terraform-search-import
À propos
Cette compétence Claude découvre les ressources cloud existantes à l'aide de requêtes Terraform Search et les importe en masse dans la gestion Terraform. Elle est conçue pour intégrer une infrastructure non gérée sous le contrôle de Terraform, auditer des ressources ou migrer vers l'IaC. La compétence nécessite Terraform >=1.14 et génère une configuration pour les opérations d'importation en masse.
Installation rapide
Claude Code
Recommandénpx 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-search-importCopiez et collez cette commande dans Claude Code pour installer cette compétence
Documentation
Terraform Search and Bulk Import
Discover existing cloud resources using declarative queries and generate configuration for bulk import into Terraform state.
References:
When to Use
- Bringing unmanaged resources under Terraform control
- Auditing existing cloud infrastructure
- Migrating from manual provisioning to IaC
- Discovering resources across multiple regions/accounts
IMPORTANT: Check Provider Support First
BEFORE starting, you MUST verify the target resource type is supported:
# Check what list resources are available
./scripts/list_resources.sh aws # Specific provider
./scripts/list_resources.sh # All configured providers
Decision Tree
- Identify target resource type (e.g., aws_s3_bucket, aws_instance)
- Check if supported: Run
./scripts/list_resources.sh <provider> - Choose workflow:
- ** If supported**: Check for terraform version available.
- ** If terraform version is above 1.14.0** Use Terraform Search workflow (below)
- ** If not supported or terraform version is below 1.14.0 **: Use Manual Discovery workflow (see references/MANUAL-IMPORT.md)
Prerequisites
Before writing queries, verify the provider supports list resources for your target resource type.
Discover Available List Resources
Run the helper script to extract supported list resources from your provider:
# From a directory with provider configuration (runs terraform init if needed)
./scripts/list_resources.sh aws # Specific provider
./scripts/list_resources.sh # All configured providers
Or manually query the provider schema:
terraform providers schema -json | jq '.provider_schemas | to_entries | map({key: (.key | split("/")[-1]), value: (.value.list_resource_schemas // {} | keys)})'
Terraform Search requires an initialized working directory. Ensure you have a configuration with the required provider before running queries:
# terraform.tf
terraform {
required_providers {
aws = {
source = "hashicorp/aws"
version = "~> 6.0"
}
}
}
Run terraform init to download the provider, then proceed with queries.
Terraform Search Workflow (Supported Resources Only)
- Create
.tfquery.hclfiles withlistblocks defining search queries - Run
terraform queryto discover matching resources - Generate configuration with
-generate-config-out=<file> - Review and refine generated
resourceandimportblocks - Run
terraform planandterraform applyto import
Query File Structure
Query files use .tfquery.hcl extension and support:
providerblocks for authenticationlistblocks for resource discoveryvariableandlocalsblocks for parameterization
# discovery.tfquery.hcl
provider "aws" {
region = "us-west-2"
}
list "aws_instance" "all" {
provider = aws
}
List Block Syntax
list "<list_type>" "<symbolic_name>" {
provider = <provider_reference> # Required
# Optional: filter configuration (provider-specific)
# The `config` block schema is provider-specific. Discover available options using `terraform providers schema -json | jq '.provider_schemas."registry.terraform.io/hashicorp/<provider>".list_resource_schemas."<resource_type>"'`
config {
filter {
name = "<filter_name>"
values = ["<value1>", "<value2>"]
}
region = "<region>" # AWS-specific
}
# Optional: limit results
limit = 100
}
Supported List Resources
Provider support for list resources varies by version. Always check what's available for your specific provider version using the discovery script.
Query Examples
Basic Discovery
# Find all EC2 instances in configured region
list "aws_instance" "all" {
provider = aws
}
Filtered Discovery
# Find instances by tag
list "aws_instance" "production" {
provider = aws
config {
filter {
name = "tag:Environment"
values = ["production"]
}
}
}
# Find instances by type
list "aws_instance" "large" {
provider = aws
config {
filter {
name = "instance-type"
values = ["t3.large", "t3.xlarge"]
}
}
}
Multi-Region Discovery
provider "aws" {
region = "us-west-2"
}
locals {
regions = ["us-west-2", "us-east-1", "eu-west-1"]
}
list "aws_instance" "all_regions" {
for_each = toset(local.regions)
provider = aws
config {
region = each.value
}
}
Parameterized Queries
variable "target_environment" {
type = string
default = "staging"
}
list "aws_instance" "by_env" {
provider = aws
config {
filter {
name = "tag:Environment"
values = [var.target_environment]
}
}
}
Running Queries
# Execute queries and display results
terraform query
# Generate configuration file
terraform query -generate-config-out=imported.tf
# Pass variables
terraform query -var='target_environment=production'
Query Output Format
list.aws_instance.all account_id=123456789012,id=i-0abc123,region=us-west-2 web-server
Columns: <query_address> <identity_attributes> <name_tag>
Generated Configuration
The -generate-config-out flag creates:
# __generated__ by Terraform
resource "aws_instance" "all_0" {
ami = "ami-0c55b159cbfafe1f0"
instance_type = "t2.micro"
# ... all attributes
}
import {
to = aws_instance.all_0
provider = aws
identity = {
account_id = "123456789012"
id = "i-0abc123"
region = "us-west-2"
}
}
Post-Generation Cleanup
Generated configuration includes all attributes. Clean up by:
- Remove computed/read-only attributes
- Replace hardcoded values with variables
- Add proper resource naming
- Organize into appropriate files
# Before: generated
resource "aws_instance" "all_0" {
ami = "ami-0c55b159cbfafe1f0"
instance_type = "t2.micro"
arn = "arn:aws:ec2:..." # Remove - computed
id = "i-0abc123" # Remove - computed
# ... many more attributes
}
# After: cleaned
resource "aws_instance" "web_server" {
ami = var.ami_id
instance_type = var.instance_type
subnet_id = var.subnet_id
tags = {
Name = "web-server"
Environment = var.environment
}
}
Import by Identity
Generated imports use identity-based import (Terraform 1.12+):
import {
to = aws_instance.web
provider = aws
identity = {
account_id = "123456789012"
id = "i-0abc123"
region = "us-west-2"
}
}
Best Practices
Query Design
- Start broad, then add filters to narrow results
- Use
limitto prevent overwhelming output - Test queries before generating configuration
Configuration Management
- Review all generated code before applying
- Remove unnecessary default values
- Use consistent naming conventions
- Add proper variable abstraction
Troubleshooting
| Issue | Solution |
|---|---|
| "No list resources found" | Check provider version supports list resources |
| Query returns empty | Verify region and filter values |
| Generated config has errors | Remove computed attributes, fix deprecated arguments |
| Import fails | Ensure resource not already in state |
Complete Example
# main.tf - Initialize provider
terraform {
required_version = ">= 1.14"
required_providers {
aws = {
source = "hashicorp/aws"
version = "~> 6.0" # Always use latest version
}
}
}
# discovery.tfquery.hcl - Define queries
provider "aws" {
region = "us-west-2"
}
list "aws_instance" "team_instances" {
provider = aws
config {
filter {
name = "tag:Owner"
values = ["platform"]
}
filter {
name = "instance-state-name"
values = ["running"]
}
}
limit = 50
}
# Execute workflow
terraform init
terraform query
terraform query -generate-config-out=generated.tf
# Review and clean generated.tf
terraform plan
terraform apply
Dépôt GitHub
Compétences associées
llamaguard
AutreLlamaGuard est le modèle de Meta, doté de 7 à 8 milliards de paramètres, conçu pour modérer les entrées et sorties des LLM selon six catégories de sécurité comme la violence et les discours haineux. Il offre une précision de 94 à 95 % et peut être déployé avec vLLM, Hugging Face ou Amazon SageMaker. Utilisez cette compétence pour intégrer facilement le filtrage de contenu et des garde-fous de sécurité dans vos applications d'IA.
cost-optimization
AutreCette compétence de Claude aide les développeurs à optimiser les coûts du cloud grâce au redimensionnement des ressources, aux stratégies d'étiquetage et à l'analyse des dépenses. Elle fournit un cadre pour réduire les dépenses cloud et mettre en œuvre une gouvernance des coûts sur AWS, Azure et GCP. Utilisez-la lorsque vous devez analyser les coûts d'infrastructure, redimensionner les ressources ou respecter des contraintes budgétaires.
quantizing-models-bitsandbytes
AutreCette compétence quantifie les LLMs en précision 8 bits ou 4 bits à l'aide de bitsandbytes, permettant une réduction de 50 à 75 % de la mémoire utilisée avec une perte de précision minime. Elle est idéale pour exécuter des modèles plus volumineux sur une mémoire GPU limitée ou pour accélérer l'inférence, prenant en charge des formats comme INT8, NF4 et FP4. La compétence s'intègre à HuggingFace Transformers et permet l'entraînement QLoRA ainsi que l'utilisation d'optimiseurs en 8 bits.
dispatching-parallel-agents
AutreCette compétence Claude déploie plusieurs agents pour enquêter et résoudre simultanément 3 problèmes indépendants ou plus. Elle est conçue pour des scénarios impliquant des défaillances non liées qui peuvent être résolues sans état partagé ni dépendances. La capacité fondamentale est la résolution de problèmes en parallèle, en assignant un agent par domaine problématique indépendant afin de maximiser l'efficacité.
