- The OpenTofu Language
- Functions
- templatefile
templatefile
Function
templatefile
reads the file at the given path and renders its content
as a template using a supplied set of template variables.
The template syntax is the same as for
string templates
in the main OpenTofu language, including interpolation sequences delimited with
${
... }
. This function just allows longer template sequences to be factored
out into a separate file for readability.
The "vars" argument must be an object. Within the template file, each of the keys in the map is available as a variable for interpolation. The template may also use any other function available in the OpenTofu language. Variable names must each start with a letter, followed by zero or more letters, digits, or underscores.
Strings in the OpenTofu language are sequences of Unicode characters, so this function will interpret the file contents as UTF-8 encoded text and return the resulting Unicode characters. If the file contains invalid UTF-8 sequences then this function will produce an error.
This function can be used only with files that already exist on disk at the beginning of an OpenTofu run. Functions do not participate in the dependency graph, so this function cannot be used with files that are generated dynamically during an OpenTofu operation.
*.tftpl
is the recommended naming pattern to use for your template files.
OpenTofu will not prevent you from using other names, but following this
convention will help your editor understand the content and likely provide
better editing experience as a result.
Recursion
There are a few limitations to be aware of if recursion is used with templatefile.
Any recursive calls to templatefile
will have a limited call depth (1024 by default).
This is to prevent crashes due to unintential infinite recursive calls and limit the chance
of Out Of Memory crashes.
As tail-recursion is not supported, all documents in a call stack must be loaded into memory before the stack can unwind. On most modern systems and configurations this will likely not be an issue, but it is worth being mindful of.
If the maximum recursion depth is hit during execution, a concise error will be provided
which describes the first few steps of the call stack to help you diagnose the issue.
If you need the full call stack, setting TF_LOG=debug
will cause the full templatefile
callstack to be printed to the console.
If your configuration requires a larger maximum recursion depth, you can override the
default using the TF_TEMPLATE_RECURSION_DEPTH
environment variable. This is not
recommended and is only provided as an escape hatch. Additionally, setting it lower
than the 1024 default has the potential to cause problems with modules that use
the templatefile function.
Examples
Lists
Given a template file backends.tftpl
with the following content:
The templatefile
function renders the template:
Maps
Given a template file config.tftpl
with the following content:
The templatefile
function renders the template:
Generating JSON or YAML from a template
If the string you want to generate will be in JSON or YAML syntax, it's often tricky and tedious to write a template that will generate valid JSON or YAML that will be interpreted correctly when using lots of individual interpolation sequences and directives.
Instead, you can write a template that consists only of a single interpolated
call to either jsonencode
or
yamlencode
, specifying the value to encode using
normal OpenTofu expression syntax
as in the following examples:
Given the same input as the backends.tftpl
example in the previous section,
this will produce a valid JSON or YAML representation of the given data
structure, without the need to manually handle escaping or delimiters.
In the latest examples above, the repetition based on elements of ip_addrs
is
achieved by using a
for
expression
rather than by using
template directives.
If the resulting template is small, you can choose instead to write
jsonencode
or yamlencode
calls inline in your main configuration files, and
avoid creating separate template files at all:
For more information, see the main documentation for
jsonencode
and yamlencode
.
Related Functions
file
reads a file from disk and returns its literal contents without any template interpretation.templatestring
takes a string and renders it as a template using a supplied set of template variables.