github.com/nathanielks/terraform@v0.6.1-0.20170509030759-13e1a62319dc/website/source/docs/commands/index.html.markdown (about)

     1  ---
     2  layout: "docs"
     3  page_title: "Commands"
     4  sidebar_current: "docs-commands"
     5  description: |-
     6    Terraform is controlled via a very easy to use command-line interface (CLI). Terraform is only a single command-line application: terraform. This application then takes a subcommand such as "apply" or "plan". The complete list of subcommands is in the navigation to the left.
     7  ---
     8  
     9  # Terraform Commands (CLI)
    10  
    11  Terraform is controlled via a very easy to use command-line interface (CLI).
    12  Terraform is only a single command-line application: terraform. This application
    13  then takes a subcommand such as "apply" or "plan". The complete list of subcommands
    14  is in the navigation to the left.
    15  
    16  The terraform CLI is a well-behaved command line application. In erroneous cases,
    17  a non-zero exit status will be returned. It also responds to -h and --help as you'd
    18  most likely expect.
    19  
    20  To view a list of the available commands at any time, just run terraform with no arguments:
    21  
    22  ```text
    23  $ terraform
    24  Usage: terraform [--version] [--help] <command> [args]
    25  
    26  The available commands for execution are listed below.
    27  The most common, useful commands are shown first, followed by
    28  less common or more advanced commands. If you're just getting
    29  started with Terraform, stick with the common commands. For the
    30  other commands, please read the help and docs before usage.
    31  
    32  Common commands:
    33      apply              Builds or changes infrastructure
    34      console            Interactive console for Terraform interpolations
    35      destroy            Destroy Terraform-managed infrastructure
    36      env                Environment management
    37      fmt                Rewrites config files to canonical format
    38      get                Download and install modules for the configuration
    39      graph              Create a visual graph of Terraform resources
    40      import             Import existing infrastructure into Terraform
    41      init               Initialize a new or existing Terraform configuration
    42      output             Read an output from a state file
    43      plan               Generate and show an execution plan
    44      push               Upload this Terraform module to Terraform Enterprise to run
    45      refresh            Update local state file against real resources
    46      show               Inspect Terraform state or plan
    47      taint              Manually mark a resource for recreation
    48      untaint            Manually unmark a resource as tainted
    49      validate           Validates the Terraform files
    50      version            Prints the Terraform version
    51  
    52  All other commands:
    53      debug              Debug output management (experimental)
    54      force-unlock       Manually unlock the terraform state
    55      state              Advanced state management
    56  ```
    57  
    58  To get help for any specific command, pass the -h flag to the relevant subcommand. For example,
    59  to see help about the graph subcommand:
    60  
    61  ```text
    62  $ terraform graph -h
    63  Usage: terraform graph [options] PATH
    64  
    65    Outputs the visual graph of Terraform resources. If the path given is
    66    the path to a configuration, the dependency graph of the resources are
    67    shown. If the path is a plan file, then the dependency graph of the
    68    plan itself is shown.
    69  
    70    The graph is outputted in DOT format. The typical program that can
    71    read this format is GraphViz, but many web services are also available
    72    to read this format.
    73  ```