--- layout: docs sidebar_current: docs-provisioners-puppet-server page_title: Puppet Server - Provisioners description: |- The puppet-server Packer provisioner provisions Packer machines with Puppet by connecting to a Puppet master. --- # Puppet Server Provisioner Type: `puppet-server` The `puppet-server` Packer provisioner provisions Packer machines with Puppet by connecting 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 a Puppet server to be accessible from your network. ```json { "type": "puppet-server", "options": "--test --pluginsync", "facter": { "server_role": "webserver" } } ``` ## Configuration Reference The reference of available configuration options is listed below. The provisioner takes various options. None are strictly required. They are listed below: - `client_cert_path` (string) - Path to the directory on your disk that contains the client certificate for the node. This defaults to nothing, in which case a client cert won't be uploaded. - `client_private_key_path` (string) - Path to the directory on your disk that contains the client private key for the node. This defaults to nothing, in which case a client private key won't be uploaded. - `facter` (object of key/value strings) - Additional Facter facts to make available to the Puppet run. - `ignore_exit_codes` (boolean) - If true, Packer will never consider the provisioner a failure. - `options` (string) - Additional command line options to pass to `puppet agent` when Puppet is run. - `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. - `puppet_node` (string) - The name of the node. If this isn't set, the fully qualified domain name will be used. - `puppet_server` (string) - Hostname of the Puppet server. By default "puppet" will be used. - `staging_dir` (string) - This is the directory where all the configuration of Puppet by Packer will be placed. By default this is /tmp/packer-puppet-server. 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. - `puppet_bin_dir` (string) - The path to the directory that contains the puppet binary for running `puppet agent`. Usually, this would be found via the `$PATH` or `%PATH%` environment variable, but some builders (notably, the Docker one) do not run profile-setup scripts, therefore the path is usually empty. - `execute_command` (string) - This is optional. The command used to execute Puppet. This has various [configuration template variables](/docs/templates/engine.html) available. See below for more information. By default, Packer uses the following command: ```liquid {{.FacterVars}} {{if .Sudo}} sudo -E {{end}} \ {{if ne .PuppetBinDir \"\"}}{{.PuppetBinDir}}/{{end}}puppet agent --onetime --no-daemonize \ {{if ne .PuppetServer \"\"}}--server='{{.PuppetServer}}' {{end}} \ {{if ne .Options \"\"}}{{.Options}} {{end}} \ {{if ne .PuppetNode \"\"}}--certname={{.PuppetNode}} {{end}} \ {{if ne .ClientCertPath \"\"}}--certdir='{{.ClientCertPath}}' {{end}} \ {{if ne .ClientPrivateKeyPath \"\"}}--privatekeydir='{{.ClientPrivateKeyPath}}' \ {{end}} --detailed-exitcodes ``` ## 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.