Terraform's state associates each real-world object with a configured resource at a specific resource address. This is seamless when changing a resource's attributes, but Terraform will lose track of a resource if you change its name, move it to a different module, or change its provider.
Usually that's fine: Terraform will destroy the old resource, replace it with a new one (using the new resource address), and update any resources that rely on its attributes.
In cases where it's important to preserve an existing infrastructure object, you can explicitly tell Terraform to associate it with a different configured resource.
For most cases we recommend using the Terraform language's refactoring features to document in your module exactly how the resource names have changed over time. Terraform reacts to this information automatically during planning, so users of your module do not need to take any unusual extra steps.
Hands On: Try the Use Configuration to Move Resources tutorial.
There are some other situations which require explicit state modifications, though. For those, consider the following Terraform commands:
The terraform state mv
command changes
which resource address in your configuration is associated with a particular
real-world object. Use this to preserve an object when renaming a resource, or
when moving a resource into or out of a child module.
The terraform state rm
command tells
Terraform to stop managing a resource as part of the current working directory
and workspace, without destroying the corresponding real-world object. (You
can later use terraform import
to start managing that resource in a
different workspace or a different Terraform configuration.)
The terraform state replace-provider
command
transfers existing resources to a new provider without requiring them to be
re-created.