116 lines
3.9 KiB
Markdown
116 lines
3.9 KiB
Markdown
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---
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layout: "docs"
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page_title: "User Variables in Templates"
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---
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# User Variables
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User variables allow your templates to be further configured with variables
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from the command-line, environmental variables, or files. This lets you
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parameterize your templates so that you can keep secret tokens,
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environment-specific data, and other types of information out of your
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templates. This maximizes the portablility and shareability of the template.
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Using user variables expects you know how
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[configuration templates](/docs/templates/configuration-templates.html) work.
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If you don't know how configuration templates work yet, please read that
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page first.
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## Usage
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User variables must first be defined in a `variables` section within your
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template. Even if you want a variable to default to an empty string, it
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must be defined. This explicitivity makes it easy for newcomers to your
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template to understand what can be modified using variables in your template.
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The `variables` section is a simple key/value mapping of the variable
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name to a default value. A default value can be the empty string. An
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example is shown below:
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<pre class="prettyprint">
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{
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"variables": {
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"aws_access_key": "",
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"aws_secret_key": ""
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},
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"builders": [{
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"type": "amazon-ebs",
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"access_key": "{{user `aws_access_key`}}",
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"secret_key": "{{user `aws_secret_key`}}",
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...
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}]
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}
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</pre>
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In the above example, the template defines two variables: `aws_access_key` and
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`aws_secret_key`. They default to empty values.
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Later, the variables are used within the builder we defined in order to
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configure the actual keys for the Amazon builder.
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Using the variables is extremely easy. Variables are used by calling
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the user function in the form of <code>{{user `variable`}}</code>.
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This function can be used in _any string_ within the template, in
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builders, provisioners, _anything_. The user variable is available globally
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within the template.
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## Setting Variables
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Now that we covered how to define and use variables within a template,
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the next important point is how to actually set these variables. Packer
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exposes two methods for setting variables: from the command line or
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from a file.
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### From the Command Line
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To set variables from the command line, the `-var` flag is used as
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a parameter to `packer build` (and some other commands). Continuing our example
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above, we could build our template using the command below. The command
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is split across multiple lines for readability, but can of course be a single
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line.
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```
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$ packer build \
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-var 'aws_access_key=foo' \
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-var 'aws_secret_key=bar' \
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template.json
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```
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As you can see, the `-var` flag can be specified multiple times in order
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to set multiple variables. Also, variables set later on the command-line
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override earlier set variables if it has already been set.
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Finally, variables set from the command-line override all other methods
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of setting variables. So if you specify a variable in a file (the next
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method shown), you can override it using the command-line.
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### From a File
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Variables can also be set from an external JSON file. The `-var-file`
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flag reads a file containing a basic key/value mapping of variables to
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values and sets those variables. The JSON file is simple:
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<pre class="prettyprint">
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{
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"aws_access_key": "foo",
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"aws_secret_key": "bar"
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}
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</pre>
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It is a single JSON object where the keys are variables and the values are
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the variable values. Assuming this file is in `variables.json`, we can
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build our template using the following command:
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```
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$ packer build -var-file=variables.json template.json
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```
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The `-var-file` flag can be specified multiple times and variables from
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multiple files will be read and applied. As you'd expect, variables read
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from files specified later override a variable set earlier if it has
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already been set.
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And as mentioned above, no matter where a `-var-file` is specified, a
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`-var` flag on the command line will always override any variables from
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a file.
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