format_size (Function)¶
The format_size function formats byte values into human-readable strings using appropriate units (B, KB, MB, GB, TB, PB). It automatically selects the most appropriate unit based on the size and allows customizable decimal precision for fine-tuned display control.
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Note
This provider is currently in POC (proof-of-concept) status and under active development. Features and APIs may change without notice. Not intended for production infrastructure.
Human-readable size formatting makes technical information accessible to users. The automatic unit selection ensures that sizes are always displayed in the most intuitive format, whether showing a 2 KB config file or a 500 GB database.
Capabilities¶
This function enables you to:
- File size display: Show file sizes in user-friendly format for outputs and reports
- Storage reports: Display storage usage and capacity in readable units
- Bandwidth monitoring: Format network transfer amounts for dashboards
- Memory usage: Display RAM or cache sizes in appropriate units
- Progress indicators: Show download/upload progress with formatted sizes
Example Usage¶
locals {
example_result = upper(
# Function arguments here
)
}
output "function_result" {
description = "Result of upper function"
value = local.example_result
}
Signature¶
format_size(input)
Arguments¶
Return Value¶
Returns a human-readable size string:
- Automatically selects appropriate unit (B, KB, MB, GB, TB, PB)
- Formats with specified decimal precision
- Returns null if the input is null
- Always includes unit suffix
Common Patterns¶
Storage Reports¶
variable "disk_usage_bytes" {
default = 52428800 # 50 MB
}
locals {
formatted_usage = provider::pyvider::format_size(var.disk_usage_bytes, 2)
# Result: "50.00 MB"
}
File Size Display¶
variable "file_sizes" {
default = [1024, 1048576, 1073741824]
}
locals {
formatted_sizes = [
for size in var.file_sizes :
provider::pyvider::format_size(size)
]
# Result: ["1.0 KB", "1.0 MB", "1.0 GB"]
}
Documentation version: 0.0.19 | Last updated: 2025-11-09