Day 4 - Terraform State File Management with Remote Backend
Today felt different. Until now, Terraform was just creating resources. But today, I learned how Terraform remembers what it creates, and how to manage that memory safely using a remote backend. Why Remote State Matters When Terraform runs, it keeps track of infrastructure in a state file. If that file stays on a local machine: It’s not shareable It’s not safe It can easily get corrupted or lost Moving state to Amazon S3 solves this. Teams can collaborate State is stored securely Changes are tracked with versioning Locking prevents conflicts What I Built Today I configured Terraform to: Store state in an S3 bucket Enable encryption Use native state locking (no DynamoDB required) Create a new S3 bucket using Terraform Step 1: Created S3 Bucket for State I manually created an S3 bucket and enabled versioning. Step 2: Configured Remote Backend I updated my Terraform configuration to use S3 as backend: backend "s3" { bucket =...