1288057b810b2082c756606f70de38c3b6d589a9
ci/woodpecker/push/apply Pipeline was successful
## Summary - Add K8s auth role woodpecker_terraform_git for CI pipeline authentication - Add consul secret backend role terraform-git for consul state storage tokens - Add consul ACL policy granting write access to infra/terraform/git/ key prefix - Add vault policy for reading consul creds at consul_root/au/syd1/creds/terraform-git ## Test plan - [ ] Verify terragrunt plan succeeds - [ ] Verify consul ACL policy is created correctly - [ ] Verify K8s auth role can authenticate from woodpecker namespace Reviewed-on: #73 Co-authored-by: Ben Vincent <ben@unkin.net> Co-committed-by: Ben Vincent <ben@unkin.net>
terraform-vault
A repository to manage the configuration of Vault secret engines, authentication modes and policies.
Usage
- Initialize Terraform
Once you have your backend block configured, you need to initialize your Terraform working directory to configure the backend:
terraform init
This command initializes the backend and checks the connection to Consul. If everything is set up correctly, Terraform will start using Consul as its backend for storing the state.
- Common terraform init Errors
If you encounter errors while running terraform init, check the following:
Consul server is reachable: Make sure that the address is correct and that you can connect to the Consul server.
Consul token (if using ACLs): Verify that the token has the correct permissions to write to the specified path in the Consul KV store.
- Example Consul KV Structure
In Consul, the state file will be stored in the KV store under the specified path:
terraform/state
You can check the Consul KV store by accessing the Consul UI or using the consul kv command to see the stored Terraform state:
consul kv get terraform/state
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