--- page_title: Resources - Configuration Language description: >- Resources correspond to infrastructure objects like virtual networks or compute instances. Learn about resource types, syntax, behavior, and arguments. --- # Resource Blocks > **Hands-on:** Try the [Terraform: Get Started](/terraform/tutorials/aws-get-started?utm_source=WEBSITE&utm_medium=WEB_IO&utm_offer=ARTICLE_PAGE&utm_content=DOCS) tutorials. _Resources_ are the most important element in the Terraform language. Each resource block describes one or more infrastructure objects, such as virtual networks, compute instances, or higher-level components such as DNS records. For information about how Terraform manages resources after applying a configuration, refer to [Resource Behavior](/terraform/language/resources/behavior). ## Resource Syntax A `resource` block declares a resource of a specific type with a specific local name. Terraform uses the name when referring to the resource in the same module, but it has no meaning outside that module's scope. In the following example, the `aws_instance` resource type is named `web`. The resource type and name must be unique within a module because they serve as an identifier for a given resource. ```hcl resource "aws_instance" "web" { ami = "ami-a1b2c3d4" instance_type = "t2.micro" } ``` Within the block body (between `{` and `}`) are the configuration arguments for the resource itself. The arguments often depend on the resource type. In this example, both `ami` and `instance_type` are special arguments for [the `aws_instance` resource type](https://registry.terraform.io/providers/hashicorp/aws/latest/docs/resources/instance). -> **Note:** Resource names must start with a letter or underscore, and may contain only letters, digits, underscores, and dashes. Resource declarations can include more advanced features, such as single resource declarations that produce multiple similar remote objects, but only a small subset is required for initial use. ## Resource Types Each resource is associated with a single _resource type_, which determines the kind of infrastructure object it manages and what arguments and other attributes the resource supports. ### Providers A [provider](/terraform/language/providers/requirements) is a plugin for Terraform that offers a collection of resource types. Each resource type is implemented by a provider. A provider provides resources to manage a single cloud or on-premises infrastructure platform. Providers are distributed separately from Terraform, but Terraform can automatically install most providers when initializing a working directory. To manage resources, a Terraform module must specify the required providers. Refer to [Provider Requirements](/terraform/language/providers/requirements) for additional information. Most providers need some configuration to access their remote API, which is provided by the root module. Refer to [Provider Configuration](/terraform/language/providers/configuration) for additional information. Based on a resource type's name, Terraform can usually determine which provider to use. By convention, resource type names start with their provider's preferred local name. When using multiple configurations of a provider or non-preferred local provider names, you must use [the `provider` meta-argument](/terraform/language/meta-arguments/resource-provider) to manually choose a provider configuration. ### Resource Arguments Most of the arguments within the body of a `resource` block are specific to the selected resource type. The resource type's documentation lists which arguments are available and how their values should be formatted. The values for resource arguments can make full use of [expressions](/terraform/language/expressions) and other dynamic Terraform language features. [Meta-arguments](#meta-arguments) are defined by Terraform and apply across all resource types. ### Documentation for Resource Types Every Terraform provider has its own documentation, describing its resource types and their arguments. Some provider documentation is still part of Terraform's core documentation, but the [Terraform Registry](https://registry.terraform.io/browse/providers) is the main home for all publicly available provider docs. When viewing a provider's page on the Terraform Registry, you can click the **Documentation** link in the header to browse its documentation. The documentation is versioned. To choose a different version of the provider documentation, click on the version in the provider breadcrumbs to choose a version from the drop-down menu. ## Meta-Arguments The Terraform language defines the following meta-arguments, which can be used with any resource type to change the behavior of resources: - [`depends_on`, for specifying hidden dependencies](/terraform/language/meta-arguments/depends_on) - [`count`, for creating multiple resource instances according to a count](/terraform/language/meta-arguments/count) - [`for_each`, to create multiple instances according to a map, or set of strings](/terraform/language/meta-arguments/for_each) - [`provider`, for selecting a non-default provider configuration](/terraform/language/meta-arguments/resource-provider) - [`lifecycle`, for lifecycle customizations](/terraform/language/meta-arguments/lifecycle) - [`provisioner`, for taking extra actions after resource creation](/terraform/language/resources/provisioners/syntax) ## Removing Resources -> **Note:** The `removed` block is available in Terraform v1.7 and later. For earlier Terraform versions, you can use the [`terraform state rm` CLI command](/terraform/cli/commands/state/rm) as a separate step. To remove a resource from Terraform, simply delete the `resource` block from your Terraform configuration. By default, after you remove the `resource` block, Terraform will plan to destroy any real infrastructure object managed by that resource. Sometimes you may wish to remove a resource from your Terraform configuration without destroying the real infrastructure object it manages. In this case, the resource will be removed from the [Terraform state](/terraform/language/state), but the real infrastructure object will not be destroyed. To declare that a resource was removed from Terraform configuration but that its managed object should not be destroyed, remove the `resource` block from your configuration and replace it with a `removed` block: ```hcl removed { from = aws_instance.example lifecycle { destroy = false } } ``` The `from` argument is the address of the resource you want to remove, without any instance keys (such as "aws_instance.example[1]"). The `lifecycle` block is required. The `destroy` argument determines whether Terraform will attempt to destroy the object managed by the resource or not. A value of `false` means that Terraform will remove the resource from state without destroying it. A `removed` block may also contain a [Destroy-Time Provisioner](/terraform/language/resources/provisioners/syntax#destroy-time-provisioners), so that the provisioner can remain in the configuration even though the `resource` block has been removed. ```hcl removed { from = aws_instance.example lifecycle { destroy = true } provisioner "local-exec" { when = destroy command = "echo 'Instance ${self.id} has been destroyed.'" } } ``` The same referencing rules apply as in normal destroy-time provisioners, with only `count.index`, `each.key`, and `self` allowed. The provisioner must specify `when = destroy`, and the `removed` block must use `destroy = true` in order for the provisioner to execute. ## Custom Condition Checks You can use `precondition` and `postcondition` blocks to specify assumptions and guarantees about how the resource operates. The following example creates a precondition that checks whether the AMI is properly configured. ```hcl resource "aws_instance" "example" { instance_type = "t2.micro" ami = "ami-abc123" lifecycle { # The AMI ID must refer to an AMI that contains an operating system # for the `x86_64` architecture. precondition { condition = data.aws_ami.example.architecture == "x86_64" error_message = "The selected AMI must be for the x86_64 architecture." } } } ``` [Custom condition checks](/terraform/language/expressions/custom-conditions#preconditions-and-postconditions) can help capture assumptions so that future maintainers understand the configuration design and intent. They also return useful information about errors earlier and in context, helping consumers to diagnose issues in their configuration. ## Operation Timeouts Some resource types provide a special `timeouts` nested block argument that allows you to customize how long certain operations are allowed to take before being considered to have failed. For example, [`aws_db_instance`](https://registry.terraform.io/providers/hashicorp/aws/latest/docs/resources/db_instance) allows configurable timeouts for `create`, `update`, and `delete` operations. Timeouts are handled entirely by the resource type implementation in the provider, but resource types offering these features follow the convention of defining a child block called `timeouts` that has a nested argument named after each operation that has a configurable timeout value. Each of these arguments takes a string representation of a duration, such as `"60m"` for 60 minutes, `"10s"` for ten seconds, or `"2h"` for two hours. ```hcl resource "aws_db_instance" "example" { # ... timeouts { create = "60m" delete = "2h" } } ``` The set of configurable operations is chosen by each resource type. Most resource types do not support the `timeouts` block at all. Consult the documentation for each resource type to see which operations it offers for configuration, if any.