--- description: | The masterless Puppet Packer provisioner configures Puppet to run on the machines by Packer from local modules and manifest files. Modules and manifests can be uploaded from your local machine to the remote machine or can simply use remote paths (perhaps obtained using something like the shell provisioner). Puppet is run in masterless mode, meaning it never communicates to a Puppet master. layout: docs page_title: 'Puppet (Masterless) Provisioner' ... # Puppet (Masterless) Provisioner Type: `puppet-masterless` The masterless Puppet Packer provisioner configures Puppet to run on the machines by Packer from local modules and manifest files. Modules and manifests can be uploaded from your local machine to the remote machine or can simply use remote paths (perhaps obtained using something like the shell provisioner). Puppet is run in masterless mode, meaning it never communicates to a Puppet master. -> **Note:** Puppet will *not* be installed automatically by this provisioner. This provisioner expects that Puppet is already installed on the machine. It is common practice to use the [shell provisioner](/docs/provisioners/shell.html) before the Puppet provisioner to do this. ## Basic Example The example below is fully functional and expects the configured manifest file to exist relative to your working directory: ``` {.javascript} { "type": "puppet-masterless", "manifest_file": "site.pp" } ``` ## Configuration Reference The reference of available configuration options is listed below. Required parameters: - `manifest_file` (string) - This is either a path to a puppet manifest (`.pp` file) *or* a directory containing multiple manifests that puppet will apply (the ["main manifest"](https://docs.puppetlabs.com/puppet/latest/reference/dirs_manifest.html)). These file(s) must exist on your local system and will be uploaded to the remote machine. Optional parameters: - `execute_command` (string) - The command used to execute Puppet. This has various [configuration template variables](/docs/templates/configuration-templates.html) available. See below for more information. - `extra_arguments` (array of strings) - This is an array of additional options to pass to the puppet command when executing puppet. This allows for customization of the `execute_command` without having to completely replace or include it's contents, making forward-compatible customizations much easier. - `facter` (object of key/value strings) - Additional [facts](https://puppetlabs.com/facter) to make available when Puppet is running. - `hiera_config_path` (string) - The path to a local file with hiera configuration to be uploaded to the remote machine. Hiera data directories must be uploaded using the file provisioner separately. - `ignore_exit_codes` (boolean) - If true, Packer will never consider the provisioner a failure. - `manifest_dir` (string) - The path to a local directory with manifests to be uploaded to the remote machine. This is useful if your main manifest file uses imports. This directory doesn't necessarily contain the `manifest_file`. It is a separate directory that will be set as the "manifestdir" setting on Puppet. \~> `manifest_dir` is passed to `puppet apply` as the `--manifestdir` option. This option was deprecated in puppet 3.6, and removed in puppet 4.0. If you have multiple manifests you should use `manifest_file` instead. - `module_paths` (array of strings) - This is an array of paths to module directories on your local filesystem. These will be uploaded to the remote machine. By default, this is empty. - `prevent_sudo` (boolean) - By default, the configured commands that are executed to run Puppet are executed with `sudo`. If this is true, then the sudo will be omitted. - `staging_directory` (string) - This is the directory where all the configuration of Puppet by Packer will be placed. By default this is "/tmp/packer-puppet-masterless". This directory doesn't need to exist but must have proper permissions so that the SSH user that Packer uses is able to create directories and write into this folder. If the permissions are not correct, use a shell provisioner prior to this to configure it properly. - `working_directory` (string) - This is the directory from which the puppet command will be run. When using hiera with a relative path, this option allows to ensure that the paths are working properly. If not specified, defaults to the value of specified `staging_directory` (or its default value if not specified either). ## Execute Command By default, Packer uses the following command (broken across multiple lines for readability) to execute Puppet: ``` {.liquid} cd {{.WorkingDir}} && \ {{.FacterVars}}{{if .Sudo}} sudo -E {{end}}puppet apply \ --verbose \ --modulepath='{{.ModulePath}}' \ {{if ne .HieraConfigPath ""}}--hiera_config='{{.HieraConfigPath}}' {{end}} \ {{if ne .ManifestDir ""}}--manifestdir='{{.ManifestDir}}' {{end}} \ --detailed-exitcodes \ {{.ManifestFile}} ``` This command can be customized using the `execute_command` configuration. As you can see from the default value above, the value of this configuration can contain various template variables, defined below: - `WorkingDir` - The path from which Puppet will be executed. - `FacterVars` - Shell-friendly string of environmental variables used to set custom facts configured for this provisioner. - `HieraConfigPath` - The path to a hiera configuration file. - `ManifestFile` - The path on the remote machine to the manifest file for Puppet to use. - `ModulePath` - The paths to the module directories. - `Sudo` - A boolean of whether to `sudo` the command or not, depending on the value of the `prevent_sudo` configuration. ## Default Facts In addition to being able to specify custom Facter facts using the `facter` configuration, the provisioner automatically defines certain commonly useful facts: - `packer_build_name` is set to the name of the build that Packer is running. This is most useful when Packer is making multiple builds and you want to distinguish them in your Hiera hierarchy. - `packer_builder_type` is the type of the builder that was used to create the machine that Puppet is running on. This is useful if you want to run only certain parts of your Puppet code on systems built with certain builders.