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Getting Started with Terraform

You're reading from   Getting Started with Terraform Manage production infrastructure as a code

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788623537
Length 208 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Kirill Shirinkin Kirill Shirinkin
Author Profile Icon Kirill Shirinkin
Kirill Shirinkin
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Toc

Table of Contents (9) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Infrastructure Automation FREE CHAPTER 2. Deploying First Server 3. Resource Dependencies and Modules 4. Storing and Supplying Configuration 5. Connecting with Other Tools 6. Scaling and Updating Infrastructure 7. Collaborative Infrastructure 8. Future of Terraform

Understanding dependency graph


Terraform doesn't simply build your resources and write their configuration into a state file. Internally, it also manages a dependency graph of all the resources you have. It's hard to see with a single resource, but now we have two interconnected resources: VPC and a subnet. The latter one depends on the existence of the first one. But wait, what is a dependency graph anyway?

First of all, let's recall what a graph is. We won't go deep into mathematical formulas and advanced graph theories and examples here. Graph theory is big, and there are so many applications of it.

Though there are many definitions of a graph, which differ depending on the knowledge area and industry, the simplest description is a set of nodes and edges, where edges represent a connection between two nodes. It's easier to look at a graph than to read about one:

Here, we have two nodes connected to each other. Nothing really complicated. What is a dependency graph then? Let's steal a definition...

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