Authenticate Terraform using Managed Identity for Azure services
Terraform enables the definition, preview, and deployment of cloud infrastructure. Using Terraform, you create configuration files using HCL syntax. The HCL syntax allows you to specify the cloud provider - such as Azure - and the elements that make up your cloud infrastructure. After you create your configuration files, you create an execution plan that allows you to preview your infrastructure changes before they're deployed. Once you verify the changes, you apply the execution plan to deploy the infrastructure.
Managed identities for Azure resources is used to authenticate to Azure Active Directory. HashiCorp recommends using either a Service Principal or managed identity if you're running Terraform in a non-interactive manner. There are two types of managed identities: system-assigned and user-assigned. In this article, you learn how to use system-assigned identities.
Define a system-assigned managed identity
To use a system-assigned managed identity, use the following steps:
Specify the
identity
block and settype
toSystemAssigned
.resource "azurerm_linux_virtual_machine" "example" { # ... identity { type = "SystemAssigned" } }
Grant the
Contributor
role to the identity.data "azurerm_subscription" "current" {} data "azurerm_role_definition" "contributor" { name = "Contributor" } resource "azurerm_role_assignment" "example" { scope = data.azurerm_subscription.current.id role_definition_name = "Contributor" principal_id = azurerm_linux_virtual_machine.example.identity[0].principal_id }
Configure with environment variables, specifying your Azure credentials.
export ARM_USE_MSI=true export ARM_SUBSCRIPTION_ID=xxxxxxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxxxxxxxxxx export ARM_TENANT_ID=xxxxxxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxxxxxxxxxx
Example: Create a virtual machine with a managed identity
Create a directory in which to test the sample Terraform code and make it the current directory.
Create a file named
providers.tf
and insert the following code.terraform { required_version = ">=0.12" required_providers { azapi = { source = "azure/azapi" version = "~>1.5" } azurerm = { source = "hashicorp/azurerm" version = "~>2.0" } random = { source = "hashicorp/random" version = "~>3.0" } } } provider "azurerm" { features {} }
Create a file named
main.tf
and insert the following code:resource "random_pet" "rg_name" { prefix = var.resource_group_name_prefix } resource "azurerm_resource_group" "rg" { location = var.resource_group_location name = random_pet.rg_name.id } data "azurerm_subscription" "current" {} resource "azurerm_virtual_network" "example" { name = "myVnet" address_space = ["10.0.0.0/16"] location = azurerm_resource_group.rg.location resource_group_name = azurerm_resource_group.rg.name } resource "azurerm_subnet" "example" { name = "mySubnet" resource_group_name = azurerm_resource_group.rg.name virtual_network_name = azurerm_virtual_network.example.name address_prefixes = ["10.0.2.0/24"] } resource "azurerm_network_interface" "example" { name = "myNic" location = azurerm_resource_group.rg.location resource_group_name = azurerm_resource_group.rg.name ip_configuration { name = "internal" subnet_id = azurerm_subnet.example.id private_ip_address_allocation = "Dynamic" } } resource "azurerm_linux_virtual_machine" "example" { name = "myVm" resource_group_name = azurerm_resource_group.rg.name location = azurerm_resource_group.rg.location size = "Standard_F2" network_interface_ids = [ azurerm_network_interface.example.id, ] computer_name = "hostname" admin_username = var.username admin_ssh_key { username = var.username public_key = azapi_resource_action.ssh_public_key_gen.output.publicKey } identity { type = "SystemAssigned" } os_disk { caching = "ReadWrite" storage_account_type = "Standard_LRS" } source_image_reference { publisher = "Canonical" offer = "0001-com-ubuntu-server-jammy" sku = "22_04-lts" version = "latest" } } data "azurerm_role_definition" "contributor" { name = "Contributor" } resource "azurerm_role_assignment" "example" { scope = data.azurerm_subscription.current.id role_definition_name = "Contributor" principal_id = azurerm_linux_virtual_machine.example.identity[0].principal_id }
Create a file named
ssh.tf
and insert the following code.resource "random_pet" "ssh_key_name" { prefix = "ssh" separator = "" } resource "azapi_resource_action" "ssh_public_key_gen" { type = "Microsoft.Compute/sshPublicKeys@2022-11-01" resource_id = azapi_resource.ssh_public_key.id action = "generateKeyPair" method = "POST" response_export_values = ["publicKey", "privateKey"] } resource "azapi_resource" "ssh_public_key" { type = "Microsoft.Compute/sshPublicKeys@2022-11-01" name = random_pet.ssh_key_name.id location = azurerm_resource_group.rg.location parent_id = azurerm_resource_group.rg.id } output "key_data" { value = azapi_resource_action.ssh_public_key_gen.output.publicKey } ```
Create a file named
variables.tf
and insert the following code:variable "resource_group_location" { type = string description = "Location of the resource group." default = "eastus" } variable "resource_group_name_prefix" { type = string description = "Prefix of the resource group name that's combined with a random ID so name is unique in your Azure subscription." default = "rg" } variable "username" { type = string description = "The username for the local account that will be created on the new VM." default = "azureadmin" }
Create a file named
outputs.tf
and insert the following code:output "resource_group_name" { value = azurerm_resource_group.rg.name } output "azurerm_linux_virtual_machine_name" { value = azurerm_linux_virtual_machine.example.name }