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Co-authored-by: Geoffrey Grosenbach <26+topfunky@users.noreply.github.com> Co-authored-by: Anthony <russo555@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Ashlee Boyer <ashlee.boyer@hashicorp.com> Co-authored-by: Ashlee M Boyer <43934258+ashleemboyer@users.noreply.github.com> Co-authored-by: HashiBot <62622282+hashibot-web@users.noreply.github.com> Co-authored-by: Kevin Wang <kwangsan@gmail.com>
330 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
330 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
---
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layout: docs
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page_title: Input Variables - HCL Configuration Language
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description: |-
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Input variables are parameters for Nomad jobs.
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This page covers configuration syntax for variables.
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---
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# Input Variables
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Input variables serve as parameters for a Nomad job, allowing aspects of the
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job to be customized without altering the job's own source code.
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When you declare variables in the same file as the job specification, you
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can set their values using CLI options and environment variables.
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-> **Note:** For brevity, input variables are often referred to as just
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"variables" or "Nomad variables" when it is clear from context what sort of
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variable is being discussed. Other kinds of variables in Nomad include
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_environment variables_ (set by the shell where Nomad runs) and _expression
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variables_ (used to indirectly represent a value in an
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[expression](/docs/job-specification/hcl2/expressions)).
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## Declaring an Input Variable
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Each input variable accepted by a job must be declared using a `variable`
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block :
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```hcl
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variable "image_id" {
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type = string
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}
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variable "availability_zone_names" {
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type = list(string)
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default = ["us-west-1a"]
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}
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variable "docker_ports" {
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type = list(object({
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internal = number
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external = number
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protocol = string
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}))
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default = [
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{
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internal = 8300
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external = 8300
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protocol = "tcp"
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}
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]
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}
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```
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Or a less precise variables block:
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```hcl
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variables {
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foo = "value"
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my_secret = "foo"
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}
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```
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The label after the `variable` keyword or a label of a `variables` block is a
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name for the variable, which must be unique among all variables in the same
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job. This name is used to assign a value to the variable from outside and to
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reference the variable's value from within the job.
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The `variable` block can optionally include a `type` argument to specify what
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value types are accepted for the variable, as described in the following
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section.
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The `variable` declaration can also include a `default` argument. If present,
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the variable is considered to be _optional_ and the default value will be used
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if no value is set when calling the job or running Nomad. The `default`
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argument requires a literal value and cannot reference other objects in the
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configuration.
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## Using Input Variable Values
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Within the job that declared a variable, its value can be accessed from within
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[expressions](/docs/job-specification/hcl2/expressions) as `var.<NAME>`, where
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`<NAME>` matches the label given in the declaration block:
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```hcl
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config {
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image = var.task_image
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label = var.task_labels
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}
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```
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The value assigned to a variable can be accessed only from expressions within
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the folder where it was declared. Note that a block label (such as the job ID
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or task group name) is not an expression and so can't be interpolated with a
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variable or local.
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## Type Constraints
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The `type` argument in a `variable` block allows you to restrict the [type of
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value](/docs/job-specification/hcl2/expressions#types-and-values) that will be
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accepted as the value for a variable. If no type constraint is set then a
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value of any type is accepted.
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While type constraints are optional, we recommend specifying them; they serve
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as easy reminders for users of the job, and allow Nomad to return a helpful
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error message if the wrong type is used.
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Type constraints are created from a mixture of type keywords and type
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constructors. The supported type keywords are:
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- `string`
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- `number`
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- `bool`
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The type constructors allow you to specify complex types such as collections:
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- `list(<TYPE>)`
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- `set(<TYPE>)`
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- `map(<TYPE>)`
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- `object({<ATTR NAME> = <TYPE>, ... })`
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- `tuple([<TYPE>, ...])`
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The keyword `any` may be used to indicate that any type is acceptable. For more
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information on the meaning and behavior of these different types, as well as
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detailed information about automatic conversion of complex types, see [Type
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Constraints](https://www.terraform.io/language/expressions/type-constraints).
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If both the `type` and `default` arguments are specified, the given default
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value must be convertible to the specified type.
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If only `default` is specified, the type of the default value will be used.
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When the `type` and `default` are both _not_ specified and you try to set a
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variable [from env vars](#environment-variables) or [from the command
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line](#variables-on-the-command-line), the variable will always be interpreted
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as a string.
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## Input Variable Documentation
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Because the input variables of a job are part of its user interface, you can
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briefly describe the purpose of each variable using the optional `description`
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argument:
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```hcl
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variable "image_id" {
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type = string
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description = "The docker image used for task."
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}
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```
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The description should concisely explain the purpose of the variable and what
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kind of value is expected. This description string might be included in
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documentation about the job, and so it should be written from the perspective
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of the user of the job rather than its maintainer. For commentary for job
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maintainers, use comments.
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## Input Variable Custom Validation Rules
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Input variables support specifying arbitrary custom validation rules for a particular
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variable using a `validation` block nested within the corresponding `variable` block:
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```hcl
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variable "image_id" {
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type = string
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description = "The id of the machine image (AMI) to use for the server."
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validation {
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condition = substr(var.image_id, 0, 4) == "ami-"
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error_message = "The image_id value must be a valid AMI id, starting with \"ami-\"."
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}
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}
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```
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The condition argument is an expression that must use the value of the variable to
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return true if the value is valid, or false if it is invalid. The expression can
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refer only to the variable that the condition applies to, and _must_ not produce errors.
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If condition evaluates to false, Nomad will produce an error message that includes
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the sentences given in `error_message`. The error message string should be at least
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one full sentence explaining the constraint that failed, starting with an uppercase
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letter ( if the alphabet permits it ) and ending with a period or question mark.
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Multiple validation blocks can be declared in which case error messages will be
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returned for all failed conditions.
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## Assigning Values to job Variables
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Once a variable is declared in your configuration, you can set it:
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- Individually, with the `-var foo=bar` command line option.
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- In variable definitions files specified on the command line (with `-var-file=input.vars`).
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- As environment variables, for example: `NOMAD_VAR_foo=bar`
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The following sections describe these options in more detail.
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### Variables on the Command Line
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To specify individual variables on the command line, use the `-var` option when
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running the `nomad job run` command:
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```shell-session
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$ nomad job run -var="image_id=nginx:1.19" example.nomad
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```
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The `-var` option can be used any number of times in a single command.
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If you plan to assign variables via the command line, we strongly recommend that
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you at least set a default type instead of using empty blocks; this helps the
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HCL parser understand what is being set. Otherwise, the interpreter will assume
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that any variable set on the command line is a string.
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### Variable Definitions Files
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To set lots of variables, it is more convenient to specify their values in a
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_variable definitions file_ and then specify that file on the command line with
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`-var-file`:
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```shell-session
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$ nomad job run -var-file="testing.vars" example.nomad
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```
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A variable definitions file uses the same HCL basic syntax, but consists only
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of variable name assignments:
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```hcl
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image_id = "nginx:1.19"
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labels = [
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"testing",
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"internal",
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]
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```
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Alternatively, the files can be JSON objects, with the root object properties
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corresponding to variable names:
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```json
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{
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"image_id": "nginx:1.19",
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"labels": ["testing", "internal"]
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}
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```
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### Environment Variables
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As a fallback for the other ways of defining variables, Nomad searches the
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environment of its own process for environment variables named `NOMAD_VAR_`
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followed by the name of a declared variable.
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This can be useful when running Nomad in automation, or when running a
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sequence of Nomad commands in succession with the same variables. For example,
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at a `bash` prompt on a Unix system:
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```shell-session
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$ export NOMAD_VAR_image_id=nginx:1.19
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$ nomad job run example.nomad
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...
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```
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On operating systems where environment variable names are case-sensitive,
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Nomad matches the variable name exactly as given in configuration, and so the
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required environment variable name will usually have a mix of upper and lower
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case letters as in the above example.
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### Complex-typed Values
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When variable values are provided in a variable definitions file, Nomad's
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[usual syntax](/docs/job-specification/hcl2/expressions) can be used to assign
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complex-typed values, like lists and maps.
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Some special rules apply to the `-var` command line option and to environment
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variables. For convenience, Nomad defaults to interpreting `-var` and
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environment variable values as literal strings, which do not need to be quoted:
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```shell-session
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$ export NOMAD_VAR_image_id=nginx:1.19
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```
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However, if an input variable uses a [type constraint](#type-constraints) to
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require a complex value (list, set, map, object, or tuple), Nomad will instead
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attempt to parse its value using the same syntax used within variable
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definitions files, which requires careful attention to the string escaping
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rules in your shell:
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```shell-session
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$ export NOMAD_VAR_availability_zone_names='["us-west-1b","us-west-1d"]'
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```
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For readability, and to avoid the need to worry about shell escaping, we
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recommend always setting complex variable values via variable definitions
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files.
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### Variable Definition Precedence
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The above mechanisms for setting variables can be used together in any
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combination.
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Nomad loads variables in the following order, with later sources taking
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precedence over earlier ones:
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- Environment variables (lowest priority)
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- Any `-var` and `-var-file` options on the command line, in the order they are
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provided. (highest priority)
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If the same variable is assigned multiple values using different mechanisms,
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Nomad uses the _last_ value it finds, overriding any previous values. Note
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that the same variable cannot be assigned multiple values within a single source.
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~> **Important:** Variables with map and object values behave the same way as
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other variables: the last value found overrides the previous values.
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## A variable value must be known:
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Take the following variable for example:
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```hcl
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variable "foo" {
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type = string
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}
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```
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Here `foo` must have a known value but you can default it to `null` to make
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this behavior optional :
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| | no default | `default = null` | `default = "xy"` |
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| :-----------------------------: | :--------------------------: | :--------------: | :--------------: |
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| foo unused | error, "foo needs to be set" | - | - |
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| var.foo | error, "foo needs to be set" | null | xy |
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| `NOMAD_VAR_foo=yz`<br />var.foo | yz | yz | yz |
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| `-var foo=yz`<br />var.foo | yz | yz | yz |
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