--- description: | The amazon-ebsvolume Packer builder is like the EBS builder, but is intended to create EBS volumes rather than a machine image. layout: docs page_title: 'Amazon EBS Volume - Builders' sidebar_current: 'docs-builders-amazon-ebsvolume' --- # EBS Volume Builder Type: `amazon-ebsvolume` The `amazon-ebsvolume` Packer builder is able to create Amazon Elastic Block Store volumes which are prepopulated with filesystems or data. This builder builds EBS volumes by launching an EC2 instance from a source AMI, provisioning that running machine, and then destroying the source machine, keeping the volumes intact. This is all done in your own AWS account. The builder will create temporary key pairs, security group rules, etc. that provide it temporary access to the instance while the image is being created. The builder does *not* manage EBS Volumes. Once it creates volumes and stores it in your account, it is up to you to use, delete, etc. the volumes. -> **Note:** Temporary resources are, by default, all created with the prefix `packer`. This can be useful if you want to restrict the security groups and key pairs Packer is able to operate on. ## Configuration Reference There are many configuration options available for the builder. They are segmented below into two categories: required and optional parameters. Within each category, the available configuration keys are alphabetized. In addition to the options listed here, a [communicator](/docs/templates/communicator.html) can be configured for this builder. ### Required: - `access_key` (string) - The access key used to communicate with AWS. [Learn how to set this.](/docs/builders/amazon.html#specifying-amazon-credentials) - `instance_type` (string) - The EC2 instance type to use while building the AMI, such as `m1.small`. - `region` (string) - The name of the region, such as `us-east-1`, in which to launch the EC2 instance to create the AMI. - `secret_key` (string) - The secret key used to communicate with AWS. [Learn how to set this.](/docs/builders/amazon.html#specifying-amazon-credentials) - `source_ami` (string) - The initial AMI used as a base for the newly created machine. `source_ami_filter` may be used instead to populate this automatically. ### Optional: - `ebs_volumes` (array of block device mappings) - Add the block device mappings to the AMI. The block device mappings allow for keys: - `device_name` (string) - The device name exposed to the instance (for example, `/dev/sdh` or `xvdh`). Required when specifying `volume_size`. - `delete_on_termination` (boolean) - Indicates whether the EBS volume is deleted on instance termination - `encrypted` (boolean) - Indicates whether to encrypt the volume or not - `kms_key_id` (string) - The ARN for the KMS encryption key. When specifying `kms_key_id`, `encrypted` needs to be set to `true`. - `iops` (number) - The number of I/O operations per second (IOPS) that the volume supports. See the documentation on [IOPs](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/APIReference/API_EbsBlockDevice.html) for more information - `no_device` (boolean) - Suppresses the specified device included in the block device mapping of the AMI - `snapshot_id` (string) - The ID of the snapshot - `virtual_name` (string) - The virtual device name. See the documentation on [Block Device Mapping](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/APIReference/API_BlockDeviceMapping.html) for more information - `volume_size` (number) - The size of the volume, in GiB. Required if not specifying a `snapshot_id` - `volume_type` (string) - The volume type. `gp2` for General Purpose (SSD) volumes, `io1` for Provisioned IOPS (SSD) volumes, and `standard` for Magnetic volumes - `tags` (map) - Tags to apply to the volume. These are retained after the builder completes. This is a \[template engine\] (/docs/templates/engine.html) where the `SourceAMI` variable is replaced with the source AMI ID and `BuildRegion` variable is replaced with the value of `region`. - `associate_public_ip_address` (boolean) - If using a non-default VPC, public IP addresses are not provided by default. If this is toggled, your new instance will get a Public IP. - `availability_zone` (string) - Destination availability zone to launch instance in. Leave this empty to allow Amazon to auto-assign. - `custom_endpoint_ec2` (string) - This option is useful if you use a cloud provider whose API is compatible with aws EC2. Specify another endpoint like this `https://ec2.custom.endpoint.com`. - `ebs_optimized` (boolean) - Mark instance as [EBS Optimized](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/EBSOptimized.html). Default `false`. - `ena_support` (boolean) - Enable enhanced networking (ENA but not SriovNetSupport) on HVM-compatible AMIs. If true, add `ec2:ModifyInstanceAttribute` to your AWS IAM policy. Note: you must make sure enhanced networking is enabled on your instance. See [Amazon's documentation on enabling enhanced networking](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/enhanced-networking.html#enabling_enhanced_networking). Default `false`. - `iam_instance_profile` (string) - The name of an [IAM instance profile](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/IAM/latest/UserGuide/instance-profiles.html) to launch the EC2 instance with. - `mfa_code` (string) - The MFA [TOTP](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time-based_One-time_Password_Algorithm) code. This should probably be a user variable since it changes all the time. - `profile` (string) - The profile to use in the shared credentials file for AWS. See Amazon's documentation on [specifying profiles](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/sdk-for-go/v1/developer-guide/configuring-sdk.html#specifying-profiles) for more details. - `run_tags` (object of key/value strings) - Tags to apply to the instance that is *launched* to create the AMI. These tags are *not* applied to the resulting AMI unless they're duplicated in `tags`. This is a [template engine](/docs/templates/engine.html) where the `SourceAMI` variable is replaced with the source AMI ID and `BuildRegion` variable is replaced with the value of `region`. - `security_group_id` (string) - The ID (*not* the name) of the security group to assign to the instance. By default this is not set and Packer will automatically create a new temporary security group to allow SSH access. Note that if this is specified, you must be sure the security group allows access to the `ssh_port` given below. - `security_group_ids` (array of strings) - A list of security groups as described above. Note that if this is specified, you must omit the `security_group_id`. - `temporary_security_group_source_cidr` (string) - An IPv4 CIDR block to be authorized access to the instance, when packer is creating a temporary security group. The default is `0.0.0.0/0` (ie, allow any IPv4 source). This is only used when `security_group_id` or `security_group_ids` is not specified. - `shutdown_behavior` (string) - Automatically terminate instances on shutdown in case Packer exits ungracefully. Possible values are `stop` and `terminate`. Defaults to `stop`. - `skip_metadata_api_check` - (boolean) Skip the AWS Metadata API check. Useful for AWS API implementations that do not have a metadata API endpoint. Setting to `true` prevents Packer from authenticating via the Metadata API. You may need to use other authentication methods like static credentials, configuration variables, or environment variables. - `skip_region_validation` (boolean) - Set to `true` if you want to skip validation of the region configuration option. Defaults to `false`. - `snapshot_groups` (array of strings) - A list of groups that have access to create volumes from the snapshot(s). By default no groups have permission to create volumes from the snapshot(s). `all` will make the snapshot publicly accessible. - `snapshot_users` (array of strings) - A list of account IDs that have access to create volumes from the snapshot(s). By default no additional users other than the user creating the AMI has permissions to create volumes from the backing snapshot(s). - `source_ami_filter` (object) - Filters used to populate the `source_ami` field. Example: ``` json { "source_ami_filter": { "filters": { "virtualization-type": "hvm", "name": "ubuntu/images/*ubuntu-xenial-16.04-amd64-server-*", "root-device-type": "ebs" }, "owners": ["099720109477"], "most_recent": true } } ``` This selects the most recent Ubuntu 16.04 HVM EBS AMI from Canonical. NOTE: This will fail unless *exactly* one AMI is returned. In the above example, `most_recent` will cause this to succeed by selecting the newest image. - `filters` (map of strings) - filters used to select a `source_ami`. NOTE: This will fail unless *exactly* one AMI is returned. Any filter described in the docs for [DescribeImages](http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/APIReference/API_DescribeImages.html) is valid. - `owners` (array of strings) - This scopes the AMIs to certain Amazon account IDs. This is helpful to limit the AMIs to a trusted third party, or to your own account. - `most_recent` (boolean) - Selects the newest created image when true. This is most useful for selecting a daily distro build. - `spot_price` (string) - The maximum hourly price to pay for a spot instance to create the AMI. Spot instances are a type of instance that EC2 starts when the current spot price is less than the maximum price you specify. Spot price will be updated based on available spot instance capacity and current spot instance requests. It may save you some costs. You can set this to `auto` for Packer to automatically discover the best spot price or to `0` to use an on-demand instance (default). - `spot_price_auto_product` (string) - Required if `spot_price` is set to `auto`. This tells Packer what sort of AMI you're launching to find the best spot price. This must be one of: `Linux/UNIX`, `SUSE Linux`, `Windows`, `Linux/UNIX (Amazon VPC)`, `SUSE Linux (Amazon VPC)` or `Windows (Amazon VPC)` - `sriov_support` (boolean) - Enable enhanced networking (SriovNetSupport but not ENA) on HVM-compatible AMIs. If true, add `ec2:ModifyInstanceAttribute` to your AWS IAM policy. Note: you must make sure enhanced networking is enabled on your instance. See [Amazon's documentation on enabling enhanced networking](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/enhanced-networking.html#enabling_enhanced_networking). Default `false`. - `ssh_keypair_name` (string) - If specified, this is the key that will be used for SSH with the machine. By default, this is blank, and Packer will generate a temporary key pair unless [`ssh_password`](/docs/templates/communicator.html#ssh_password) is used. [`ssh_private_key_file`](/docs/templates/communicator.html#ssh_private_key_file) must be specified with this. - `ssh_private_ip` (boolean) - No longer supported. See [`ssh_interface`](#ssh_interface). A fixer exists to migrate. - `ssh_interface` (string) - One of `public_ip`, `private_ip`, `public_dns` or `private_dns`. If set, either the public IP address, private IP address, public DNS name or private DNS name will used as the host for SSH. The default behaviour if inside a VPC is to use the public IP address if available, otherwise the private IP address will be used. If not in a VPC the public DNS name will be used. Also works for WinRM. Where Packer is configured for an outbound proxy but WinRM traffic should be direct, `ssh_interface` must be set to `private_dns` and `.compute.internal` included in the `NO_PROXY` environment variable. - `subnet_id` (string) - If using VPC, the ID of the subnet, such as `subnet-12345def`, where Packer will launch the EC2 instance. This field is required if you are using an non-default VPC. - `temporary_key_pair_name` (string) - The name of the temporary key pair to generate. By default, Packer generates a name that looks like `packer_`, where <UUID> is a 36 character unique identifier. - `token` (string) - The access token to use. This is different from the access key and secret key. If you're not sure what this is, then you probably don't need it. This will also be read from the `AWS_SESSION_TOKEN` environmental variable. - `user_data` (string) - User data to apply when launching the instance. Note that you need to be careful about escaping characters due to the templates being JSON. It is often more convenient to use `user_data_file`, instead. - `user_data_file` (string) - Path to a file that will be used for the user data when launching the instance. - `vpc_id` (string) - If launching into a VPC subnet, Packer needs the VPC ID in order to create a temporary security group within the VPC. Requires `subnet_id` to be set. If this field is left blank, Packer will try to get the VPC ID from the `subnet_id`. - `windows_password_timeout` (string) - The timeout for waiting for a Windows password for Windows instances. Defaults to 20 minutes. Example value: `10m` ## Basic Example ``` json { "type" : "amazon-ebsvolume", "secret_key" : "YOUR SECRET KEY HERE", "access_key" : "YOUR KEY HERE", "region" : "us-east-1", "ssh_username" : "ubuntu", "instance_type" : "t2.medium", "source_ami" : "ami-40d28157", "ebs_volumes" : [ { "volume_type" : "gp2", "device_name" : "/dev/xvdf", "delete_on_termination" : false, "tags" : { "zpool" : "data", "Name" : "Data1" }, "volume_size" : 10 }, { "volume_type" : "gp2", "device_name" : "/dev/xvdg", "tags" : { "zpool" : "data", "Name" : "Data2" }, "delete_on_termination" : false, "volume_size" : 10 }, { "volume_size" : 10, "tags" : { "Name" : "Data3", "zpool" : "data" }, "delete_on_termination" : false, "device_name" : "/dev/xvdh", "volume_type" : "gp2" } ] } ``` -> **Note:** Packer can also read the access key and secret access key from environmental variables. See the configuration reference in the section above for more information on what environmental variables Packer will look for. Further information on locating AMI IDs and their relationship to instance types and regions can be found in the AWS EC2 Documentation [for Linux](http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/finding-an-ami.html) or [for Windows](http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/WindowsGuide/finding-an-ami.html). ## Accessing the Instance to Debug If you need to access the instance to debug for some reason, run the builder with the `-debug` flag. In debug mode, the Amazon builder will save the private key in the current directory and will output the DNS or IP information as well. You can use this information to access the instance as it is running. -> **Note:** Packer uses pre-built AMIs as the source for building images. These source AMIs may include volumes that are not flagged to be destroyed on termination of the instance building the new image. In addition to those volumes created by this builder, any volumes inn the source AMI which are not marked for deletion on termination will remain in your account.