terraform-style-guide
About
This skill generates Terraform HCL code that adheres to HashiCorp's official style conventions and best practices. It's designed for writing, reviewing, or generating Terraform configurations, ensuring proper file organization and code structure. Use it to automatically produce well-formatted code with correct provider setup, dependency ordering, and variable usage.
Quick Install
Claude Code
Recommendednpx skills add hashicorp/agent-skills -a claude-code/plugin add https://github.com/hashicorp/agent-skillsgit clone https://github.com/hashicorp/agent-skills.git ~/.claude/skills/terraform-style-guideCopy and paste this command in Claude Code to install this skill
Documentation
Terraform Style Guide
Generate and maintain Terraform code following HashiCorp's official style conventions and best practices.
Reference: HashiCorp Terraform Style Guide
Code Generation Strategy
When generating Terraform code:
- Start with provider configuration and version constraints
- Create data sources before dependent resources
- Build resources in dependency order
- Add outputs for key resource attributes
- Use variables for all configurable values
File Organization
| File | Purpose |
|---|---|
terraform.tf | Terraform and provider version requirements |
providers.tf | Provider configurations |
main.tf | Primary resources and data sources |
variables.tf | Input variable declarations (alphabetical) |
outputs.tf | Output value declarations (alphabetical) |
locals.tf | Local value declarations |
Example Structure
# terraform.tf
terraform {
required_version = ">= 1.14"
required_providers {
aws = {
source = "hashicorp/aws"
version = "~> 6.0"
}
}
}
# variables.tf
variable "environment" {
description = "Target deployment environment"
type = string
validation {
condition = contains(["dev", "staging", "prod"], var.environment)
error_message = "Environment must be dev, staging, or prod."
}
}
# locals.tf
locals {
common_tags = {
Environment = var.environment
ManagedBy = "Terraform"
}
}
# main.tf
resource "aws_vpc" "main" {
cidr_block = var.vpc_cidr
enable_dns_hostnames = true
tags = merge(local.common_tags, {
Name = "${var.project_name}-${var.environment}-vpc"
})
}
# outputs.tf
output "vpc_id" {
description = "ID of the created VPC"
value = aws_vpc.main.id
}
Code Formatting
Indentation and Alignment
- Use two spaces per nesting level (no tabs)
- Align equals signs for consecutive arguments
resource "aws_instance" "web" {
ami = "ami-0c55b159cbfafe1f0"
instance_type = "t2.micro"
subnet_id = "subnet-12345678"
tags = {
Name = "web-server"
Environment = "production"
}
}
Block Organization
Arguments precede blocks, with meta-arguments first:
resource "aws_instance" "example" {
# Meta-arguments
count = 3
# Arguments
ami = "ami-0c55b159cbfafe1f0"
instance_type = "t2.micro"
# Blocks
root_block_device {
volume_size = 20
}
# Lifecycle last
lifecycle {
create_before_destroy = true
}
}
Naming Conventions
- Use lowercase with underscores for all names
- Use descriptive nouns excluding the resource type
- Be specific and meaningful
- Resource names must be singular, not plural
- Default to
mainfor resources where a specific descriptive name is redundant or unavailable, provided only one instance exists
# Bad
resource "aws_instance" "webAPI-aws-instance" {}
resource "aws_instance" "web_apis" {}
variable "name" {}
# Good
resource "aws_instance" "web_api" {}
resource "aws_vpc" "main" {}
variable "application_name" {}
Variables
Every variable must include type and description:
variable "instance_type" {
description = "EC2 instance type for the web server"
type = string
default = "t2.micro"
validation {
condition = contains(["t2.micro", "t2.small", "t2.medium"], var.instance_type)
error_message = "Instance type must be t2.micro, t2.small, or t2.medium."
}
}
variable "database_password" {
description = "Password for the database admin user"
type = string
sensitive = true
}
Outputs
Every output must include description:
output "instance_id" {
description = "ID of the EC2 instance"
value = aws_instance.web.id
}
output "database_password" {
description = "Database administrator password"
value = aws_db_instance.main.password
sensitive = true
}
Dynamic Resource Creation
Prefer for_each over count
# Bad - count for multiple resources
resource "aws_instance" "web" {
count = var.instance_count
tags = { Name = "web-${count.index}" }
}
# Good - for_each with named instances
variable "instance_names" {
type = set(string)
default = ["web-1", "web-2", "web-3"]
}
resource "aws_instance" "web" {
for_each = var.instance_names
tags = { Name = each.key }
}
count for Conditional Creation
resource "aws_cloudwatch_metric_alarm" "cpu" {
count = var.enable_monitoring ? 1 : 0
alarm_name = "high-cpu-usage"
threshold = 80
}
Security Best Practices
Refer to SECURITY.md. It includes guidance on encrypting resources, preventing sensitive data in state, and secure configurations.
Version Pinning
terraform {
required_version = ">= 1.14"
required_providers {
aws = {
source = "hashicorp/aws"
version = "~> 6.0"
}
}
}
Use the latest major version of each provider and the latest minor version of Terraform, unless otherwise constrained by a dependency lock file or by other modules used by the configuration.
Version constraint operators:
= 1.0.0- Exact version>= 1.0.0- Greater than or equal~> 1.0- Allow rightmost component to increment>= 1.0, < 2.0- Version range
Provider Configuration
provider "aws" {
region = "us-west-2"
default_tags {
tags = {
ManagedBy = "Terraform"
Project = var.project_name
}
}
}
# Aliased provider for multi-region
provider "aws" {
alias = "east"
region = "us-east-1"
}
Version Control
Never commit:
terraform.tfstate,terraform.tfstate.backup.terraform/directory*.tfplan.tfvarsfiles with sensitive data
Always commit:
- All
.tfconfiguration files .terraform.lock.hcl(dependency lock file)
Validation Tools
Run before committing:
terraform fmt -recursive
terraform validate
Additional tools:
tflint- Linting and best practicescheckov/tfsec- Security scanning
Code Review Checklist
- Code formatted with
terraform fmt - Configuration validated with
terraform validate - Files organized according to standard structure
- All variables have type and description
- All outputs have descriptions
- Resource names use descriptive nouns with underscores
- Version constraints pinned explicitly
- Sensitive values marked with
sensitive = true - No hardcoded credentials or secrets
- Security best practices applied
Based on: HashiCorp Terraform Style Guide
GitHub Repository
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