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docs | Vagrant Post-Processor |
Vagrant Post-Processor
Type: vagrant
The Vagrant post-processor takes a build and converts the artifact into a valid Vagrant box, if it can. This lets you use Packer to automatically create arbitrarily complex Vagrant boxes, and is in fact how the official boxes distributed by Vagrant are created.
If you've never used a post-processor before, please read the documentation on using post-processors in templates. This knowledge will be expected for the remainder of this document.
Because Vagrant boxes are provider-specific, the Vagrant post-processor is hardcoded to understand how to convert the artifacts of certain builders into proper boxes for their respective providers.
Currently, the Vagrant post-processor can create boxes for the following providers.
- AWS
- VirtualBox
- VMware
Configuration
The simplest way to use the post-processor is to just enable it. No configuration is required by default. This will mostly do what you expect and will build functioning boxes for many of the built-in builders of Packer.
However, if you want to configure things a bit more, the post-processor does expose some configuration options. The available options are listed below, with more details about certain options in following sections.
-
output
(string) - The full path to the box file that will be created by this post-processor. This is a configuration template. The variableProvider
is replaced by the Vagrant provider the box is for. The variableArtifactId
is replaced by the ID of the input artifact. By default, the value of this config ispacker_{{.Provider}}.box
. -
aws
,virtualbox
, orvmware
(objects) - These are used to configure the specific options for certain providers. A reference of available configuration parameters for each is in the section below.
AWS Provider
The AWS provider itself can be configured with specific options:
vagrantfile_template
(string) - Path to a template to use for the Vagrantfile that is packaged with the box. The contents of the file must be a valid Go text template. By default this is a template that simply sets the AMIs for the various regions of the AWS build.
The vagrantfile_template
has the Images
variable which is a map
of region (string) to AMI ID (string). An example Vagrantfile template for
AWS is shown below. The example simply sets the AMI for each region.
Vagrant.configure("2") do |config|
config.vm.provider "aws" do |aws|
{{ range $region, $ami := .Images }}
aws.region_config "{{ $region }}", ami: "{{ $ami }}"
{{ end }}
end
end
VirtualBox Provider
The VirtualBox provider itself can be configured with specific options:
vagrantfile_template
(string) - Path to a template to use for the Vagrantfile that is packaged with the box. The contents of the file must be a valid Go text template. By default this is a template that just sets the base MAC address so that networking works.
The vagrantfile_template
has the BaseMACAddress
variable which is a string
containing the MAC address of the first network interface. This must be set
in the Vagrantfile for networking to work properly with Vagrant. An example
Vagrantfile template is shown below:
Vagrant.configure("2") do |config|
config.vm.base_mac = "{{ .BaseMacAddress }}"
end
VMware Provider
The VMware provider itself can be configured with specific options:
vagrantfile_template
(string) - Path to a template to use for the Vagrantfile that is packaged with the box. The contents of the file must be a valid Go text template. By default no Vagrantfile is packaged with the box. Note that currently no variables are available in the template, but this may change in the future.