| name | pulumi-best-practices |
| version | 1.0.0 |
| description | Load when the user is writing, reviewing, or debugging Pulumi TypeScript/Python programs; asks about Output<T> or apply() usage; wants to create ComponentResource classes; needs to refactor resources without destroying them (aliases); is setting up secrets or config; or is configuring a pulumi preview/up CI workflow. Also load for questions about resource dependency order, parent/child resource relationships, or pulumi.interpolate. |
Pulumi Best Practices
When to Use This Skill
Invoke this skill when:
- Writing new Pulumi programs or components
- Reviewing Pulumi code for correctness
- Refactoring existing Pulumi infrastructure
- Debugging resource dependency issues
- Setting up configuration and secrets
Practices
1. Never Create Resources Inside apply()
Why: Resources created inside apply() don't appear in pulumi preview, making changes unpredictable. Pulumi cannot properly track dependencies, leading to race conditions and deployment failures.
Detection signals:
new aws. or other resource constructors inside .apply() callbacks
- Resource creation inside
pulumi.all([...]).apply()
- Dynamic resource counts determined at runtime inside apply
Wrong:
const bucket = new aws.s3.Bucket("bucket");
bucket.id.apply(bucketId => {
new aws.s3.BucketObject("object", {
bucket: bucketId,
content: "hello",
});
});
Right:
const bucket = new aws.s3.Bucket("bucket");
const object = new aws.s3.BucketObject("object", {
bucket: bucket.id,
content: "hello",
});
When apply is appropriate:
- Transforming output values for use in tags, names, or computed strings
- Logging or debugging (not resource creation)
- Conditional logic that affects resource properties, not resource existence
Reference: https://www.pulumi.com/docs/concepts/inputs-outputs/
2. Pass Outputs Directly as Inputs
Why: Pulumi builds a directed acyclic graph (DAG) based on input/output relationships. Passing outputs directly ensures correct creation order. Unwrapping values manually breaks the dependency chain, causing resources to deploy in wrong order or reference values that don't exist yet.
Detection signals:
- Variables extracted from
.apply() used later as resource inputs
await on output values outside of apply
- String concatenation with outputs instead of
pulumi.interpolate
Wrong:
const vpc = new aws.ec2.Vpc("vpc", { cidrBlock: "10.0.0.0/16" });
let vpcId: string;
vpc.id.apply(id => { vpcId = id; });
const subnet = new aws.ec2.Subnet("subnet", {
vpcId: vpcId,
cidrBlock: "10.0.1.0/24",
});
Right:
const vpc = new aws.ec2.Vpc("vpc", { cidrBlock: "10.0.0.0/16" });
const subnet = new aws.ec2.Subnet("subnet", {
vpcId: vpc.id,
cidrBlock: "10.0.1.0/24",
});
For string interpolation:
const name = bucket.id.apply(id => `prefix-${id}-suffix`);
const name = pulumi.interpolate`prefix-${bucket.id}-suffix`;
const name = pulumi.concat("prefix-", bucket.id, "-suffix");
Reference: https://www.pulumi.com/docs/concepts/inputs-outputs/
3. Use Components for Related Resources
Why: ComponentResource classes group related resources into reusable, logical units. Without components, your resource graph is flat, making it hard to understand which resources belong together, reuse patterns across stacks, or reason about your infrastructure at a higher level.
Detection signals:
- Multiple related resources created at top level without grouping
- Repeated resource patterns across stacks that should be abstracted
- Hard to understand resource relationships from the Pulumi console
Wrong:
const bucket = new aws.s3.Bucket("app-bucket");
const bucketPolicy = new aws.s3.BucketPolicy("app-bucket-policy", {
bucket: bucket.id,
policy: policyDoc,
});
const originAccessIdentity = new aws.cloudfront.OriginAccessIdentity("app-oai");
const distribution = new aws.cloudfront.Distribution("app-cdn", { });
Right:
interface StaticSiteArgs {
domain: string;
content: pulumi.asset.AssetArchive;
}
class StaticSite extends pulumi.ComponentResource {
public readonly url: pulumi.Output<string>;
constructor(name: string, args: StaticSiteArgs, opts?: pulumi.ComponentResourceOptions) {
super("myorg:components:StaticSite", name, args, opts);
const bucket = new aws.s3.Bucket(`${name}-bucket`, {}, { parent: this });
this.url = distribution.domainName;
this.registerOutputs({ url: this.url });
}
}
const site = new StaticSite("marketing", {
domain: "marketing.example.com",
content: new pulumi.asset.FileArchive("./dist"),
});
Component best practices:
- Use a consistent type URN pattern:
organization:module:ComponentName
- Call
registerOutputs() at the end of the constructor
- Expose outputs as class properties for consumers
- Accept
ComponentResourceOptions to allow callers to set providers, aliases, etc.
For in-depth component authoring guidance (args design, multi-language support, testing, distribution), use skill pulumi-component.
Reference: https://www.pulumi.com/docs/concepts/resources/components/
4. Always Set parent: this in Components
Why: When you create resources inside a ComponentResource without setting parent: this, those resources appear at the root level of your stack's state. This breaks the logical hierarchy, makes the Pulumi console hard to navigate, and can cause issues with aliases and refactoring. The parent relationship is what makes the component actually group its children.
Detection signals:
- ComponentResource classes that don't pass
{ parent: this } to child resources
- Resources inside a component appearing at root level in the console
- Unexpected behavior when adding aliases to components
Wrong:
class MyComponent extends pulumi.ComponentResource {
constructor(name: string, opts?: pulumi.ComponentResourceOptions) {
super("myorg:components:MyComponent", name, {}, opts);
const bucket = new aws.s3.Bucket(`${name}-bucket`);
}
}
Right:
class MyComponent extends pulumi.ComponentResource {
constructor(name: string, opts?: pulumi.ComponentResourceOptions) {
super("myorg:components:MyComponent", name, {}, opts);
const bucket = new aws.s3.Bucket(`${name}-bucket`, {}, {
parent: this
});
const policy = new aws.s3.BucketPolicy(`${name}-policy`, {
bucket: bucket.id,
policy: policyDoc,
}, {
parent: this
});
}
}
What parent: this provides:
- Resources appear nested under the component in Pulumi console
- Deleting the component deletes all children
- Aliases on the component automatically apply to children
- Clear ownership in state files
Reference: https://www.pulumi.com/docs/concepts/resources/components/
5. Encrypt Secrets from Day One
Why: Secrets marked with --secret are encrypted in state files, masked in CLI output, and tracked through transformations. Starting with plaintext config and converting later requires credential rotation, reference updates, and audit of leaked values in logs and state history.
Detection signals:
- Passwords, API keys, tokens stored as plain config
- Connection strings with embedded credentials
- Private keys or certificates in plaintext
Wrong:
pulumi config set databasePassword hunter2
pulumi config set apiKey sk-1234567890
Right:
pulumi config set --secret databasePassword hunter2
pulumi config set --secret apiKey sk-1234567890
In code:
const config = new pulumi.Config();
const dbPassword = config.requireSecret("databasePassword");
const connectionString = pulumi.interpolate`postgres://user:${dbPassword}@host/db`;
const computed = pulumi.secret(someValue);
Use Pulumi ESC for centralized secrets:
environment:
- production-secrets
esc env set production-secrets db.password --secret "hunter2"
What qualifies as a secret:
- Passwords and passphrases
- API keys and tokens
- Private keys and certificates
- Connection strings with credentials
- OAuth client secrets
- Encryption keys
References:
6. Use Aliases When Refactoring
Why: Renaming resources, moving them into components, or changing parents causes Pulumi to see them as new resources. Without aliases, refactoring destroys and recreates resources, potentially causing downtime or data loss. Aliases preserve resource identity through refactors.
Detection signals:
- Resource rename without alias
- Moving resource into or out of a ComponentResource
- Changing the parent of a resource
- Preview shows delete+create when update was intended
Wrong:
const bucket = new aws.s3.Bucket("my-bucket");
const bucket = new aws.s3.Bucket("application-bucket");
Right:
const bucket = new aws.s3.Bucket("application-bucket", {}, {
aliases: [{ name: "my-bucket" }],
});
Moving into a component:
const bucket = new aws.s3.Bucket("my-bucket");
class MyComponent extends pulumi.ComponentResource {
constructor(name: string, opts?: pulumi.ComponentResourceOptions) {
super("myorg:components:MyComponent", name, {}, opts);
const bucket = new aws.s3.Bucket("bucket", {}, {
parent: this,
aliases: [{
name: "my-bucket",
parent: pulumi.rootStackResource,
}],
});
}
}
Alias types:
aliases: [{ name: "old-name" }]
aliases: [{ name: "resource-name", parent: oldParent }]
aliases: ["urn:pulumi:stack::project::aws:s3/bucket:Bucket::old-name"]
Lifecycle:
- Add alias during refactor
- Run
pulumi up on all stacks
- Remove alias after all stacks updated (optional, but keeps code clean)
Reference: https://www.pulumi.com/docs/iac/concepts/resources/options/aliases/
7. Preview Before Every Deployment
Why: pulumi preview shows exactly what will be created, updated, or destroyed. Surprises in production come from skipping preview. A resource showing "replace" when you expected "update" means imminent destruction and recreation.
Detection signals:
- Running
pulumi up --yes interactively without reviewing changes
- No preview step anywhere in the CI/CD workflow for a given change
- Preview output not reviewed before merge or deployment approval
Wrong:
pulumi up --yes
Right:
pulumi preview
pulumi up
What to look for in preview:
+ create - New resource will be created
~ update - Existing resource will be modified in place
- delete - Resource will be destroyed
+-replace - Resource will be destroyed and recreated (potential downtime)
~+-replace - Resource will be updated, then replaced
Warning signs:
- Unexpected
replace operations (check for immutable property changes)
- Resources being deleted that shouldn't be
- More changes than expected from your code diff
CI/CD integration:
jobs:
preview:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
- name: Pulumi Preview
uses: pulumi/actions@v5
with:
command: preview
stack-name: production
env:
PULUMI_ACCESS_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.PULUMI_ACCESS_TOKEN }}
deploy:
needs: preview
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
if: github.ref == 'refs/heads/main'
steps:
- name: Pulumi Up
uses: pulumi/actions@v5
with:
command: up
stack-name: production
PR workflow:
- Run preview on every PR
- Post preview output as PR comment
- Require preview review before merge
- Deploy only on merge to main
References:
Quick Reference
| Practice | Key Signal | Fix |
|---|
| No resources in apply | new Resource() inside .apply() | Move resource outside, pass Output directly |
| Pass outputs directly | Extracted values used as inputs | Use Output objects, pulumi.interpolate |
| Use components | Flat structure, repeated patterns | Create ComponentResource classes |
| Set parent: this | Component children at root level | Pass { parent: this } to all child resources |
| Secrets from day one | Plaintext passwords/keys in config | Use --secret flag, ESC |
| Aliases when refactoring | Delete+create in preview | Add alias with old name/parent |
| Preview before deploy | pulumi up --yes | Always run pulumi preview first |
Validation Checklist
When reviewing Pulumi code, verify:
Related Skills
- pulumi-component: Deep guide to authoring ComponentResource classes, designing args interfaces, multi-language support, testing, and distribution. Use skill
pulumi-component.
- pulumi-automation-api: Programmatic orchestration of multiple stacks. Use skill
pulumi-automation-api.
- pulumi-esc: Centralized secrets and configuration management. Use skill
pulumi-esc.