Google CloudGoogle Compute Enginegoogle_compute_region_target_tcp_proxyPro

How to Import an Google Regional Target TCP Proxy into Terraform

To import an existing Google Regional Target TCP Proxy into Terraform, scan it with Terraback and run terraback gcp import --method bulk. Terraback writes the matching google_compute_region_target_tcp_proxy resource block and the Terraform 1.5+ import block for you, so you do not have to run terraform import by hand. The import ID is the full path projects/{project}/regions/{region}/targetTcpProxies/{name}.

Import Google Regional Target TCP Proxy with Terraback (recommended)

Terraback reverse-engineers your live infrastructure: it reads the Google Compute Engine resource with read-only credentials, generates the HCL, and produces the exact import block. Two commands take you from a live Google Regional Target TCP Proxy to managed Terraform.

1

Scan your Google Cloud account

terraback scan all gcp --project my-gcp-project
2

Generate import blocks and import into state

terraback gcp import --method bulk

The Terraform import block

Terraback emits a Terraform 1.5+ import block like the one below. Because the block lives in your configuration, the import is reviewable in a pull request and repeatable across environments.

import {
  to = google_compute_region_target_tcp_proxy.main
  id = "projects/my-project/regions/us-central1/targetTcpProxies/my-tcp-proxy"
}

Example google_compute_region_target_tcp_proxy configuration

Here is a realistic Google Regional Target TCP Proxy block. Terraback generates a fuller version from your actual resource attributes; this is a minimal, valid starting point.

resource "google_compute_region_target_tcp_proxy" "main" {
  name            = "my-tcp-proxy"
  region          = "us-central1"
  backend_service = google_compute_region_backend_service.main.id
  proxy_header    = "NONE"
}

Gotchas when importing a Google Regional Target TCP Proxy

  • This regional proxy imports with a regions/{region} path; the global variant google_compute_target_tcp_proxy uses a global path instead.
  • backend_service must be a google_compute_region_backend_service with load_balancing_scheme INTERNAL_MANAGED in the same region.
  • proxy_header defaults to NONE; set it to PROXY_V1 only if backends expect the PROXY protocol header.
  • Changing the region forces recreation.

Doing it manually with terraform import

The native approach is to write the google_compute_region_target_tcp_proxy block by hand, then run terraform import google_compute_region_target_tcp_proxy.example <import-id> for every resource, one at a time. That works for a handful of resources, but it does not scale: you author all the HCL yourself and repeat the command for each item. Terraback generates the HCL and the import blocks for your whole account in one pass.

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