See the docs for usage information
Should you want to validate a change locally, the --debug
flag allows you to execute the provider against a terraform instance locally.
This also allows for debuggers (e.g. delve) to be attached to the provider.
go run main.go --debug
# Copy the TF_REATTACH_PROVIDERS env var
# In a new terminal
cd examples/your-example
TF_REATTACH_PROVIDERS=... terraform init
TF_REATTACH_PROVIDERS=... terraform apply
- conductorone_access_conflict
- conductorone_access_profile
- conductorone_access_profile_requestable_entries
- conductorone_access_profile_visibility_bindings
- conductorone_app
- conductorone_app_entitlement_automation
- conductorone_app_entitlement_proxy_binding
- conductorone_app_resource
- conductorone_app_resource_type
- conductorone_app_entitlement_owner
- conductorone_app_owner
- conductorone_bundle_automation
- conductorone_compliance_framework
- conductorone_connector_credential
- conductorone_custom_app_entitlement
- conductorone_policy
- conductorone_risk_level
- conductorone_webhook
- conductorone_access_profile
- conductorone_app
- conductorone_app_entitlement
- conductorone_app_entitlement_automation
- conductorone_app_entitlement_proxy_binding
- conductorone_app_entitlements
- conductorone_app_resource
- conductorone_app_resource_type
- conductorone_app_resources
- conductorone_aws_external_id
- conductorone_bundle_automation
- conductorone_compliance_framework
- conductorone_connector_credential
- conductorone_policy
- conductorone_risk_level
- conductorone_user
- conductorone_webhook
Terraform allows you to use local provider builds by setting a dev_overrides
block in a configuration file called .terraformrc
. This block overrides all other configured installation methods.
Terraform searches for the .terraformrc
file in your home directory and applies any configuration settings you set.
provider_installation {
dev_overrides {
"registry.terraform.io/terraform/scaffolding" = "<PATH>"
}
# For all other providers, install them directly from their origin provider
# registries as normal. If you omit this, Terraform will _only_ use
# the dev_overrides block, and so no other providers will be available.
direct {}
}
Your <PATH>
may vary depending on how your Go environment variables are configured. Execute go env GOBIN
to set it, then set the <PATH>
to the value returned. If nothing is returned, set it to the default location, $HOME/go/bin
.
- This version introduces a breaking change to the
request_catalog
resource and datasource. Therequest_catalog
resource and datasource are now theaccess_profile
resource and datasource. - There are also breaking changes to many of the datasources, as we switched to using search endpoints to give more options on how to filter the result. This may require you to update your Terraform configurations to use the proper fields for the datasources as some of the field names have changed.
- This version fixes issues with importing app entitlements. The SDK and the provider schema did not match so imports were broken, the provider was changed to match the SDK which introduced a breaking change. the
max_grant_druation
object was removed and the internalduration_unset
andgrant_unset
fields have been moved out.
- This version fixes issue where you weren't able to update app owners on the app resource by breaking out app owners into it's own resource. This will break any Terraform configurations that specify appOwners on the app resource. To use the new version of the provider you will need to use the new app_owners resource to configure the owners of an app, and no longer specify owners on the app resource.
- This version introduces a breaking change to the
app_entitlement
datasource. Theapp_entitlement
datasource now nests thegrant_duration
andgrant_unset
inside themax_grant_duration
field.
- This version introduces a breaking change to the
app_entitlement_owners
resource. Theapp_entitlement_owners
resource now requires a list of strings calleduser_ids
, which is used to set the owners on the resource. The list ofuser_ids
will replace any existing owners on the app entitlement with the new list of owners.
While we value open-source contributions to this SDK, this library is generated programmatically. Feel free to open a PR or a Github issue as a proof of concept and we'll do our best to include it in a future release !
SDK Created by Speakeasy
ConductorOne API: The ConductorOne API is a HTTP API for managing ConductorOne resources.
To install this provider, copy and paste this code into your Terraform configuration. Then, run terraform init
.
terraform {
required_providers {
conductorone = {
source = "conductorone/conductorone"
version = "1.4.4"
}
}
}
provider "conductorone" {
# Configuration options
}
Should you want to validate a change locally, the --debug
flag allows you to execute the provider against a terraform instance locally.
This also allows for debuggers (e.g. delve) to be attached to the provider.
go run main.go --debug
# Copy the TF_REATTACH_PROVIDERS env var
# In a new terminal
cd examples/your-example
TF_REATTACH_PROVIDERS=... terraform init
TF_REATTACH_PROVIDERS=... terraform apply
Terraform allows you to use local provider builds by setting a dev_overrides
block in a configuration file called .terraformrc
. This block overrides all other configured installation methods.
- Execute
go build
to construct a binary calledterraform-provider-conductorone
- Ensure that the
.terraformrc
file is configured with adev_overrides
section such that your local copy of terraform can see the provider binary
Terraform searches for the .terraformrc
file in your home directory and applies any configuration settings you set.
provider_installation {
dev_overrides {
"registry.terraform.io/conductorone/conductorone" = "<PATH>"
}
# For all other providers, install them directly from their origin provider
# registries as normal. If you omit this, Terraform will _only_ use
# the dev_overrides block, and so no other providers will be available.
direct {}
}