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Command: output

The opentf output command is used to extract the value of an output variable from the state file.

Usage

Usage: opentf output [options] [NAME]

With no additional arguments, output will display all the outputs for the root module. If an output NAME is specified, only the value of that output is printed.

The command-line flags are all optional. The following flags are available:

  • -json - If specified, the outputs are formatted as a JSON object, with a key per output. If NAME is specified, only the output specified will be returned. This can be piped into tools such as jq for further processing.
  • -raw - If specified, OpenTF will convert the specified output value to a string and print that string directly to the output, without any special formatting. This can be convenient when working with shell scripts, but it only supports string, number, and boolean values. Use -json instead for processing complex data types.
  • -no-color - If specified, output won't contain any color.
  • -state=path - Path to the state file. Defaults to "opentf.tfstate". Ignored when remote state is used.

Examples

These examples assume the following OpenTF output snippet.

output "instance_ips" {
value = aws_instance.web.*.public_ip
}

output "lb_address" {
value = aws_alb.web.public_dns
}

output "password" {
sensitive = true
value = var.secret_password
}

To list all outputs:

$ opentf output
instance_ips = [
"54.43.114.12",
"52.122.13.4",
"52.4.116.53"
]
lb_address = "my-app-alb-1657023003.us-east-1.elb.amazonaws.com"
password = <sensitive>

Note that outputs with the sensitive attribute will be redacted:

$ opentf output password
password = <sensitive>

To query for the DNS address of the load balancer:

$ opentf output lb_address
"my-app-alb-1657023003.us-east-1.elb.amazonaws.com"

To query for all instance IP addresses:

$ opentf output instance_ips
instance_ips = [
"54.43.114.12",
"52.122.13.4",
"52.4.116.53"
]

Use in automation

The opentf output command by default displays in a human-readable format, which can change over time to improve clarity.

For scripting and automation, use -json to produce the stable JSON format. You can parse the output using a JSON command-line parser such as jq:

$ opentf output -json instance_ips | jq -r '.[0]'
54.43.114.12

For the common case of directly using a string value in a shell script, you can use -raw instead, which will print the string directly with no extra escaping or whitespace.

$ opentf output -raw lb_address
my-app-alb-1657023003.us-east-1.elb.amazonaws.com

The -raw option works only with values that OpenTF can automatically convert to strings. Use -json instead, possibly combined with jq, to work with complex-typed values such as objects.

OpenTF strings are sequences of Unicode characters rather than raw bytes, so the -raw output will be UTF-8 encoded when it contains non-ASCII characters. If you need a different character encoding, use a separate command such as iconv to transcode OpenTF's raw output.