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azurermRoute

Manages a Route within a Route Table.

\~> NOTE on Route Tables and Routes: Terraform currently provides both a standalone Route resource, and allows for Routes to be defined in-line within the Route Table resource. At this time you cannot use a Route Table with in-line Routes in conjunction with any Route resources. Doing so will cause a conflict of Route configurations and will overwrite Routes.

Example Usage

/*Provider bindings are generated by running cdktf get.
See https://cdk.tf/provider-generation for more details.*/
import * as azurerm from "./.gen/providers/azurerm";
/*The following providers are missing schema information and might need manual adjustments to synthesize correctly: azurerm.
For a more precise conversion please use the --provider flag in convert.*/
const azurermResourceGroupExample = new azurerm.resourceGroup.ResourceGroup(
  this,
  "example",
  {
    location: "West Europe",
    name: "example-resources",
  }
);
const azurermRouteTableExample = new azurerm.routeTable.RouteTable(
  this,
  "example_1",
  {
    location: azurermResourceGroupExample.location,
    name: "acceptanceTestRouteTable1",
    resource_group_name: azurermResourceGroupExample.name,
  }
);
/*This allows the Terraform resource name to match the original name. You can remove the call if you don't need them to match.*/
azurermRouteTableExample.overrideLogicalId("example");
const azurermRouteExample = new azurerm.route.Route(this, "example_2", {
  address_prefix: "10.1.0.0/16",
  name: "acceptanceTestRoute1",
  next_hop_type: "VnetLocal",
  resource_group_name: azurermResourceGroupExample.name,
  route_table_name: azurermRouteTableExample.name,
});
/*This allows the Terraform resource name to match the original name. You can remove the call if you don't need them to match.*/
azurermRouteExample.overrideLogicalId("example");

Argument Reference

The following arguments are supported:

  • name - (Required) The name of the route. Changing this forces a new resource to be created.

  • resourceGroupName - (Required) The name of the resource group in which to create the route. Changing this forces a new resource to be created.

  • routeTableName - (Required) The name of the route table within which create the route. Changing this forces a new resource to be created.

  • addressPrefix - (Required) The destination to which the route applies. Can be CIDR (such as 10100/16) or Azure Service Tag (such as apiManagement, azureBackup or azureMonitor) format.

  • nextHopType - (Required) The type of Azure hop the packet should be sent to. Possible values are virtualNetworkGateway, vnetLocal, internet, virtualAppliance and none.

  • nextHopInIpAddress - (Optional) Contains the IP address packets should be forwarded to. Next hop values are only allowed in routes where the next hop type is virtualAppliance.

Attributes Reference

The following attributes are exported:

  • id - The Route ID.

Timeouts

The timeouts block allows you to specify timeouts for certain actions:

  • create - (Defaults to 30 minutes) Used when creating the Route.
  • update - (Defaults to 30 minutes) Used when updating the Route.
  • read - (Defaults to 5 minutes) Used when retrieving the Route.
  • delete - (Defaults to 30 minutes) Used when deleting the Route.

Import

Routes can be imported using the resourceId, e.g.

terraform import azurerm_route.exampleRoute /subscriptions/00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000/resourceGroups/mygroup1/providers/Microsoft.Network/routeTables/mytable1/routes/myroute1