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shell-local will run a shell script of your choosing on the machine where Packer is being run - in other words, shell-local will run the shell script on your build server, or your desktop, etc., rather than the remote/guest machine being provisioned by Packer. | docs | Shell (Local) - Provisioners | docs-provisioners-shell-local |
Local Shell Provisioner
Type: shell-local
shell-local will run a shell script of your choosing on the machine where Packer is being run - in other words, shell-local will run the shell script on your build server, or your desktop, etc., rather than the remote/guest machine being provisioned by Packer.
The remote shell provisioner executes shell scripts on a remote machine.
Basic Example
The example below is fully functional.
{
"type": "shell-local",
"command": "echo foo"
}
Configuration Reference
The reference of available configuration options is listed below. The only required element is "command".
Exactly one of the following is required:
-
command
(string) - This is a single command to execute. It will be written to a temporary file and run using theexecute_command
call below. If you are building a windows vm on AWS, Azure or Google Compute and would like to access the generated password that Packer uses to connect to the instance via WinRM, you can use the template variable{{.WinRMPassword}}
to set this as an environment variable. -
inline
(array of strings) - This is an array of commands to execute. The commands are concatenated by newlines and turned into a single file, so they are all executed within the same context. This allows you to change directories in one command and use something in the directory in the next and so on. Inline scripts are the easiest way to pull off simple tasks within the machine. -
script
(string) - The path to a script to execute. This path can be absolute or relative. If it is relative, it is relative to the working directory when Packer is executed. -
scripts
(array of strings) - An array of scripts to execute. The scripts will be executed in the order specified. Each script is executed in isolation, so state such as variables from one script won't carry on to the next.
Optional parameters:
-
environment_vars
(array of strings) - An array of key/value pairs to inject prior to theexecute_command
. The format should bekey=value
. Packer injects some environmental variables by default into the environment, as well, which are covered in the section below. If you are building a windows vm on AWS, Azure or Google Compute and would like to access the generated password that Packer uses to connect to the instance via WinRM, you can use the template variable{{.WinRMPassword}}
to set this as an environment variable. For example:"environment_vars": "WINRMPASS={{.WinRMPassword}}"
-
execute_command
(array of strings) - The command used to execute the script. By default this is["/bin/sh", "-c", "{{.Vars}}, "{{.Script}}"]
on unix and["cmd", "/c", "{{.Vars}}", "{{.Script}}"]
on windows. This is treated as a template engine. There are two available variables:Script
, which is the path to the script to run, andVars
, which is the list ofenvironment_vars
, if configured.If you choose to set this option, make sure that the first element in the array is the shell program you want to use (for example, "sh"), and a later element in the array must be
{{.Script}}
.This option provides you a great deal of flexibility. You may choose to provide your own shell program, for example "/usr/local/bin/zsh" or even "powershell.exe". However, with great power comes great responsibility - these commands are not officially supported and things like environment variables may not work if you use a different shell than the default.
For backwards compatibility, you may also use {{.Command}}, but it is decoded the same way as {{.Script}}. We recommend using {{.Script}} for the sake of clarity, as even when you set only a single
command
to run, Packer writes it to a temporary file and then runs it as a script.If you are building a windows vm on AWS, Azure or Google Compute and would like to access the generated password that Packer uses to connect to the instance via WinRM, you can use the template variable
{{.WinRMPassword}}
to set this as an environment variable. -
inline_shebang
(string) - The shebang value to use when running commands specified byinline
. By default, this is/bin/sh -e
. If you're not usinginline
, then this configuration has no effect. Important: If you customize this, be sure to include something like the-e
flag, otherwise individual steps failing won't fail the provisioner. -
use_linux_pathing
(bool) - This is only relevant to windows hosts. If you are running Packer in a Windows environment with the Windows Subsystem for Linux feature enabled, and would like to invoke a bash script rather than invoking a Cmd script, you'll need to set this flag to true; it tells Packer to use the linux subsystem path for your script rather than the Windows path. (e.g. /mnt/c/path/to/your/file instead of C:/path/to/your/file). Please see the example below for more guidance on how to use this feature. If you are not on a Windows host, or you do not intend to use the shell-local provisioner to run a bash script, please ignore this option.
Execute Command
To many new users, the execute_command
is puzzling. However, it provides an
important function: customization of how the command is executed. The most
common use case for this is dealing with sudo password prompts. You may also
need to customize this if you use a non-POSIX shell, such as tcsh
on FreeBSD.
The Windows Linux Subsystem
The shell-local provisioner was designed with the idea of allowing you to run
commands in your local operating system's native shell. For Windows, we've
assumed in our defaults that this is Cmd. However, it is possible to run a
bash script as part of the Windows Linux Subsystem from the shell-local
provisioner, by modifying the execute_command
and the use_linux_pathing
options in the provisioner config.
The example below is a fully functional test config.
One limitation of this offering is that "inline" and "command" options are not available to you; please limit yourself to using the "script" or "scripts" options instead.
Please note that the WSL is a beta feature, and this tool is not guaranteed to work as you expect it to.
{
"builders": [
{
"type": "null",
"communicator": "none"
}
],
"provisioners": [
{
"type": "shell-local",
"environment_vars": ["PROVISIONERTEST=ProvisionerTest1"],
"execute_command": ["bash", "-c", "{{.Vars}} {{.Script}}"],
"use_linux_pathing": true,
"scripts": ["C:/Users/me/scripts/example_bash.sh"]
},
{
"type": "shell-local",
"environment_vars": ["PROVISIONERTEST=ProvisionerTest2"],
"execute_command": ["bash", "-c", "{{.Vars}} {{.Script}}"],
"use_linux_pathing": true,
"script": "C:/Users/me/scripts/example_bash.sh"
}
]
}
Default Environmental Variables
In addition to being able to specify custom environmental variables using the
environment_vars
configuration, the provisioner automatically defines certain
commonly useful environmental variables:
-
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 slightly from a common provisioning script. -
PACKER_BUILDER_TYPE
is the type of the builder that was used to create the machine that the script is running on. This is useful if you want to run only certain parts of the script on systems built with certain builders.
Safely Writing A Script
Whether you use the inline
option, or pass it a direct script
or scripts
,
it is important to understand a few things about how the shell-local
provisioner works to run it safely and easily. This understanding will save
you much time in the process.
Once Per Builder
The shell-local
script(s) you pass are run once per builder. That means that
if you have an amazon-ebs
builder and a docker
builder, your script will be
run twice. If you have 3 builders, it will run 3 times, once for each builder.
Always Exit Intentionally
If any provisioner fails, the packer build
stops and all interim artifacts
are cleaned up.
For a shell script, that means the script must exit with a zero code. You
must be extra careful to exit 0
when necessary.
Usage Examples:
Example of running a .cmd file on windows:
{
"type": "shell-local",
"environment_vars": ["SHELLLOCALTEST=ShellTest1"],
"scripts": ["./scripts/test_cmd.cmd"]
},
Contents of "test_cmd.cmd":
echo %SHELLLOCALTEST%
Example of running an inline command on windows: Required customization: tempfile_extension
{
"type": "shell-local",
"environment_vars": ["SHELLLOCALTEST=ShellTest2"],
"tempfile_extension": ".cmd",
"inline": ["echo %SHELLLOCALTEST%"]
},
Example of running a bash command on windows using WSL: Required customizations: use_linux_pathing and execute_command
{
"type": "shell-local",
"environment_vars": ["SHELLLOCALTEST=ShellTest3"],
"execute_command": ["bash", "-c", "{{.Vars}} {{.Script}}"],
"use_linux_pathing": true,
"script": "./scripts/example_bash.sh"
}
Contents of "example_bash.sh":
#!/bin/bash
echo $SHELLLOCALTEST
Example of running a powershell script on windows: Required customizations: env_var_format and execute_command
{
"type": "shell-local",
"environment_vars": ["SHELLLOCALTEST=ShellTest4"],
"execute_command": ["powershell.exe", "{{.Vars}} {{.Script}}"],
"env_var_format": "$env:%s=\"%s\"; ",
}
Example of running a powershell script on windows as "inline": Required customizations: env_var_format, tempfile_extension, and execute_command
{
"type": "shell-local",
"tempfile_extension": ".ps1",
"environment_vars": ["SHELLLOCALTEST=ShellTest5"],
"execute_command": ["powershell.exe", "{{.Vars}} {{.Script}}"],
"env_var_format": "$env:%s=\"%s\"; ",
"inline": ["write-output $env:SHELLLOCALTEST"]
}
Example of running a bash script on linux:
{
"type": "shell-local",
"environment_vars": ["PROVISIONERTEST=ProvisionerTest1"],
"scripts": ["./scripts/dummy_bash.sh"]
}
Example of running a bash "inline" on linux:
{
"type": "shell-local",
"environment_vars": ["PROVISIONERTEST=ProvisionerTest2"],
"inline": ["echo hello",
"echo $PROVISIONERTEST"]
}