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URL: https://developer.hashicorp.com/terraform/language/backend/s3

⇱ Backend Type: s3 | Terraform | HashiCorp Developer


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S3

Stores the state as a given key in a given bucket on Amazon S3. This backend also supports state locking which can be enabled by setting the use_lockfile argument to true.

Warning! It is highly recommended that you enable Bucket Versioning on the S3 bucket to allow for state recovery in the case of accidental deletions and human error.

Example Configuration

terraform {
 backend "s3" {
 bucket = "mybucket"
 key = "path/to/my/key"
 region = "us-east-1"
 }
}

This assumes we have a bucket created called mybucket. The Terraform state is written to the key path/to/my/key.

Note that for the access credentials we recommend using a partial configuration.

State Storage

The S3 backend stores state data in an S3 object at the path set by the key parameter in the S3 bucket indicated by the bucket parameter. Using the example shown above, the state would be stored at the path path/to/my/key in the bucket mybucket.

When using workspaces, the state for the default workspace is stored at the location described above. Other workspaces are stored using the path <workspace_key_prefix>/<workspace_name>/<key>. The default workspace key prefix is env: and it can be configured using the parameter workspace_key_prefix. Using the example above, the state for the workspace development would be stored at the path env:/development/path/to/my/key.

State Locking

State locking is an opt-in feature of the S3 backend.

Locking can be enabled via S3 or DynamoDB. However, DynamoDB-based locking is deprecated and will be removed in a future minor version. To support migration from older versions of Terraform that only support DynamoDB-based locking, the S3 and DynamoDB arguments can be configured simultaneously.

Enabling S3 State Locking

To enable S3 state locking, use the following optional argument:

  • use_lockfile - (Optional) Whether to use a lockfile for locking the state file. Defaults to false.

Enabling DynamoDB State Locking (Deprecated)

To enable DynamoDB state locking, use the following optional arguments:

  • dynamodb_endpoint - (Optional, Deprecated) Custom endpoint URL for the AWS DynamoDB API. Use endpoints.dynamodb instead.
  • dynamodb_table - (Optional, Deprecated) Name of the DynamoDB Table to use for state locking and consistency. The table must have a partition key named LockID with a type of String.

Permissions Required

S3 Bucket Permissions

When not using workspaces(or when only using the default workspace), Terraform will need the following AWS IAM permissions on the target backend bucket:

  • s3:ListBucket on arn:aws:s3:::mybucket. At a minimum, this must be able to list the path where the state is stored.
  • s3:GetObject on arn:aws:s3:::mybucket/path/to/my/key
  • s3:PutObject on arn:aws:s3:::mybucket/path/to/my/key

Note: If use_lockfile is set, s3:GetObject, s3:PutObject, and s3:DeleteObject are required on the lock file, e.g., arn:aws:s3:::mybucket/path/to/my/key.tflock.

Note: s3:DeleteObject is not required on the state file, as Terraform does not delete it.

This is seen in the following AWS IAM Statement:

{
 "Version": "2012-10-17",
 "Statement": [
 {
 "Effect": "Allow",
 "Action": "s3:ListBucket",
 "Resource": "arn:aws:s3:::mybucket",
 "Condition": {
 "StringEquals": {
 "s3:prefix": "mybucket/path/to/my/key"
 }
 }
 },
 {
 "Effect": "Allow",
 "Action": ["s3:GetObject", "s3:PutObject"],
 "Resource": [
 "arn:aws:s3:::mybucket/path/to/my/key"
 ]
 },
 {
 "Effect": "Allow",
 "Action": ["s3:GetObject", "s3:PutObject", "s3:DeleteObject"],
 "Resource": [
 "arn:aws:s3:::mybucket/path/to/my/key.tflock"
 ]
 }
 ]
}

When using workspaces, Terraform will also need permissions to create, list, read, update, and delete the workspace state file:

  • s3:ListBucket on arn:aws:s3:::mybucket. At a minumum, this must be able to list the path where the default workspace is stored as well as the other workspaces.
  • s3:GetObject on arn:aws:s3:::mybucket/path/to/my/key, arn:aws:s3:::mybucket/<workspace_key_prefix>/*/path/to/my/key
  • s3:PutObject on arn:aws:s3:::mybucket/path/to/my/key, arn:aws:s3:::mybucket/<workspace_key_prefix>/*/path/to/my/key
  • s3:DeleteObject on arn:aws:s3:::mybucket/<workspace_key_prefix>/*/path/to/my/key

Note: If use_lockfile is set, s3:GetObject, s3:PutObject, and s3:DeleteObject are required on the lock file, e.g., arn:aws:s3:::mybucket/<workspace_key_prefix>/*/path/to/my/key.tflock.

Note: AWS can control access to S3 buckets with either IAM policies attached to users/groups/roles (like the example above) or resource policies attached to bucket objects (which look similar but also require a Principal to indicate which entity has those permissions). For more details, see Amazon's documentation about S3 access control.

DynamoDB Table Permissions

If you are using the deprecated DynamoDB-based locking mechanism, Terraform will need the following AWS IAM permissions on the DynamoDB table (arn:aws:dynamodb:::table/mytable):

This is seen in the following AWS IAM Statement:

{
 "Version": "2012-10-17",
 "Statement": [
 {
 "Effect": "Allow",
 "Action": [
 "dynamodb:DescribeTable",
 "dynamodb:GetItem",
 "dynamodb:PutItem",
 "dynamodb:DeleteItem"
 ],
 "Resource": "arn:aws:dynamodb:*:*:table/mytable"
 }
 ]
}

Data Source Configuration

To make use of the S3 remote state in another configuration, use the terraform_remote_state data source.

data "terraform_remote_state" "network" {
 backend = "s3"
 config = {
 bucket = "terraform-state-prod"
 key = "network/terraform.tfstate"
 region = "us-east-1"
 }
}

The terraform_remote_state data source will return all of the root module outputs defined in the referenced remote state (but not any outputs from nested modules unless they are explicitly output again in the root). An example output might look like:

data.terraform_remote_state.network:
 id = 2016-10-29 01:57:59.780010914 +0000 UTC
 addresses.# = 2
 addresses.0 = 52.207.220.222
 addresses.1 = 54.196.78.166
 backend = s3
 config.% = 3
 config.bucket = terraform-state-prod
 config.key = network/terraform.tfstate
 config.region = us-east-1
 elb_address = web-elb-790251200.us-east-1.elb.amazonaws.com
 public_subnet_id = subnet-1e05dd33

Configuration

This backend requires the configuration of the AWS Region and S3 state storage. Other configuration, such as enabling state locking, is optional.

Credentials and Shared Configuration

Warning: We recommend using environment variables to supply credentials and other sensitive data. If you use -backend-config or hardcode these values directly in your configuration, Terraform will include these values in both the .terraform subdirectory and in plan files. Refer to Credentials and Sensitive Data for details.

The following configuration is required:

  • region - (Required) AWS Region of the S3 Bucket and DynamoDB Table (if used). This can also be sourced from the AWS_DEFAULT_REGION and AWS_REGION environment variables.

The following configuration is optional:

  • use_lockfile - (Optional) Whether to use a lockfile for locking the state file. Defaults to false.
  • access_key - (Optional) AWS access key. If configured, must also configure secret_key. This can also be sourced from the AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID environment variable, AWS shared credentials file (e.g. ~/.aws/credentials), or AWS shared configuration file (e.g. ~/.aws/config).
  • allowed_account_ids - (Optional) List of allowed AWS account IDs to prevent potential destruction of a live environment. Conflicts with forbidden_account_ids.
  • custom_ca_bundle - (Optional) File containing custom root and intermediate certificates. Can also be set using the AWS_CA_BUNDLE environment variable. Setting ca_bundle in the shared config file is not supported.
  • ec2_metadata_service_endpoint - (Optional) Custom endpoint URL for the EC2 Instance Metadata Service (IMDS) API. Can also be set with the AWS_EC2_METADATA_SERVICE_ENDPOINT environment variable.
  • ec2_metadata_service_endpoint_mode - (Optional) Mode to use in communicating with the metadata service. Valid values are IPv4 and IPv6. Can also be set with the AWS_EC2_METADATA_SERVICE_ENDPOINT_MODE environment variable.
  • forbidden_account_ids - (Optional) List of forbidden AWS account IDs to prevent potential destruction of a live environment. Conflicts with allowed_account_ids.
  • http_proxy - (Optional) URL of a proxy to use for HTTP requests when accessing the AWS API. Can also be set using the HTTP_PROXY or http_proxy environment variables.
  • https_proxy - (Optional) URL of a proxy to use for HTTPS requests when accessing the AWS API. Can also be set using the HTTPS_PROXY or https_proxy environment variables.
  • iam_endpoint - (Optional, Deprecated) Custom endpoint URL for the AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM) API. Use endpoints.iam instead.
  • insecure - (Optional) Whether to explicitly allow the backend to perform "insecure" SSL requests. If omitted, the default value is false.
  • no_proxy - (Optional) Comma-separated list of hosts that should not use HTTP or HTTPS proxies. Each value can be one of:
    • A domain name
    • An IP address
    • A CIDR address
    • An asterisk (*), to indicate that no proxying should be performed Domain name and IP address values can also include a port number. Can also be set using the NO_PROXY or no_proxy environment variables.
  • max_retries - (Optional) The maximum number of times an AWS API request is retried on retryable failure. Defaults to 5.
  • profile - (Optional) Name of AWS profile in AWS shared credentials file (e.g. ~/.aws/credentials) or AWS shared configuration file (e.g. ~/.aws/config) to use for credentials and/or configuration. This can also be sourced from the AWS_PROFILE environment variable.
  • retry_mode - (Optional) Specifies how retries are attempted. Valid values are standard and adaptive. Can also be configured using the AWS_RETRY_MODE environment variable or the shared config file parameter retry_mode.
  • secret_key - (Optional) AWS access key. If configured, must also configure access_key. This can also be sourced from the AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY environment variable, AWS shared credentials file (e.g. ~/.aws/credentials), or AWS shared configuration file (e.g. ~/.aws/config).
  • shared_config_files - (Optional) List of paths to AWS shared configuration files. Defaults to ~/.aws/config.
  • shared_credentials_file - (Optional, Deprecated, use shared_credentials_files instead) Path to the AWS shared credentials file. Defaults to ~/.aws/credentials.
  • shared_credentials_files - (Optional) List of paths to AWS shared credentials files. Defaults to ~/.aws/credentials.
  • skip_credentials_validation - (Optional) Skip credentials validation via the STS API. Useful for testing and for AWS API implementations that do not have STS available.
  • skip_region_validation - (Optional) Skip validation of provided region name.
  • skip_requesting_account_id - (Optional) Whether to skip requesting the account ID. Useful for AWS API implementations that do not have the IAM, STS API, or metadata API.
  • skip_metadata_api_check - (Optional) Skip usage of EC2 Metadata API.
  • skip_s3_checksum - (Optional) Do not include checksum when uploading S3 Objects. Useful for some S3-Compatible APIs.
  • sts_endpoint - (Optional, Deprecated) Custom endpoint URL for the AWS Security Token Service (STS) API. Use endpoints.sts instead.
  • sts_region - (Optional) AWS region for STS. If unset, AWS will use the same region for STS as other non-STS operations.
  • token - (Optional) Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA) token. This can also be sourced from the AWS_SESSION_TOKEN environment variable.
  • use_dualstack_endpoint - (Optional) Force the backend to resolve endpoints with DualStack capability. Can also be set with the AWS_USE_DUALSTACK_ENDPOINT environment variable or in a shared config file (use_dualstack_endpoint).
  • use_fips_endpoint - (Optional) Force the backend to resolve endpoints with FIPS capability. Can also be set with the AWS_USE_FIPS_ENDPOINT environment variable or in a shared config file (use_fips_endpoint).

Overriding AWS API endpoints

The optional argument endpoints contains the following arguments:

  • dynamodb - (Optional, Deprecated) Custom endpoint URL for the AWS DynamoDB API. This can also be sourced from the environment variable AWS_ENDPOINT_URL_DYNAMODB or the deprecated environment variable AWS_DYNAMODB_ENDPOINT.
  • iam - (Optional) Custom endpoint URL for the AWS IAM API. This can also be sourced from the environment variable AWS_ENDPOINT_URL_IAM or the deprecated environment variable AWS_IAM_ENDPOINT.
  • s3 - (Optional) Custom endpoint URL for the AWS S3 API. This can also be sourced from the environment variable AWS_ENDPOINT_URL_S3 or the deprecated environment variable AWS_S3_ENDPOINT.
  • sso - (Optional) Custom endpoint URL for the AWS IAM Identity Center (formerly known as AWS SSO) API. This can also be sourced from the environment variable AWS_ENDPOINT_URL_SSO.
  • sts - (Optional) Custom endpoint URL for the AWS STS API. This can also be sourced from the environment variable AWS_ENDPOINT_URL_STS or the deprecated environment variable AWS_STS_ENDPOINT.

The environment variable AWS_ENDPOINT_URL can be used to set a base endpoint URL for all services.

Endpoints can also be overridden using the AWS shared configuration file. Setting the parameter endpoint_url on a profile will set that endpoint for all services. To set endpoints for specific services, create a services section and set the endpoint_url parameters for each desired service. Endpoints set for specific services will override the base endpoint configured in the profile.

Assume Role Configuration

The argument assume_role contains the following arguments:

  • role_arn - (Required) Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the IAM Role to assume.
  • duration - (Optional) The duration individual credentials will be valid. Credentials are automatically renewed up to the maximum defined by the AWS account. Specified using the format <hours>h<minutes>m<seconds>s with any unit being optional. For example, an hour and a half can be specified as 1h30m or 90m. Must be between 15 minutes (15m) and 12 hours (12h).
  • external_id - (Optional) External identifier to use when assuming the role.
  • policy - (Optional) IAM Policy JSON describing further restricting permissions for the IAM Role being assumed.
  • policy_arns - (Optional) Set of Amazon Resource Names (ARNs) of IAM Policies describing further restricting permissions for the IAM Role being assumed.
  • session_name - (Optional) Session name to use when assuming the role.
  • source_identity - (Optional) Source identity specified by the principal assuming the role.
  • tags - (Optional) Map of assume role session tags.
  • transitive_tag_keys - (Optional) Set of assume role session tag keys to pass to any subsequent sessions.

Multiple assume_role values can be specified, and the roles will be assumed in order.

terraform {
 backend "s3" {
 bucket = "example-bucket"
 key = "path/to/state"
 region = "us-east-1"
 assume_role = {
 role_arn = "arn:aws:iam::PRODUCTION-ACCOUNT-ID:role/Terraform"
 }
 }
}

Assume Role With Web Identity Configuration

The following assume_role_with_web_identity configuration block is optional:

  • role_arn - (Required) Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the IAM Role to assume. Can also be set with the AWS_ROLE_ARN environment variable.
  • duration - (Optional) The duration individual credentials will be valid. Credentials are automatically renewed up to the maximum defined by the AWS account. Specified using the format <hours>h<minutes>m<seconds>s with any unit being optional. For example, an hour and a half can be specified as 1h30m or 90m. Must be between 15 minutes (15m) and 12 hours (12h).
  • policy - (Optional) IAM Policy JSON describing further restricting permissions for the IAM Role being assumed.
  • policy_arns - (Optional) Set of Amazon Resource Names (ARNs) of IAM Policies describing further restricting permissions for the IAM Role being assumed.
  • session_name - (Optional) Session name to use when assuming the role. Can also be set with the AWS_ROLE_SESSION_NAME environment variable.
  • web_identity_token - (Optional) The value of a web identity token from an OpenID Connect (OIDC) or OAuth provider. One of web_identity_token or web_identity_token_file is required.
  • web_identity_token_file - (Optional) File containing a web identity token from an OpenID Connect (OIDC) or OAuth provider. One of web_identity_token_file or web_identity_token is required. Can also be set with the AWS_WEB_IDENTITY_TOKEN_FILE environment variable.
terraform {
 backend "s3" {
 bucket = "example-bucket"
 key = "path/to/state"
 region = "us-east-1"
 assume_role_with_web_identity = {
 role_arn = "arn:aws:iam::PRODUCTION-ACCOUNT-ID:role/Terraform"
 web_identity_token = "<token value>"
 }
 }
}

S3 State Storage

The following configuration is required:

  • bucket - (Required) Name of the S3 Bucket.
  • key - (Required) Path to the state file inside the S3 Bucket. When using a non-default workspace, the state path will be <workspace_key_prefix>/<workspace_name>/<key> (see also the workspace_key_prefix configuration).

The following configuration is optional:

  • acl - (Optional) Canned ACL to be applied to the state and lock files.
  • encrypt - (Optional) Enable server side encryption of the state and lock files.
  • endpoint - (Optional, Deprecated) Custom endpoint URL for the AWS S3 API. Use endpoints.s3 instead.
  • force_path_style - (Optional, Deprecated) Enable path-style S3 URLs (https://<HOST>/<BUCKET> instead of https://<BUCKET>.<HOST>).
  • kms_key_id - (Optional) Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of a Key Management Service (KMS) Key to use for encrypting the state and lock files. Note that if this value is specified, Terraform will need kms:Encrypt, kms:Decrypt and kms:GenerateDataKey permissions on this KMS key.
  • sse_customer_key - (Optional) The key to use for encrypting state and lock files with Server-Side Encryption with Customer-Provided Keys (SSE-C). This is the base64-encoded value of the key, which must decode to 256 bits. This can also be sourced from the AWS_SSE_CUSTOMER_KEY environment variable, which is recommended due to the sensitivity of the value. Setting it inside a terraform file will cause it to be persisted to disk in terraform.tfstate.
  • use_path_style - (Optional) Enable path-style S3 URLs (https://<HOST>/<BUCKET> instead of https://<BUCKET>.<HOST>).
  • workspace_key_prefix - (Optional) Prefix applied to the state path inside the bucket. This is only relevant when using a non-default workspace. Defaults to env:.

Multi-account AWS Architecture

A common architectural pattern is for an organization to use a number of separate AWS accounts to isolate different teams and environments. For example, a "staging" system will often be deployed into a separate AWS account than its corresponding "production" system, to minimize the risk of the staging environment affecting production infrastructure, whether via rate limiting, misconfigured access controls, or other unintended interactions.

The S3 backend can be used in a number of different ways that make different tradeoffs between convenience, security, and isolation in such an organization. This section describes one such approach that aims to find a good compromise between these tradeoffs, allowing use of Terraform's workspaces feature to switch conveniently between multiple isolated deployments of the same configuration.

Use this section as a starting-point for your approach, but note that you will probably need to make adjustments for the unique standards and regulations that apply to your organization. You will also need to make some adjustments to this approach to account for existing practices within your organization, if for example other tools have previously been used to manage infrastructure.

Terraform is an administrative tool that manages your infrastructure, and so ideally the infrastructure that is used by Terraform should exist outside of the infrastructure that Terraform manages. This can be achieved by creating a separate administrative AWS account which contains the user accounts used by human operators and any infrastructure and tools used to manage the other accounts. Isolating shared administrative tools from your main environments has a number of advantages, such as avoiding accidentally damaging the administrative infrastructure while changing the target infrastructure, and reducing the risk that an attacker might abuse production infrastructure to gain access to the (usually more privileged) administrative infrastructure.

Administrative Account Setup

Your administrative AWS account will contain at least the following items:

  • One or more IAM user for system administrators that will log in to maintain infrastructure in the other accounts.
  • Optionally, one or more IAM groups to differentiate between different groups of users that have different levels of access to the other AWS accounts.
  • An S3 bucket that will contain the Terraform state files for each workspace.

Provide the S3 bucket name to Terraform in the S3 backend configuration using the bucket argument. Set use_lockfile to true to enable state locking. Configure a suitable workspace_key_prefix to manage states of workspaces that will be created for this configuration.

Environment Account Setup

For the sake of this section, the term "environment account" refers to one of the accounts whose contents are managed by Terraform, separate from the administrative account described above.

Your environment accounts will eventually contain your own product-specific infrastructure. Along with this it must contain one or more IAM roles that grant sufficient access for Terraform to perform the desired management tasks.

Delegating Access

Each Administrator will run Terraform using credentials for their IAM user in the administrative account. IAM Role Delegation is used to grant these users access to the roles created in each environment account.

Full details on role delegation are covered in the AWS documentation linked above. The most important details are:

  • Each role's Assume Role Policy must grant access to the administrative AWS account, which creates a trust relationship with the administrative AWS account so that its users may assume the role.
  • The users or groups within the administrative account must also have a policy that creates the converse relationship, allowing these users or groups to assume that role.

Since the purpose of the administrative account is only to host tools for managing other accounts, it is useful to give the administrative accounts restricted access only to the specific operations needed to assume the environment account role and access the Terraform state. By blocking all other access, you remove the risk that user error will lead to staging or production resources being created in the administrative account by mistake.

When configuring Terraform, use either environment variables or the standard credentials file ~/.aws/credentials to provide the administrator user's IAM credentials within the administrative account to both the S3 backend and to Terraform's AWS provider.

Use conditional configuration to pass a different assume_role value to the AWS provider depending on the selected workspace. For example:

variable "workspace_iam_roles" {
 default = {
 staging = "arn:aws:iam::STAGING-ACCOUNT-ID:role/Terraform"
 production = "arn:aws:iam::PRODUCTION-ACCOUNT-ID:role/Terraform"
 }
}
provider "aws" {
 # No credentials explicitly set here because they come from either the
 # environment or the global credentials file.
 assume_role = {
 role_arn = var.workspace_iam_roles[terraform.workspace]
 }
}

If workspace IAM roles are centrally managed and shared across many separate Terraform configurations, the role ARNs could also be obtained via a data source such as terraform_remote_state to avoid repeating these values.

Creating and Selecting Workspaces

With the necessary objects created and the backend configured, run terraform init to initialize the backend and establish an initial workspace called "default". This workspace will not be used, but is created automatically by Terraform as a convenience for users who are not using the workspaces feature.

Create a workspace corresponding to each key given in the workspace_iam_roles variable value above:

$ terraform workspace new staging
Created and switched to workspace "staging"!
...
$ terraform workspace new production
Created and switched to workspace "production"!
...

Due to the assume_role setting in the AWS provider configuration, any management operations for AWS resources will be performed via the configured role in the appropriate environment AWS account. The backend operations, such as reading and writing the state from S3, will be performed directly as the administrator's own user within the administrative account.

$ terraform workspace select staging
$ terraform apply
...

Running Terraform in Amazon EC2

Teams that make extensive use of Terraform for infrastructure management often run Terraform in automation to ensure a consistent operating environment and to limit access to the various secrets and other sensitive information that Terraform configurations tend to require.

When running Terraform in an automation tool running on an Amazon EC2 instance, consider running this instance in the administrative account and using an instance profile in place of the various administrator IAM users suggested above. An IAM instance profile can also be granted cross-account delegation access via an IAM policy, giving this instance the access it needs to run Terraform.

To isolate access to different environment accounts, use a separate EC2 instance for each target account so that its access can be limited only to the single account.

Similar approaches can be taken with equivalent features in other AWS compute services, such as ECS.

Protecting Access to Workspace State

In a simple implementation of the pattern described earlier,
all users can read and write states for all workspaces.
In many cases, it is desirable to apply precise access controls
to the Terraform state objects stored in S3. For example, only
trusted administrators should modify the production state.
It is also important to control access to reading the state file.
If state locking is enabled, the lock file (<key>.tflock)
must also be included in the access controls.

Amazon S3 supports fine-grained access control on a per-object-path basis using IAM policy. A full description of S3's access control mechanism is beyond the scope of this guide, but an example IAM policy granting access to only a single state object within an S3 bucket is shown below:

{
 "Version": "2012-10-17",
 "Statement": [
 {
 "Effect": "Allow",
 "Action": "s3:ListBucket",
 "Resource": "arn:aws:s3:::example-bucket",
 "Condition": {
 "StringEquals": {
 "s3:prefix": "path/to/state"
 }
 }
 },
 {
 "Effect": "Allow",
 "Action": ["s3:GetObject", "s3:PutObject"],
 "Resource": [
 "arn:aws:s3:::example-bucket/myapp/production/tfstate",
 ]
 },
 {
 "Effect": "Allow",
 "Action": ["s3:GetObject", "s3:PutObject", "s3:DeleteObject"],
 "Resource": [
 "arn:aws:s3:::example-bucket/myapp/production/tfstate.tflock"
 ]
 }
 ]
}

The example backend configuration below documents the corresponding bucket, key and use_lockfile arguments:

terraform {
 backend "s3" {
 bucket = "example-bucket"
 key = "path/to/state"
 use_lockfile = true
 region = "us-east-1"
 }
}

Refer to the AWS documentation on S3 access control for more details.

Configuring Custom User-Agent Information

Note this feature is optional and only available in Terraform v0.13.1+.

By default, the underlying AWS client used by the Terraform AWS Provider creates requests with User-Agent headers including information about Terraform and AWS Go SDK versions. To provide additional information in the User-Agent headers, the TF_APPEND_USER_AGENT environment variable can be set and its value will be directly added to HTTP requests. e.g.

$ export TF_APPEND_USER_AGENT="JenkinsAgent/i-12345678 BuildID/1234 (Optional Extra Information)"

Support for "S3 Compatible" Storage Providers

Support for S3 Compatible storage providers is offered as “best effort”. HashiCorp only tests the s3 backend against Amazon S3, so cannot offer any guarantees when using an alternate provider.

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