one Function
Note: This function is available only in Terraform v0.15 and later.
one
takes a list, set, or tuple value with either zero or one elements.
If the collection is empty, one
returns null
. Otherwise, one
returns
the first element. If there are two or more elements then one
will return
an error.
This is a specialized function intended for the common situation where a conditional item is represented as either a zero- or one-element list, where a module author wishes to return a single value that might be null instead.
For example:
variable "include_ec2_instance" { type = bool default = true} resource "aws_instance" "example" { count = var.include_ec2_instance ? 1 : 0 # (other resource arguments...)} output "instance_ip_address" { value = one(aws_instance.example[*].private_ip)}
Because the aws_instance
resource above has the count
argument set to a
conditional that returns either zero or one, the value of
aws_instance.example
is a list of either zero or one elements. The
instance_ip_address
output value uses the one
function as a concise way
to return either the private IP address of a single instance, or null
if
no instances were created.
Relationship to the "Splat" Operator
The Terraform language has a built-in operator [*]
, known as
the splat operator, and one of its functions
is to translate a primitive value that might be null into a list of either
zero or one elements:
variable "ec2_instance_type" { description = "The type of instance to create. If set to null, no instance will be created." type = string default = null} resource "aws_instance" "example" { count = length(var.ec2_instance_type[*]) instance_type = var.ec2_instance_type # (other resource arguments...)} output "instance_ip_address" { value = one(aws_instance.example[*].private_ip)}
In this case we can see that the one
function is, in a sense, the opposite
of applying [*]
to a primitive-typed value. Splat can convert a possibly-null
value into a zero-or-one list, and one
can reverse that to return to a
primitive value that might be null.
Examples
> one([])null> one(["hello"])"hello"> one(["hello", "goodbye"]) Error: Invalid function argument Invalid value for "list" parameter: must be a list, set, or tuple value witheither zero or one elements.
Using one
with sets
The one
function can be particularly helpful in situations where you have a
set that you know has only zero or one elements. Set values don't support
indexing, so it's not valid to write var.set[0]
to extract the "first"
element of a set, but if you know that there's only one item then one
can
isolate and return that single item:
> one(toset([]))null> one(toset(["hello"]))"hello"
Don't use one
with sets that might have more than one element. This function
will fail in that case:
> one(toset(["hello","goodbye"])) Error: Invalid function argument Invalid value for "list" parameter: must be a list, set, or tuple value witheither zero or one elements.