module block to add the policyId variable:

module "HostConditions" {
source = "./modules/HostConditions"
policyId = newrelic_alert_policy.DemoPolicy.id
}

Run terraform plan after adding your variable to the module.

bash
$
terraform plan

Now, add more variables and replace the values CPU critical, CPU warning, and disk percent. Then, pass the new variables into the module.

Add the new variables to HostConditions/main.tf:

variable cpu_warning {}
variable cpu_critical {}
variable diskPercent {}

Update the alert conditions to use the new variables added in the HostConditons/main.tf:

resource "newrelic_infra_alert_condition" "cpuhot" {
policy_id = var.policyId
name = "CPU hot!"
type = "infra_metric"
event = "SystemSample"
select = "cpuPercent"
comparison = "above"
where = "(hostname LIKE '%myhost%')"
critical {
duration = 5
value = var.cpu_critical
time_function = "all"
}
warning {
duration = 5
value = var.cpu_warning
time_function = "all"
}
}
resource "newrelic_infra_alert_condition" "highDiskUsage" {
policy_id = var.policyId
name = "high disk usage"
type = "infra_metric"
event = "SystemSample"
select = "diskUsedPercent"
comparison = "above"
where = "(hostname LIKE '%myhost%')"
critical {
duration = 5
value = var.diskPercent
time_function = "all"
}
}

Run terraform plan after adding your variables to the module. An error message displays due to the missing variable values. Values can be added in the module block or as default values.

bash
$
terraform plan

Adding default values

Add default variable values to HostConditions/main.tf:

variable cpu_warning { default=80}
variable cpu_critical { default=90}
variable diskPercent { default=60 }

Pass variable values using module block

In the root directory main.tf, update the module block to add the cpu_critical, cpu_warning, and diskPercentage variables:

module "HostConditions" {
source = "./modules/HostConditions"
policyId = newrelic_alert_policy.DemoPolicy.id
cpu_critical = 88
cpu_warning = 78
diskPercentage = 66
}

Run terraform plan after adding your variables to the module.

bash
$
terraform plan

Reusing a module

You can reuse your module connecting to a New Relic policy that already exists. Before you start, in your New Relic account, create a new alert policy named Preexisting Policy.

Connecting an existing alert policy

First, In your root main.tf file add the data block to import an existing policy:

data "newrelic_alert_policy" "ExistingPolicy" {
name = "Preexisting Policy"
}

Next, create a second module block name HostConditions2. Add the alert conditions to the Preexisting Policy.

module "HostConditions2" {
source = "./modules/HostConditions"
policyId = data.newrelic_alert_policy.ExistingPolicy.id
cpu_critical = 87
cpu_warning = 77
diskPercentage = 67
}

Run terraform init to initialize the new module and run terraform apply to apply the changes to your New Relic account.

The terraform scripts create a new alert policy and two conditions, but it also applies the alert conditions to the Preexisting Policy.

Look in your New Relic account at the Preexisting Policy and see alerts conditions added for CPU Hot and High Disk Usage.

Store a module in Github

After you have created a module, if you want to store the module somewhere other people can use, Github is how you can do it.

Create a new Github repo

First, inside of your HostModules directory, initialize a new Github repo. Add your main.tf and provider.tf to the stage for commit:

bash
$
git add main.tf provider.tf
$
git commit -m "init"

Next, using the commands provided in your new repo, push your commit to Github:

bash
$
git remote add origin <repo_url>
$
git branch -M main
$
git push -u origin main

Using a module saved on Github

Check the Github repo and see the main.tf and provider.tf are now in your repo. Copy the GitHub repo's web URL to clone your repo.

Update the root main.tf file using GitHub as the source for the HostConditions:

module "HostConditions" {
source = "git::https://github.com/<your_username>/<your_repo_name>" # Add your repo URL
policyId = newrelic_alert_policy.DemoPolicy.id
cpu_critical = 88
cpu_warning = 78
diskPercentage = 66
}
module "HostConditions2" {
source = "git::https://github.com/<your_username>/<your_repo_name>" # Add your repo URL
policyId = data.newrelic_alert_policy.ExistingPolicy.id
cpu_critical = 87
cpu_warning = 77
diskPercentage = 67
}

Run terraform init to initialize the new module. When you run terraform init, Terraform clones the repository locally. Run terraform plan

If you need to update your local module with updates made to the git repo, run terraform get -update

Manage state remotely in Amazon S3

The state file is the representation that terraform holds about the created resources. The state file is in the root directory, but if deleted or corrupted would cause trouble. Storing the state file remote provides security and allows sharing and remote access.

In the provider.tf in the root directory, add a terraform backend block for Amazon S3:

terraform {
backend "s3" {
bucket = "<s3_bucket_name>"
key = "<s3_bucket_key>"
region = "<s3_bucket_region>"
}
}

Variables are needed to provide the correct S3 bucket details, and access is required.

To give access to the S3 bucket in your Amazon account, create an IAM user. Give the IAM user access to the S3 bucket storing the terraform state.

Add the profile to the terraform backend block:

terraform {
backend "s3" {
bucket = "<s3_bucket_name>"
key = "<s3_bucket_key>"
region = "<s3_bucket_region>"
profile = "<iam_user_profile_name>"
}
}

Before saving your state to Amazon S3, destroy the current configurations to start from a clean slate:

bash
$
terraform destroy

Initialize Terraform, run Terraform init:

bash
$
terraform init

In the terminal, the output shows the backend initialized as S3. Delete the local state as it is not needed

bash
$
rm terraform.*

Run terraform apply to apply your Terraform configuration changes.

bash
$
terraform apply

The state file is now stored in S3 instead of locally. Look in your S3 bucket and see the terraform state exists.

Conclusion

Congratulations! You're using modules to make your terraform configurations more flexible. Review the New Relic Terraform provider documentation to learn how you can take your configuration to the next level.

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