Go to file
Mitchell Hashimoto a93668bed3 Merge pull request #26 from mitchellh/digital-ocean-state-timeout
DigitalOcean: Add configuration for state timeout
2013-06-23 11:46:55 -07:00
builder builder/digitalocean: add configurable state_timeout 2013-06-23 12:51:51 +02:00
command command/build: output <nothing> properly if no artifact 2013-06-19 13:07:52 -07:00
communicator/ssh communicator/ssh: remove unusable code 2013-06-17 15:20:31 -07:00
packer packer: Better docs for communicator interface 2013-06-20 14:46:25 -07:00
plugin fmt 2013-06-18 21:54:33 -07:00
post-processor/compress fmt 2013-06-18 21:54:33 -07:00
provisioner/shell provisioner/shell: can specify multiple scripts to provision with 2013-06-20 13:45:54 -07:00
scripts scripts: script for publishing to the website 2013-06-20 14:48:57 -07:00
website website: document digitalocean state_timeout configuration 2013-06-23 12:58:00 +02:00
.gitignore website: homepage coming in, although a bit rough right now 2013-06-20 17:27:04 -07:00
Makefile move scripts into the scripts/ folder 2013-06-19 22:44:02 -07:00
README.md Update README 2013-06-08 22:56:34 -07:00
TODO.md Update TODO 2013-06-20 11:53:27 -07:00
config.go post-processor/compress: Boilerplate for the compress PP 2013-06-18 21:18:41 -07:00
configfile.go Don't depend on os/user anymore, which requires cgo 2013-06-17 22:10:11 -07:00
configfile_unix.go Don't depend on os/user anymore, which requires cgo 2013-06-17 22:10:11 -07:00
configfile_windows.go Don't depend on os/user anymore, which requires cgo 2013-06-17 22:10:11 -07:00
packer.go Make sure the cache dir is absolute 2013-06-20 12:37:17 -07:00
signal.go Signal handling, force quit after two interrupts 2013-06-03 22:40:05 -07:00

README.md

Packer

Packer is a tool for building identical machine images for multiple platforms from a single source configuration.

Packer is lightweight, runs on every major operating system, and is highly performant, creating machine images for multiple platforms in parallel. Packer comes out of the box with support for creating AMIs (EC2), VMware images, and VirtualBox images. Support for more platforms can be added via plugins.

Quick Start

First, get Packer by either downloading a pre-built Packer binary for your operating system or downloading and compiling Packer yourself.

After Packer is installed, create your first template, which tells Packer what platforms to build images for and how you want to build them. In our case, we'll create a simple AMI that has Redis pre-installed. Save this file as quick-start.json. Be sure to replace any credentials with your own.

{
  "builders": [{
    "type": "amazon-ebs",
    "access_key": "YOUR KEY HERE",
    "secret_key": "YOUR SECRET KEY HERE",
    "region": "us-east-1",
    "source_ami": "ami-de0d9eb7",
    "instance_type": "m1.small",
    "ssh_username": "ubuntu",
    "ami_name": "packer-quick-start {{.CreateTime}}"
  }]
}

Next, tell Packer to build the image:

$ packer build quick-start.json
...

Packer will build an AMI according to the "quick-start" template. The AMI will be available in your AWS account. To delete the AMI, you must manually delete it using the AWS console. Packer builds your images, it does not manage their lifecycle. Where they go, how they're run, etc. is up to you.

Documentation

Full, comprehensive documentation is viewable on the Packer website:

http://www.packer.io/docs

Developing Packer

If you wish to work on Packer itself, you'll first need Go installed (version 1.1+ is required). Next, clone this repository then just type make. In a few moments, you'll have a working packer executable:

$ make
...
$ bin/packer
...

You can run tests by typing make test. This will run tests for Packer core along with all the core builders and commands and such that come with Packer.