/terraform-provider-stripe

A Terraform Provider for Stripe

Primary LanguageGoMozilla Public License 2.0MPL-2.0

Terraform Stripe Provider

This provider enables Stripe merchants to manage certain parts of their Stripe infrastructure—products, plans, webhook endpoints—via Terraform.

Example use cases

  • Create and update resources in a repeatable manner
  • Clone resources across multiple Stripe accounts (e.g. different locales or brands)

Requirements

  • Terraform 0.11.x to 0.12.x
  • Go 1.8 to 1.12 (to build the provider plugin)

Building The Provider

Clone repository to: $GOPATH/src/github.com/franckverrot/terraform-provider-stripe

$ mkdir -p $GOPATH/src/github.com/franckverrot; cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/franckverrot
$ git clone https://github.com/franckverrot/terraform-provider-stripe.git

Enter the provider directory and build the provider

$ cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/franckverrot/terraform-provider-stripe
$ make build

Or alternatively, to install it as a plugin, run

$ cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/franckverrot/terraform-provider-stripe
$ make install

Using the provider

If you're building the provider, follow the instructions to install it as a plugin. After placing it into your plugins directory, run terraform init to initialize it.

Basic Usage

Set an environment variable, TF_VAR_stripe_api_token to store your Stripe API token. This helps ensure you do not accidentally commit this sensitive token to your repository.

export TF_VAR_stripe_api_token=<your token>

Your token is now accessible in your Terraform configuration as var.stripe_api_token, and can be used to configure the provider.

The example below demonstrates the following operations:

  • create a product
  • create a plan for that product
  • create a webhook endpoint for a few events
provider "stripe" {
  # NOTE: This is populated from the `TF_VAR_stripe_api_token` environment variable.
  api_token = "${var.stripe_api_token}"
}

resource "stripe_product" "my_product" {
  name = "My Product"
  type = "service"
}

resource "stripe_plan" "my_product_plan1" {
  product  = "${stripe_product.my_product.id}"
  amount   = 12345
  interval = "month"                           # Options: day week month year
  currency = "usd"
}

resource "stripe_webhook_endpoint" "my_endpoint" {
  url = "https://mydomain.example.com/webhook"

  enabled_events = [
    "charge.succeeded",
    "charge.failed",
    "source.chargeable",
  ]
}

resource "stripe_coupon" "mlk_day_coupon_25pc_off" {
  code     = "MLK_DAY"
  name     = "King Sales Event"
  duration = "once"

  amount_off = 4200
  currency   = "usd" # lowercase

  metadata = {
    mlk   = "<3"
    sales = "yes"
  }

  max_redemptions = 1024
  redeem_by       = "2019-09-02T12:34:56-08:00" # RFC3339, in the future
}

Supported resources

  • Products
    • name
    • type
    • active (Default: true)
    • attributes (list)
    • metadata (map)
    • statement descriptor
    • unit label
  • Plans
    • active (Default: true)
    • aggregate usage
    • amount
    • billing scheme (Default: per_unit)
    • currency
    • interval
    • interval_count (Default: 1)
    • metadata (map)
    • nickname
    • product
    • tiers
    • tiers mode
    • transform_usage
    • trial period days
    • usage type (Default: licensed)
  • Webhook Endpoints
    • url
    • enabled_events (list)
    • connect
    • Computed:
      • secret
  • Coupons
    • code (aka id)
    • name
    • amount off
      • currency
    • percent off
    • duration
      • duration_in_months
    • max redemptions
    • metadata
    • redeem by (should be RC3339-compliant)
    • Computed:
      • valid
      • created
      • livemode
      • times redeemed

Importing existing resources

Scenario: you create something manually and would like to start managing it with Terraform instead.

This provider support a straightforward/naive import procedure, here's how you could do it for a coupon.

First, import the resource:

$ terraform import stripe_coupon.mlk_day_coupon_25pc_off MLK_DAY

...
Before importing this resource, please create its configuration in the root module. For example:

resource "stripe_coupon" "mlk_day_coupon_25pc_off" {
  # (resource arguments)
}

Then after adding these lines to your Terraform file, a plan should result in:

$ terraform plan

...
-/+ stripe_coupon.mlk_day_coupon_25pc_off (new resource required)
      id:              "MLK_DAY" => <computed> (forces new resource)
      amount_off:      "4200" => "4200"
      code:            "" => "MLK_DAY"
      created:         "" => <computed>
      currency:        "usd" => "usd"
      duration:        "once" => "once"
      livemode:        "false" => <computed>
      max_redemptions: "1024" => "1024"
      metadata.%:      "2" => "2"
      metadata.mlk:    "<3" => "<3"
      metadata.sales:  "yes" => "yes"
      name:            "King Sales Event" => "King Sales Event"
      redeem_by:       "" => "2019-09-02T12:34:56-08:00" (forces new resource)
      times_redeemed:  "0" => <computed>
      valid:           "true" => <computed>

Some updates might require replacing existing resources with new ones.

Developing the Provider

If you wish to work on the provider, you'll first need Go installed on your machine (version 1.8+ is required). You'll also need to correctly setup a GOPATH, as well as adding $GOPATH/bin to your $PATH.

To compile the provider, run make. This will build the provider and put the provider binary in the $GOPATH/bin directory.

$ make bin
...
$ $GOPATH/bin/terraform-provider-stripe
...

License

Mozilla Public License Version 2.0 – Franck Verrot – Copyright 2018