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This repository was archived by the owner on Dec 11, 2025. It is now read-only.

cdktf/cdktf-provider-dashboard

The Future of Terraform CDK

Sunset Notice

Terraform CDK (CDKTF) will sunset and be archived on December 10, 2025. HashiCorp, an IBM Company, will no longer maintain or develop the project after that date. Unfortunately, Terraform CDK did not find product-market fit at scale. HashiCorp, an IBM Company, has chosen to focus its investments on Terraform core and its broader ecosystem.

As of December 10, 2025, Terraform CDK will be archived on GitHub, and the documentation will reflect its deprecated status. The archived code will remain available on GitHub, but it will be read-only. No further updates, fixes, or improvements (including compatibility updates) will be made.

You will be able to continue to use Terraform CDK at your own risk. Terraform CDK is licensed under the Mozilla Public License (MPL). HashiCorp, an IBM Company, does not apply any additional restrictions. We encourage community forks if there’s interest in continuing development independently.

Migration to HCL

You can use the following command to generate Terraform-compatible .tf files directly from your Terraform CDK project:

cdktf synth --hcl

This will produce readable HCL configuration files, making it easier to migrate away from Terraform CDK. After running the command, you can use standard Terraform CLI commands (terraform init, terraform plan, terraform apply) to continue managing your infrastructure. Please note that while this helps bootstrap your configuration, you may still need to review and adjust the generated files for clarity, organization, or best practices.

Note on AWS CDK

If your infrastructure is defined in Terraform CDK but also tightly integrated with AWS CDK, you may find it more consistent to migrate directly to the AWS CDK ecosystem. If you are not using AWS CDK, we highly recommend migrating to standard Terraform and HCL for long-term support and ecosystem alignment.

FAQ

Q: Is CDKTF still being developed?

A: No. CDKTF will sunset and be archived on December 10, 2025. HashiCorp, an IBM Company, will no longer maintain or develop the project after that date.

Q: Why is CDKTF being sunset?

A: CDKTF did not find product-market fit at scale. We’ve chosen to focus our investments on Terraform core and its broader ecosystem.

Q: Will CDKTF be removed from GitHub?

A: CDKTF will be archived on GitHub, and documentation will reflect its deprecated status.

Q: Can I still use CDKTF after it's sunset?

A: Yes, the archived code will remain available on GitHub, but it will be read-only. No further updates, fixes, or improvements will be made.

Q: Will CDKTF continue to support new versions of Terraform or providers?

A: No. Compatibility updates will not be made after the EOL date.

Q: Can I fork CDKTF and maintain it myself?

A: Yes. CDKTF is open source, and we encourage community forks if there’s interest in continuing development independently.

Q: Can I keep using CDKTF?

A: You may continue to use it at your own risk. HashiCorp, an IBM Company, will no longer be maintaining it.

Q: Is there a migration tool?

A: You can use the following command to generate Terraform-compatible .tf files directly from your CDKTF project:

cdktf synth --hcl

This will produce readable HCL configuration files, making it easier to migrate away from CDKTF. After running the command, you can use standard Terraform CLI commands (terraform init, terraform plan, terraform apply) to continue managing your infrastructure. Please note that while this helps bootstrap your configuration, you may still need to review and adjust the generated files for clarity, organization, or best practices.

Q: What migration guidance can we provide to customers?

A: For users looking to migrate away from CDKTF:

If your infrastructure is defined in CDKTF but also tightly integrated with AWS CDK, you may find it more consistent to migrate directly to the AWS CDK ecosystem.

If you are not using AWS CDK, we highly recommend migrating to standard Terraform and HCL for long-term support and ecosystem alignment.


CDKTF Prebuilt provider dashboard

Build / Refresh Status

This repo publishes the CDKTF prebuilt provider dashboard

The dashboard is a static site written using 11ty and Github actions that generates every hour (ideally) and fetches the status of all CDKTF pre-built providers and builds a simple dashboard for them.

Local Testing

In order to test the dashboard locally, you can run the following commands:

yarn install
yarn serve

Then point your browser to http://localhost:8080/cdktf-provider-dashboard/

Local Data

The local build uses the repos.json file within the _data folder that has a snapshot of the last run. If you make changes to scripts/collect-status.js or want to test latest data, you can run the following command:

GITHUB_TOKEN=$(gh auth token) ./scripts/collect-status.js

Assuming that you have the Github CLI installed and have a valid token. If not, you can run collect-status without a token, but it will take a lot longer to run due to rate limiting.

Note: It is best practice to commit changes to the _data/repos.json file after running the above command. That allows the next time you want to make cosmetic changes to not have to wait for the data to be fetched again.

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