blast-radius
terraform-switcher
blast-radius | terraform-switcher | |
---|---|---|
3 | 9 | |
1,995 | 1,307 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 9.4 | |
14 days ago | about 9 hours ago | |
JavaScript | Go | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
blast-radius
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Top Terraform Tools to Know in 2024
Blast Radius is a tool designed to provide interactive visualizations of Terraform dependency graphs. It's particularly useful for understanding and communicating the architecture and potential impact of changes in Terraform-managed infrastructure.
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Visualize your Terraform
I have tried with Blast Radius, but I was no luck here. Additionally, it looks like Blast Radius is no longer maintained.
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Best Tools to Visualize your Terraform
Blast Radius is a tool for reasoning about Terraform dependency graphs with interactive visualizations. It’s an open source that is used to document infrastructure, reason relationships between resources, and learn about Terraform or one of its providers. This is a step-by-step guide on how to use Blast Radius to visualize Terraform.
terraform-switcher
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Top Terraform Tools to Know in 2024
TFSwitch is a CLI tool that allows easy switching between different Terraform versions, simplifying workflows in environments where multiple Terraform versions are used.
- Breve guia de sobrevivência com Terraform
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Asdf – the language tool version manager
tfswitch might help with particular issue of terraform versioning:
https://tfswitch.warrensbox.com/
Even then some versions of terraform providers are not compatible with M1 macs. Docker would help with that probably, but so can: https://github.com/kreuzwerker/m1-terraform-provider-helper
Perhaps these sort of issues support the benefits of per-module docker images?
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Best strategy to upgrade Terraform code?
My approach is to change the version in the version.tf file, install the new version using tfswitch (https://tfswitch.warrensbox.com/) and execute a plan. If infrastructure matches the configuration I will asume there are no breaking changes...
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New Lifecycle Options and Refactoring Capabilities in Terraform 1.1 and 1.2
Also, an excellent tool can help with fast switching between different Terraform versions while you’re experimenting — tfswitch.
- Managing multiple terraform versions across modules
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Local credentials and MFA
https://tfswitch.warrensbox.com/ for switching between Terraform versions
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VSCode plugin very slow at terraform fmt on save
It was easy. I didn't use terraform-version files like you, but there are similar ways to automatically switch versions. https://github.com/warrensbox/terraform-switcher
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Terraforming in 2021 – new features, testing and compliance
Terraform Switcher - yet another project essentially doing the same written in go;
What are some alternatives?
rover - Interactive Terraform visualization. State and configuration explorer.
tfenv - Terraform version manager
b2 - Bridging Code and Interactive Visualization in Computational Notebooks
netmaker-gui - An alternate UI for Netmaker (https://github.com/gravitl/netmaker)
java - Structurizr for Java
terraform-ls - Terraform Language Server
c3 - :bar_chart: A D3-based reusable chart library
tflint - A Pluggable Terraform Linter
Azure-PlantUML - PlantUML sprites, macros, and other includes for Azure services
aws-vault - A vault for securely storing and accessing AWS credentials in development environments
cloudiscovery - The tool to help you discover resources in the cloud environment
inspec - InSpec: Auditing and Testing Framework