- Expressions
- Function Calls
Function Calls
The OpenTF language has a number of built-in functions that can be used in expressions to transform and combine values. These are similar to the operators but all follow a common syntax:
<FUNCTION NAME>(<ARGUMENT 1>, <ARGUMENT 2>)
The function name specifies which function to call. Each defined function expects a specific number of arguments with specific value types, and returns a specific value type as a result.
Some functions take an arbitrary number of arguments. For example, the min
function takes any amount of number arguments and returns the one that is
numerically smallest:
min(55, 3453, 2)
A function call expression evaluates to the function's return value.
Available Functions
For a full list of available functions, see the function reference.
Expanding Function Arguments
If the arguments to pass to a function are available in a list or tuple value,
that value can be expanded into separate arguments. Provide the list value as
an argument and follow it with the ...
symbol:
min([55, 2453, 2]...)
The expansion symbol is three periods (...
), not a Unicode ellipsis character
(…
). Expansion is a special syntax that is only available in function calls.
Using Sensitive Data as Function Arguments
When using sensitive data, such as an input variable or an output defined as sensitive as function arguments, the result of the function call will be marked as sensitive.
This is a conservative behavior that is true irrespective of the function being
called. For example, passing an object containing a sensitive input variable to
the keys()
function will result in a list that is sensitive:
> local.baz
{
"a" = (sensitive value)
"b" = "dog"
}
> keys(local.baz)
(sensitive value)
When OpenTF Calls Functions
Most of OpenTF's built-in functions are, in programming language terms, pure functions. This means that their result is based only on their arguments and so it doesn't make any practical difference when OpenTF would call them.
However, a small subset of functions interact with outside state and so for those it can be helpful to know when OpenTF will call them in relation to other events that occur in an OpenTF run.
The small set of special functions includes
file
,
templatefile
,
timestamp
,
and uuid
.
If you are not working with these functions then you don't need
to read this section, although the information here may still be interesting
background information.
The file
and templatefile
functions are intended for reading files that
are included as a static part of the configuration and so OpenTF will
execute these functions as part of initial configuration validation, before
taking any other actions with the configuration. That means you cannot use
either function to read files that your configuration might generate
dynamically on disk as part of the plan or apply steps.
The timestamp
function returns a representation of the current system time
at the point when OpenTF calls it, and the uuid
function returns a random
result which differs on each call. Without any special behavior, these would
both cause the final configuration during the apply step not to match the
actions shown in the plan, which violates the OpenTF execution model.
For that reason, OpenTF arranges for both of those functions to produce
unknown value results during the
plan step, with the real result being decided only during the apply step.
For timestamp
in particular, this means that the recorded time will be
the instant when OpenTF began applying the change, rather than when
OpenTF planned the change.
For more details on the behavior of these functions, refer to their own documentation pages.