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Terraform MongoDB Atlas Provider: Deploy, update, and manage MongoDB Atlas configurations as code through HashiCorp Terraform

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MongoDB Atlas Provider

Build Status

This is the repository for the Terraform MongoDB Atlas Provider, which allows one to use Terraform with MongoDB's Database as a Service offering, Atlas. Learn more about Atlas at https://www.mongodb.com/cloud/atlas

For general information about Terraform, visit the official website and the GitHub project page.

Support, Bugs, Feature Requests

Support for the Terraform MongoDB Atlas Provider is provided under MongoDB Atlas support plans. Please submit support questions within the Atlas UI. Support questions submitted under the Issues section of this repo will be handled on a "best effort" basis.

Bugs should be filed under the Issues section of this repo.

Feature requests can be submitted at https://feedback.mongodb.com/forums/924145-atlas - just select the Terraform plugin as the category or vote for an already suggested feature.

Requirements

  • Terraform 0.12+
  • Go 1.14 (to build the provider plugin)

Developing the Provider

If you wish to work on the provider, you'll first need Go installed on your machine (please check the requirements before proceeding).

Note: This project uses Go Modules making it safe to work with it outside of your existing GOPATH. The instructions that follow assume a directory in your home directory outside of the standard GOPATH (i.e $HOME/development/terraform-providers/).

Clone repository to: $HOME/development/terraform-providers/

$ mkdir -p $HOME/development/terraform-providers/; cd $HOME/development/terraform-providers/
$ git clone [email protected]:mongodb/terraform-provider-mongodbatlas
...

Enter the provider directory and run make tools. This will install the needed tools for the provider.

$ make tools

To compile the provider, run make build. This will build the provider and put the provider binary in the $GOPATH/bin directory.

$ make build
...
$ $GOPATH/bin/terraform-provider-mongodbatlas
...

Using the Provider

To use a released provider in your Terraform environment, run terraform init and Terraform will automatically install the provider. To specify a particular provider version when installing released providers, see the Terraform documentation on provider versioning.

To instead use a custom-built provider in your Terraform environment (e.g. the provider binary from the build instructions above), follow the instructions to install it as a plugin. After placing it into your plugins directory, run terraform init to initialize it.

For either installation method, documentation about the provider specific configuration options can be found on the provider's website.

Testing the Provider

In order to test the provider, you can run make test. You can use meta-arguments such as alias and version. The following arguments are supported in the MongoDB Atlas provider block:

  • public_key - (Optional) This is the MongoDB Atlas API public_key. It must be provided, but it can also be sourced from the MONGODB_ATLAS_PUBLIC_KEY environment variable.

  • private_key - (Optional) This is the MongoDB Atlas private_key. It must be provided, but it can also be sourced from the MONGODB_ATLAS_PRIVATE_KEY environment variable.

~> Notice: If you do not have a public_key and private_key you must create a programmatic API key to configure the provider (see Creating Programmatic API key). If you already have one, you can continue with Configuring environment variables

Running the acceptance test

Programmatic API key

It's necessary to generate and configure an API key for your organization for the acceptance test to succeed. To grant programmatic access to an organization or project using only the API you need to know:

  1. The programmatic API key has two parts: a Public Key and a Private Key. To see more details on how to create a programmatic API key visit https://docs.atlas.mongodb.com/configure-api-access/#programmatic-api-keys.

  2. The programmatic API key must be granted roles sufficient for the acceptance test to succeed. The Organization Owner and Project Owner roles should be sufficient. You can see the available roles at https://docs.atlas.mongodb.com/reference/user-roles.

  3. You must configure Atlas API Access for your programmatic API key. You should allow API access for the IP address from which the acceptance test runs.

Configuring environment variables

You must also configure the following environment variables before running the test:

MongoDB Atlas env variables
export MONGODB_ATLAS_PROJECT_ID=<YOUR_PROJECT_ID>
export MONGODB_ATLAS_ORG_ID=<YOUR_ORG_ID>
export MONGODB_ATLAS_PUBLIC_KEY=<YOUR_PUBLIC_KEY>
export MONGODB_ATLAS_PRIVATE_KEY=<YOUR_PRIVATE_KEY>
  • For Authentication database user resource configuration:
$ export MONGODB_ATLAS_DB_USERNAME=<YOUR_DATABASE_NAME>
  • For Project(s) resource configuration:
$ export MONGODB_ATLAS_TEAMS_IDS=<YOUR_TEAMS_IDS>

~> Notice: It should be at least one team id up to 3 teams ids depending of acceptance testing using separator comma like this teamId1,teamdId2,teamId3.

  • For skip acceptances testing that requires additional credentials such as AWS, AZURE and GCP:
export SKIP_TEST_EXTERNAL_CREDENTIALS=TRUE
AWS env variables
  • For Network Peering resource configuration:
$ export AWS_ACCOUNT_ID=<YOUR_ACCOUNT_ID>
$ export AWS_VPC_ID=<YOUR_VPC_ID>
$ export AWS_VPC_CIDR_BLOCK=<YOUR_VPC_CIDR_BLOCK>
$ export AWS_REGION=<YOUR_REGION>
$ export AWS_SUBNET_ID=<YOUR_SUBNET_ID>
$ export AWS_SECURITY_GROUP_ID=<YOUR_SECURITY_GROUP_ID>

~> Notice: For more information about the Network Peering resource, see: https://docs.atlas.mongodb.com/reference/api/vpc/

  • For Encryption at Rest resource configuration:
$ export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=<YOUR_ACCESS_KEY_ID>
$ export AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=<YOUR_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY>
$ export AWS_CUSTOMER_MASTER_KEY_ID=<YOUR_CUSTOMER_MASTER_KEY_ID>
$ export AWS_REGION=<YOUR_REGION>

$ export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID_UPDATED=<YOUR_ACCESS_KEY_ID_UPDATED>
$ export AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY_UPDATED=<YOUR_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY_UPDATED>
$ export AWS_CUSTOMER_MASTER_KEY_ID_UPDATED=<YOUR_CUSTOMER_MASTER_KEY_ID_UPDATED>
$ export AWS_REGION_UPDATED=<YOUR_REGION_UPDATED>

~> Notice: For more information about the Encryption at Rest resource, see: https://docs.atlas.mongodb.com/reference/api/encryption-at-rest/

  • For Private Endpoint Link resource configuration:
$ export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=<YOUR_ACCESS_KEY_ID>
$ export AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=<YOUR_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY>
$ export AWS_CUSTOMER_MASTER_KEY_ID=<YOUR_CUSTOMER_MASTER_KEY_ID>
$ export AWS_REGION=<YOUR_REGION>
$ export AWS_VPC_ID=<YOUR_VPC_ID>
$ export AWS_SUBNET_ID=<YOUR_SUBNET_ID>
$ export AWS_SECURITY_GROUP_ID=<YOUR_SECURITY_GROUP_ID>

~> Notice: For more information about the PrivateLink (for AWS only), see: https://docs.atlas.mongodb.com/reference/api/encryption-at-rest/https://docs.atlas.mongodb.com/reference/api/private-endpoint/

AZURE env variables
  • For Network Peering resource configuration:
$ export AZURE_DIRECTORY_ID=<YOUR_DIRECTORY_ID>
$ export AZURE_SUBCRIPTION_ID=<YOUR_SUBCRIPTION_ID>
$ export AZURE_RESOURCE_GROUP_NAME=<YOUR_RESOURCE_GROUP_NAME>
$ export AZURE_VNET_NAME=<YOUR_VNET_NAME>

~> Notice: For more information about the Network Peering resource, see: https://docs.atlas.mongodb.com/reference/api/vpc/

  • For Encryption at Rest resource configuration:
export AZURE_CLIENT_ID=<YOUR_CLIENT_ID>
export AZURE_SUBCRIPTION_ID=<YOUR_SUBCRIPTION_ID>
export AZURE_RESOURCE_GROUP_NAME=<YOUR_RESOURCE_GROUP_NAME>
export AZURE_SECRET=<YOUR_SECRET>
export AZURE_KEY_VAULT_NAME=<YOUR_KEY_VAULT_NAME>
export AZURE_KEY_IDENTIFIER=<YOUR_KEY_IDENTIFIER>
export AZURE_TENANT_ID=<YOUR_TENANT_ID>
export AZURE_DIRECTORY_ID=<YOUR_DIRECTORY_ID>

export AZURE_CLIENT_ID_UPDATED=<YOUR_CLIENT_ID_UPDATED>
export AZURE_RESOURCE_GROUP_NAME_UPDATED=<YOUR_RESOURCE_GROUP_NAME_UPDATED>
export AZURE_SECRET_UPDATED=<YOUR_SECRET_UPDATED>
export AZURE_KEY_VAULT_NAME_UPDATED=<YOUR_KEY_VAULT_NAME_UPDATED>
export AZURE_KEY_IDENTIFIER_UPDATED=<YOUR_KEY_IDENTIFIER_UPDATED>

~> Notice: For more information about the Encryption at Rest resource, see: https://docs.atlas.mongodb.com/reference/api/encryption-at-rest/

GCP env variables
  • For Network Peering resource configuration:
$export GCP_PROJECT_ID=<YOUR_PROJECT_ID>

~> Notice: For more information about the Network Peering resource, see: https://docs.atlas.mongodb.com/reference/api/vpc/

  • For Encryption at Rest resource configuration:
$ export GCP_SERVICE_ACCOUNT_KEY=<YOUR_GCP_SERVICE_ACCOUNT_KEY>
$ export GCP_KEY_VERSION_RESOURCE_ID=<YOUR_GCP_KEY_VERSION_RESOURCE_ID>

~> Notice: For more information about the Encryption at Rest resource, see: https://docs.atlas.mongodb.com/reference/api/encryption-at-rest/

In order to run the full suite of Acceptance tests, run make testacc.

~> Notice: Acceptance tests create real resources, and often cost money to run. Please note in any PRs made if you are unable to pay to run acceptance tests for your contribution. We will accept "best effort" implementations of acceptance tests in this case and run them for you on our side. This may delay the contribution but we do not want your contribution blocked by funding.

$ make testacc

Thanks

We'd like to thank Akshay Karle for writing the first version of a Terraform Provider for MongoDB Atlas and paving the way for the creation of this one.

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