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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. | docs | Template Engine - Templates | docs-templates-engine |
Template Engine
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.
The syntax of templates uses the following conventions:
- Anything template related happens within double-braces:
{{ }}
. - Functions are specified directly within the braces, such as
{{timestamp}}
. - Template variables are prefixed with a period and capitalized, such as
{{.Variable}}
.
Functions
Functions perform operations on and within strings, 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. If you
need greater than one second granularity, you should use {{uuid}}
, for
example when you have multiple builders in the same template.
Here is a full list of the available functions for reference.
build_name
- The name of the build being run.build_type
- The type of the builder being used currently.env
- Returns environment variables. See example in using home variableisotime [FORMAT]
- UTC time, which can be formatted. See more examples below in theisotime
format reference.lower
- Lowercases the string.pwd
- The working directory while executing Packer.split
- Split an input string using separator and return the requested substring.template_dir
- The directory to the template for the build.timestamp
- The current Unix timestamp in UTC.uuid
- Returns a random UUID.upper
- Uppercases the string.user
- Specifies a user variable.packer_version
- Returns Packer version.
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}}
.
Specific to Google Compute builders:
-
clean_image_name
- GCE image names can only contain certain characters and the maximum length is 63. This function will convert upper cases to lower cases and replace illegal characters with a "-" character. Example:"mybuild-{{isotime | clean_image_name}}"
will becomemybuild-2017-10-18t02-06-30z
.Note: Valid GCE image names must match the regex
(?:[a-z](?:[-a-z0-9]{0,61}[a-z0-9])?)
This engine does not guarantee that the final image name will match the regex; it will not truncate your name if it exceeds 63 characters, and it will not validate that the beginning and end of the engine's output are valid. For example,
"image_name": {{isotime | clean_image_name}}"
will cause your build to fail because the image name will start with a number, which is why in the above example we prepend the isotime with "mybuild".
Specific to Azure builders:
-
clean_image_name
- Azure managed image names can only contain certain characters and the maximum length is 80. This function will replace illegal characters with a "-" character. Example:"mybuild-{{isotime | clean_image_name}}"
will becomemybuild-2017-10-18t02-06-30z
.Note: Valid Azure image names must match the regex
^[^_\\W][\\w-._)]{0,79}$
This engine does not guarantee that the final image name will match the regex; it will not truncate your name if it exceeds 80 characters, and it will not validate that the beginning and end of the engine's output are valid. It will truncate invalid characters from the end of the name when converting illegal characters. For example,
"managed_image_name: "My-Name::"
will be converted to"managed_image_name: "My-Name"
Template variables
Template variables are special variables automatically set by Packer at build time. Some builders, provisioners and other components have template variables that are available only for that component. Template variables are recognizable because they're prefixed by a period, such as {{ .Name }}
. For example, when using the shell
builder template variables are available to customize the execute_command
parameter used to determine how Packer will run the shell command.
{
"provisioners": [
{
"type": "shell",
"execute_command": "{{.Vars}} sudo -E -S bash '{{.Path}}'",
"scripts": [
"scripts/bootstrap.sh"
]
}
]
}
The {{ .Vars }}
and {{ .Path }}
template variables will be replaced with the list of the environment variables and the path to the script to be executed respectively.
-> Note: In addition to template variables, you can specify your own user variables. See the user variable documentation for more information on user variables.
isotime Function Format Reference
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 |
Note that "-0700" is always formatted into "+0000" because isotime
is always UTC time.
Here are some example formatted time, using the above format options:
isotime = June 7, 7:22:43pm 2014
{{isotime "2006-01-02"}} = 2014-06-07
{{isotime "Mon 1504"}} = Sat 1922
{{isotime "02-Jan-06 03\_04\_05"}} = 07-Jun-2014 07\_22\_43
{{isotime "Hour15Year200603"}} = Hour19Year201407
Please note that double quote characters need escaping inside of templates (in this case, on the ami_name
value):
{
"builders": [
{
"type": "amazon-ebs",
"access_key": "...",
"secret_key": "...",
"region": "us-east-1",
"source_ami": "ami-fce3c696",
"instance_type": "t2.micro",
"ssh_username": "ubuntu",
"ami_name": "packer {{isotime \"2006-01-02\"}}"
}
]
}
-> Note: See the Amazon builder documentation for more information on how to correctly configure the Amazon builder in this example.
split Function Format Reference
The function split
takes an input string, a seperator string, and a numeric component value and returns request substring.
Here are some examples using the above options:
build_name = foo-bar-provider
{{split build_name "-" 0}} = foo
{{split "fixed-string" "-" 1}} = string
Please note that double quote characters need escaping inside of templates (in this case, on the fixed-string
value):
{
"post-processors": [
[
{
"type": "vagrant",
"compression_level": 9,
"keep_input_artifact": false,
"vagrantfile_template": "tpl/{{split build_name \"-\" 1}.rb",
"output": "output/{{build_name}}.box",
"only": [
"org-name-provider"
]
}
]
]
}