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Templates: Provisioners
Within the template, the provisioners section contains an array of all the provisioners that Packer should use to install and configure software within running machines prior to turning them into machine images.
Provisioners are optional. If no provisioners are defined within a template, then no software other than the defaults will be installed within the resulting machine images. This is not typical, however, since much of the value of Packer is to produce multiple identical images of pre-configured software.
This documentation page will cover how to configure a provisioner in a template. The specific configuration options available for each provisioner, however, must be referenced from the documentation for that specific provisioner.
Within a template, a section of provisioner definitions looks like this:
{ "provisioners": [ ... one or more provisioner definitions here ... ] }
For each of the definitions, Packer will run the provisioner for each of the configured builds. The provisioners will be run in the order they are defined within the template.
Provisioner Definition
A provisioner definition is a JSON object that must contain at least
the type
key. This key specifies the name of the provisioner to use.
Additional keys within the object are used to configure the provisioner,
with the exception of a handful of special keys, covered later.
As an example, the "shell" provisioner requires a key such as script
which specifies a path to a shell script to execute within the machines
being created.
An example provisioner definition is shown below, configuring the shell provisioner to run a local script within the machines:
{ "type": "shell", "script": "script.sh" }
Run on Specific Builds
You can use the only
or except
configurations to run a provisioner
only with specific builds. These two configurations do what you expect:
only
will only run the provisioner on the specified builds and
except
will run the provisioner on anything other than the specified
builds.
An example of only
being used is shown below, but the usage of except
is effectively the same:
{ "type": "shell", "script": "script.sh", "only": ["virtualbox"] }
The values within only
or except
are build names, not builder
types. If you recall, build names by default are just their builder type,
but if you specify a custom name
parameter, then you should use that
as the value instead of the type.
Build-Specific Overrides
While the goal of Packer is to produce identical machine images, it sometimes requires periods of time where the machines are different before they eventually converge to be identical. In these cases, different configurations for provisioners may be necessary depending on the build. This can be done using build-specific overrides.
An example of where this might be necessary is when building both an EC2 AMI and a VMware machine. The source EC2 AMI may setup a user with administrative privileges by default, whereas the VMware machine doesn't have these privileges. In this case, the shell script may need to be executed differently. Of course, the goal is that hopefully the shell script converges these two images to be identical. However, they may initially need to be run differently.
This example is shown below:
{ "type": "shell", "script": "script.sh", "override": { "vmware": { "execute_command": "echo 'password' | sudo -S bash {{.Path}}" } } }
As you can see, the override
key is used. The value of this key is another
JSON object where the key is the name of a builder definition.
The value of this is in turn another JSON object. This JSON object simply
contains the provisioner configuration as normal. This configuration is merged
into the default provisioner configuration.