docs tweaks
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@ -390,7 +390,7 @@ Options:
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-parallel-builds=1 Number of builds to run in parallel. 1 disables parallelization. 0 means no limit (Default: 0)
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-timestamp-ui Enable prefixing of each ui output with an RFC3339 timestamp.
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-var 'key=value' Variable for templates, can be used multiple times.
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-var-file=path JSON file containing user variables.
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-var-file=path JSON or HCL2 file containing user variables.
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`
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return strings.TrimSpace(helpText)
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@ -81,7 +81,7 @@ Usage: packer console [options] [TEMPLATE]
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Options:
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-var 'key=value' Variable for templates, can be used multiple times.
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-var-file=path JSON file containing user variables. [ Note that even in HCL mode this expects file to contain JSON, a fix is comming soon ]
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-var-file=path JSON or HCL2 file containing user variables. [ Note that even in HCL mode this expects file to contain JSON, a fix is comming soon ]
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`
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return strings.TrimSpace(helpText)
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@ -92,7 +92,7 @@ Options:
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-except=foo,bar,baz Validate all builds other than these.
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-only=foo,bar,baz Validate only these builds.
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-var 'key=value' Variable for templates, can be used multiple times.
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-var-file=path JSON file containing user variables. [ Note that even in HCL mode this expects file to contain JSON, a fix is comming soon ]
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-var-file=path JSON or HCL2 file containing user variables. [ Note that even in HCL mode this expects file to contain JSON, a fix is comming soon ]
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`
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return strings.TrimSpace(helpText)
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@ -20,7 +20,7 @@ _packer () {
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'-parallel=[(false) Disable parallelization. (Default: false)]'
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'-parallel-builds=[(0) Number of builds to run in parallel. (Defaults to infinite: 0)]'
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'-var[("key=value") Variable for templates, can be used multiple times.]'
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'-var-file=[(path) JSON file containing user variables.]'
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'-var-file=[(path) JSON or HCL2 file containing user variables.]'
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'(-)*:files:_files -g "*.json"'
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)
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@ -34,7 +34,7 @@ _packer () {
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'-except=[(foo,bar,baz) Validate all builds other than these.]'
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'-only=[(foo,bar,baz) Validate only these builds.]'
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'-var[("key=value") Variable for templates, can be used multiple times.]'
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'-var-file=[(path) JSON file containing user variables.]'
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'-var-file=[(path) JSON or HCL2 file containing user variables.]'
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'(-)*:files:_files -g "*.json"'
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)
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@ -72,14 +72,18 @@ locals {
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This defines several variables within your Packer configuration, each showing
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off a different way to set them. The first variable, "weekday", is an empty
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block `{}`. This will work under many simple circumstances, and Packer will
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guess what type the variable should be at runtime.
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block `{}`, without a type or a default.
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However, it's generally best to provide the type in your variable definition,
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as you can see in variable "flavor", which we have given a type of "string",
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and variable "exit_codes", which we have given a type of "list(number)",
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meaning it is a list/array of numbers.
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When a variable is passed from the cli or environment and the variable's type
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is not set, Packer will expect it to be a string. But if it is passed from a
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var-file where Packer can interpret HCL properly it can be a slice or any
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supported type.
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In addition to setting the type, the "flavor" and "exit_codes" variables also
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provide a default. If you set a default value, then you don't need to set the
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variable at run time. Packer will use a provided command-line var,
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@ -87,14 +91,17 @@ var-file, or environment var if it exists, but if not Packer will fall back to
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this default value.
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If you do not set a default value, Packer will fail immediately when you try to
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run a build if you have not provided the missing variable via the command-line,
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a var-file, or the environment.
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run a `build` if you have not provided the missing variable via the
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command-line, a var-file, or the environment. The `validate`, `inspect` and
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`console` commands will work, but variables with unknown values will be
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`<unknown>`.
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This also defines two locals: `ice_cream_flavor` and `foo`.
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-> **Note**: that it is _not_ possible to a variable in the definition of
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another variable. But it _is_ possible to use locals and variables in the
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definition of a local, as shown in the ice_cream_flavor definition.
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-> **Note**: that it is _not_ possible to reference a variable in the
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definition of another variable. But it _is_ possible to use locals and
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variables in the definition of a local, as shown in the ice_cream_flavor
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definition.
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## Using Variables and locals in Configuration
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@ -119,19 +126,19 @@ build {
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// specialized HCL2 variable syntax. This example shows a combination of
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// an HCL2 variable and the golang template engines built into the
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// execute_command option
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execute_command = ["/bin/sh", "-c", "echo ${var.sudo_password}| {{.Vars}} {{.Script}}"]
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execute_command = ["/bin/sh", "-c", "echo ${var.sudo_password}| {{.Vars}} {{.Script}}"]
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environment_vars = ["HELLO_USER=packeruser", "UUID=${build.PackerRunUUID}"]
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inline = ["echo the Packer run uuid is $UUID"]
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inline = ["echo the Packer run uuid is $UUID"]
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}
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provisioner "shell-local" {
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inline = ["echo var.flavor is: ${var.flavor}",
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"echo local.ice_cream_flavor is: ${local.ice_cream_flavor}"]
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inline = ["echo var.flavor is: ${var.flavor}",
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"echo local.ice_cream_flavor is: ${local.ice_cream_flavor}"]
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valid_exit_codes = var.exit_codes
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}
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}
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```
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As you can see in the example, you can acces your variables directly by
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As you can see in the example, you can access your variables directly by
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giving them the `var.` or `local.` prefix. If you want to embed the variables
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in a string, you can do so with the `${}` HCL interpolation syntax. If you are
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using an option that is a template engine, you still need to use the golang
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@ -178,7 +185,7 @@ build {
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"source.null.example"
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]
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provisioner "shell-local" {
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inline = ["echo $PIZZA"]
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inline = ["echo $PIZZA"]
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environment_vars = ["PIZZA=${var.pizza}"]
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}
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}
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@ -206,7 +213,7 @@ build {
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"source.null.example"
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]
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provisioner "shell-local" {
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inline = ["echo $PIZZA"]
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inline = ["echo $PIZZA"]
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environment_vars = ["PIZZA=${var.pizza}"]
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}
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}
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@ -238,7 +245,7 @@ contents:
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```hcl
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sudo_password = "partyparrot"
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weekday = "Sunday"
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weekday = "Sunday"
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```
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You tell Packer to use this var file using the `-var-file` command line flag.
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