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docs | Configuration Templates | All strings within templates are processed by a common Packer templating engine, where variables and functions can be used to modify the value of a configuration parameter at runtime. |
Configuration Templates
All strings within templates are processed by a common Packer templating engine, where variables and functions can be used to modify the value of a configuration parameter at runtime.
For example, the {{timestamp}}
function can be used in any string to
generate the current timestamp. This is useful for configurations that require
unique keys, such as AMI names. By setting the AMI name to something like
My Packer AMI {{timestamp}}
, the AMI name will be unique down to the second.
In addition to globally available functions like timestamp shown before,
some configurations have special local variables that are available only
for that configuration. These are recognizable because they're prefixed by
a period, such as {{.Name}}
.
The complete syntax is covered in the next section, followed by a reference of globally available functions.
Syntax
The syntax of templates is extremely simple. Anything template related
happens within double-braces: {{ }}
. Variables are prefixed with a period
and capitalized, such as {{.Variable}}
and functions are just directly
within the braces, such as {{timestamp}}
.
Here is an example from the VMware VMX template that shows configuration templates in action:
.encoding = "UTF-8"
displayName = "{{ .Name }}"
guestOS = "{{ .GuestOS }}"
In this case, the "Name" and "GuestOS" variables will be replaced, potentially resulting in a VMX that looks like this:
.encoding = "UTF-8"
displayName = "packer"
guestOS = "otherlinux"
Global Functions
While some configuration settings have local variables specific to only that configuration, a set of functions are available globally for use in any string in Packer templates. These are listed below for reference.
lower
- Lowercases the string.pwd
- The working directory while executing Packer.isotime [FORMAT]
- UTC time, which can be formatted. See more examples below.timestamp
- The current Unix timestamp in UTC.uuid
- Returns a random UUID.upper
- Uppercases the string.
isotime Format
Formatting for the function isotime
uses the magic reference date
Mon Jan 2 15:04:05 -0700 MST 2006, which breaks down to the following:
Day of Week | Month | Date | Hour | Minute | Second | Year | Timezone | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Numeric | - | 01 | 02 | 03 (15) | 04 | 05 | 06 | -0700 |
Textual | Monday (Mon) | January (Jan) | - | - | - | - | - | MST |
The values in parentheses are the abbreviated, or 24-hour clock values
Here are some example formated time, using the above format options:
isotime = June 7, 7:22:43pm 2014
{{isotime "2006-01-02"}} = 2014-06-07
{{isotime "Mon 1506"}} = Sat 1914
{{isotime "01-Jan-06 03\_04\_05"}} = 07-Jun-2014 07\_22\_43
{{isotime "Hour15Year200603"}} = Hour19Year201407
Amazon Specific Functions
Specific to Amazon builders:
clean_ami_name
- AMI names can only contain certain characters. This function will replace illegal characters with a '-" character. Example usage since ":" is not a legal AMI name is:{{isotime | clean_ami_name}}
.