--- description: >- The providers meta-argument specifies which provider configurations from a parent module are available in a child module. --- # The Module `providers` Meta-Argument In a [module call](../../language/modules/syntax.mdx) block, the optional `providers` meta-argument specifies which [provider configurations](../../language/providers/configuration.mdx) from the parent module will be available inside the child module. ```hcl # The default "aws" configuration is used for AWS resources in the root # module where no explicit provider instance is selected. provider "aws" { region = "us-west-1" } # An alternate configuration is also defined for a different # region, using the alias "usw2". provider "aws" { alias = "usw2" region = "us-west-2" } # An example child module is instantiated with the alternate configuration, # so any AWS resources it defines will use the us-west-2 region. module "example" { source = "./example" providers = { aws = aws.usw2 } } ``` Each module in an OpenTofu configuration has its own separate namespace of provider configurations, but a child module's namespace is populated with configurations from the root module, either inheriting the default provider configurations automatically or explicitly passing them from the parent using the `providers` argument. ## Default Behavior: Inherit Default Providers If the child module does not declare any [configuration aliases](../../language/modules/develop/providers.mdx#provider-aliases-within-modules), the `providers` argument is optional. If you omit it, a child module inherits all of the [default provider configurations](../../language/providers/configuration.mdx#default-provider-configurations) from its parent module. (Default provider configurations are any that don't use the `alias` argument.) If you specify a `providers` argument, it cancels this default behavior, and the child module will only have access to the provider configurations you specify. ## Usage and Behavior The `providers` argument uses a map-like syntax delimited by braces (`{`, `}`). In the given mapping: - The keys are the provider configuration addresses that will be used inside the child module. - The values are provider instance addresses from the parent module. Both parts use [provider instance reference syntax](../../language/providers/configuration.mdx#referring-to-provider-instances), which for alternative provider configurations appears as `.`. Within a child module, resources are assigned to provider configurations as normal — either OpenTofu chooses a default based on the name of the resource type, or the resource specifies an alternate configuration with the `provider` argument. If the module receives a `providers` map when it's called, the provider configuration names used within the module are effectively remapped to refer the specified configurations from the parent module. ## When to Specify Providers There are two main reasons to use the `providers` argument: - Using different default provider configurations for a child module. - Configuring a module that requires multiple configurations of the same provider. ### Changing Default Provider Configurations Most re-usable modules only use default provider configurations, which they can automatically inherit from their caller when `providers` is omitted. However, in OpenTofu configurations that use multiple configurations of the same provider, you might want some child modules to use the default provider configuration and other ones to use an alternate. (This usually happens when using one configuration to manage resources in multiple different regions of the same cloud provider.) By using the `providers` argument (like in the code example above), you can accommodate this without needing to edit the child module. Although the code within the child module always refers to the default provider configuration, the actual configuration of that default can be different for each instance. ### Modules With Alternate Provider Configurations In rare cases, a single re-usable module might require multiple configurations of the same provider. For example, a module that configures connectivity between networks in two AWS regions is likely to need both a source and a destination region. In that case, the root module may look something like this: ```hcl provider "aws" { alias = "usw1" region = "us-west-1" } provider "aws" { alias = "usw2" region = "us-west-2" } module "tunnel" { source = "./tunnel" providers = { aws.src = aws.usw1 aws.dst = aws.usw2 } } ``` Non-default provider configurations are never automatically inherited, so any module that works like this will always need a `providers` argument. The documentation for the module should specify all of the provider configuration names it needs. ### Module instances with differing provider instances When you write a `provider` block using [the `for_each` meta-argument](../../language/providers/configuration.mdx#for_each-multiple-instances-of-a-provider-configuration) the provider configuration dynamically declares zero or more provider instances. If you also write a `module` block that uses `for_each` you can set its provider configuration addresses to refer to dynamically-chosen instances of a multi-instance provider configuration, which allows instantiating a module once per provider instance. For example, you might instantiate a module for each of a number of different AWS regions, declaring foundational infrastructure across all of the regions you use, with the module itself using only one default provider configuration that differs for each module instance: ```hcl variable "aws_regions" { type = map(object({ vpc_cidr_block = string })) } provider "aws" { alias = "by_region" for_each = var.aws_regions region = each.key } module "per_region" { source = "./per-region" # This expression filters var.aws_regions to include only # the elements whose value is not null. Refer to the # warning in the text below for more information. for_each = { for region, config in var.aws_regions : region => config if config != null } providers = { aws = aws.by_region[each.key] } region_name = each.key vpc_cidr_block = each.value.vpc_cidr_block } ``` The module in `./per-region` should be written so that all of its AWS resources are bound to that module's default configuration for the AWS provider. The `providers` argument in the `module` block ensures that each instance of the module has its default configuration for the AWS provider bound to a different instance of `aws.by_region`. All instances of the module must refer to instances of the same provider configuration: only the expression in brackets (`each.key` in the above example) can vary between the instances of the module. :::warning **The `for_each` expression for a module must *be different from* the `for_each` expression for its associated provider configuration.** OpenTofu uses a provider instance to plan and apply _all_ actions related to a module instance, including destroying a module instance that has been removed from the configuration. Therefore a provider instance passed into a child module that will declare resources associated with that provider instance must always remain in the configuration for at least one more plan/apply round after the module instance has been removed, or OpenTofu will fail to plan to destroy the resource instances declared in the module. You can find more information on this constraint in [Referring to Provider Instances](../../language/providers/configuration.mdx#referring-to-provider-instances). ::: ## More Information for Module Developers For more details and guidance about working with providers inside a re-usable child module, see [Module Development: Providers Within Modules](../../language/modules/develop/providers.mdx).