A stack represents a collection of infrastructure that CDK for Terraform (CDKTF) synthesizes as a dedicated Terraform configuration. Stacks allow you to separate the state management for multiple environments within an application.
You can instantiate the same resource multiple times throughout your infrastructure. For example, you may want to create multiple S3 Buckets with different configurations. Instances that share the same stack parent element are considered to be part of the same scope. You must set a different name property for each instance to avoid naming conflicts.
The following example generates a single Terraform configuration in the configured output folder. When you run cdktf synth, the synthesized Terraform configuration will be in the folder cdktf.out/stacks/a-single-stack
You can specify multiple stacks in your application. For example, you may want a separate configuration for development, testing, and production environments.
The following example synthesizes multiple Terraform configurations in the configured output folder.
Running cdktf synth produces the following synthesized stacks.
$ cdktf list
Stack name Path
multiple-stacks-dev cdktf.out/stacks/multiple-stacks-dev
multiple-stacks-staging cdktf.out/stacks/multiple-stacks-staging
multiple-stacks-production-us cdktf.out/stacks/multiple-stacks-production-us
multiple-stacks-production-eu cdktf.out/stacks/multiple-stacks-production-eu
$ cdktf list
Stack name Path
multiple-stacks-dev cdktf.out/stacks/multiple-stacks-dev
multiple-stacks-staging cdktf.out/stacks/multiple-stacks-staging
multiple-stacks-production-us cdktf.out/stacks/multiple-stacks-production-us
multiple-stacks-production-eu cdktf.out/stacks/multiple-stacks-production-eu
To deploy and destroy multiple stacks at once, either specify multiple stacks in the cdktf deploy and cdktf destroy command or use a wild card glob (e.g., cdktf deploy '*-production').
Refer to Best Practices for more details about when to create multiple stacks and how to structure them.
When you reference resources from one stack in another stack, you can do so by exposing the resource in the source stack and referencing it in the target stack.
From a usage perspective it looks like we are accessing the id value of vpc from the origin-stack instance of VpcStack and then referencing it in the target-stack instance of BackendStack.
Accessing a value from a different stack causes the value to be exported as TerraformOutput in the origin stack.
The value is than accessed through a TerraformRemoteState in the target stack.
Both are automatically added to the respective stacks to make the process seemless.
When you are using Terraform Cloud it's necessary for each stack to be it's own workspace.
This means that you need to create a separate workspace for each stack and you need to set the permissions to allow access between the stacks.
We add the stack dependencies in the cdktf.out/manifest.json file for each stack under dependencies.
By default a stack is dependant on another stack when the data used origins in that stack.
If you e.g. write this.allResources = Fn.mergeLists(resourceFromStackA.items, resourceFromStackB.items) in Stack C and use stackC.allResources in Stack D, Stack D will be dependant on Stack A and B, but not C since that is not the origin of the data.
To make the dependency explicit, runstackD.addDependency(stackC).
If you want to keep the result of the function attached to one stack and save its state, create a Terraform Local value and expose it. The following example creates a TerraformLocal.
The CLI will error if you deploy your application without first deploying the dependencies. It will also error if you try to destroy infrastructure without destroying the dependent stacks first. To remove these safeguards, add the --ignore-missing-stack-dependencies to the deploy and destroy commands.
Until version 0.2, CDKTF only supported a single stack. For local state handling, CDKTF used a terraform.tfstate in the project root folder. With version >= 0.3, the local state file reflects the stack name it belongs to in its file name. When a terraform.tfstate file is still present in the project root folder, it has to be renamed to match the schema terraform.<stack-name>.tfstate manually.
For anything on the top-level terraform block that is not natively implemented, use the stack escape hatch to define a configuration. For example, define remote backend using the addOverride method in TypeScript.
Important: Escape hatches must not have empty arguments or objects, because CDKTF removes them from the synthesized JSON configuration.
The following example synthesizes a Terraform configuration with the remote backend included in the terraform block.