github.com/askholme/packer@v0.7.2-0.20140924152349-70d9566a6852/website/source/docs/builders/amazon-chroot.html.markdown (about) 1 --- 2 layout: "docs" 3 page_title: "Amazon AMI Builder (chroot)" 4 --- 5 6 # AMI Builder (chroot) 7 8 Type: `amazon-chroot` 9 10 The `amazon-chroot` builder is able to create Amazon AMIs backed by 11 an EBS volume as the root device. For more information on the difference 12 between instance storage and EBS-backed instances, see the 13 ["storage for the root device" section in the EC2 documentation](http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/ComponentsAMIs.html#storage-for-the-root-device). 14 15 The difference between this builder and the `amazon-ebs` builder is that 16 this builder is able to build an EBS-backed AMI without launching a new 17 EC2 instance. This can dramatically speed up AMI builds for organizations 18 who need the extra fast build. 19 20 <div class="alert alert-block alert-warn"> 21 <p><strong>This is an advanced builder.</strong> If you're just getting 22 started with Packer, we recommend starting with the 23 <a href="/docs/builders/amazon-ebs.html">amazon-ebs builder</a>, which is 24 much easier to use.</p> 25 </div> 26 27 The builder does _not_ manage AMIs. Once it creates an AMI and stores it 28 in your account, it is up to you to use, delete, etc. the AMI. 29 30 ## How Does it Work? 31 32 This builder works by creating a new EBS volume from an existing source AMI 33 and attaching it into an already-running EC2 instance. One attached, a 34 [chroot](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chroot) is used to provision the 35 system within that volume. After provisioning, the volume is detached, 36 snapshotted, and an AMI is made. 37 38 Using this process, minutes can be shaved off the AMI creation process 39 because a new EC2 instance doesn't need to be launched. 40 41 There are some restrictions, however. The host EC2 instance where the 42 volume is attached to must be a similar system (generally the same OS 43 version, kernel versions, etc.) as the AMI being built. Additionally, 44 this process is much more expensive because the EC2 instance must be kept 45 running persistently in order to build AMIs, whereas the other AMI builders 46 start instances on-demand to build AMIs as needed. 47 48 ## Configuration Reference 49 50 There are many configuration options available for the builder. They are 51 segmented below into two categories: required and optional parameters. Within 52 each category, the available configuration keys are alphabetized. 53 54 ### Required: 55 56 * `access_key` (string) - The access key used to communicate with AWS. 57 If not specified, Packer will use the environment variables 58 `AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID` or `AWS_ACCESS_KEY` (in that order), if set. 59 If the environmental variables aren't set and Packer is running on 60 an EC2 instance, Packer will check the instance metadata for IAM role 61 keys. 62 63 * `ami_name` (string) - The name of the resulting AMI that will appear 64 when managing AMIs in the AWS console or via APIs. This must be unique. 65 To help make this unique, use a function like `timestamp` (see 66 [configuration templates](/docs/templates/configuration-templates.html) for more info) 67 68 * `secret_key` (string) - The secret key used to communicate with AWS. 69 If not specified, Packer will use the environment variables 70 `AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY` or `AWS_SECRET_KEY` (in that order), if set. 71 If the environmental variables aren't set and Packer is running on 72 an EC2 instance, Packer will check the instance metadata for IAM role 73 keys. 74 75 * `source_ami` (string) - The source AMI whose root volume will be copied 76 and provisioned on the currently running instance. This must be an 77 EBS-backed AMI with a root volume snapshot that you have access to. 78 79 ### Optional: 80 81 * `ami_description` (string) - The description to set for the resulting 82 AMI(s). By default this description is empty. 83 84 * `ami_groups` (array of strings) - A list of groups that have access 85 to launch the resulting AMI(s). By default no groups have permission 86 to launch the AMI. `all` will make the AMI publicly accessible. 87 88 * `ami_product_codes` (array of strings) - A list of product codes to 89 associate with the AMI. By default no product codes are associated with 90 the AMI. 91 92 * `ami_regions` (array of strings) - A list of regions to copy the AMI to. 93 Tags and attributes are copied along with the AMI. AMI copying takes time 94 depending on the size of the AMI, but will generally take many minutes. 95 96 * `ami_users` (array of strings) - A list of account IDs that have access 97 to launch the resulting AMI(s). By default no additional users other than the user 98 creating the AMI has permissions to launch it. 99 100 * `ami_virtualization_type` (string) - The type of virtualization for the AMI 101 you are building. This option is required to register HVM images. Can be 102 "paravirtual" (default) or "hvm". 103 104 * `chroot_mounts` (array of array of strings) - This is a list of additional 105 devices to mount into the chroot environment. This configuration parameter 106 requires some additional documentation which is in the "Chroot Mounts" section 107 below. Please read that section for more information on how to use this. 108 109 * `command_wrapper` (string) - How to run shell commands. This 110 defaults to "{{.Command}}". This may be useful to set if you want to set 111 environmental variables or perhaps run it with `sudo` or so on. This is a 112 configuration template where the `.Command` variable is replaced with the 113 command to be run. 114 115 * `copy_files` (array of strings) - Paths to files on the running EC2 instance 116 that will be copied into the chroot environment prior to provisioning. 117 This is useful, for example, to copy `/etc/resolv.conf` so that DNS lookups 118 work. 119 120 * `device_path` (string) - The path to the device where the root volume 121 of the source AMI will be attached. This defaults to "" (empty string), 122 which forces Packer to find an open device automatically. 123 124 * `enhanced_networking` (boolean) - Enable enhanced networking (SriovNetSupport) on 125 HVM-compatible AMIs. 126 127 * `mount_path` (string) - The path where the volume will be mounted. This is 128 where the chroot environment will be. This defaults to 129 `packer-amazon-chroot-volumes/{{.Device}}`. This is a configuration 130 template where the `.Device` variable is replaced with the name of the 131 device where the volume is attached. 132 133 * `tags` (object of key/value strings) - Tags applied to the AMI. 134 135 ## Basic Example 136 137 Here is a basic example. It is completely valid except for the access keys: 138 139 <pre class="prettyprint"> 140 { 141 "type": "amazon-chroot", 142 "access_key": "YOUR KEY HERE", 143 "secret_key": "YOUR SECRET KEY HERE", 144 "source_ami": "ami-e81d5881", 145 "ami_name": "packer-amazon-chroot {{timestamp}}" 146 } 147 </pre> 148 149 ## Chroot Mounts 150 151 The `chroot_mounts` configuration can be used to mount additional devices 152 within the chroot. By default, the following additional mounts are added 153 into the chroot by Packer: 154 155 * `/proc` (proc) 156 * `/sys` (sysfs) 157 * `/dev` (bind to real `/dev`) 158 * `/dev/pts` (devpts) 159 * `/proc/sys/fs/binfmt_misc` (binfmt_misc) 160 161 These default mounts are usually good enough for anyone and are sane 162 defaults. However, if you want to change or add the mount points, you may 163 using the `chroot_mounts` configuration. Here is an example configuration: 164 165 <pre class="prettyprint"> 166 { 167 "chroot_mounts": [ 168 ["proc", "proc", "/proc"], 169 ["bind", "/dev", "/dev"] 170 ] 171 } 172 </pre> 173 174 `chroot_mounts` is a list of a 3-tuples of strings. The three components 175 of the 3-tuple, in order, are: 176 177 * The filesystem type. If this is "bind", then Packer will properly bind 178 the filesystem to another mount point. 179 180 * The source device. 181 182 * The mount directory. 183 184 ## Parallelism 185 186 A quick note on parallelism: it is perfectly safe to run multiple 187 _separate_ Packer processes with the `amazon-chroot` builder on the same 188 EC2 instance. In fact, this is recommended as a way to push the most performance 189 out of your AMI builds. 190 191 Packer properly obtains a process lock for the parallelism-sensitive parts 192 of its internals such as finding an available device. 193 194 ## Gotchas 195 196 One of the difficulties with using the chroot builder is that your provisioning 197 scripts must not leave any processes running or packer will be unable to unmount 198 the filesystem. 199 200 For debian based distributions you can setup a [policy-rc.d](http://people.debian.org/~hmh/invokerc.d-policyrc.d-specification.txt) file which will 201 prevent packages installed by your provisioners from starting services: 202 203 <pre class="prettyprint"> 204 { 205 "type": "shell", 206 "inline": [ 207 "echo '#!/bin/sh' > /usr/sbin/policy-rc.d", 208 "echo 'exit 101' >> /usr/sbin/policy-rc.d", 209 "chmod a+x /usr/sbin/policy-rc.d" 210 ] 211 }, 212 # ... 213 { 214 "type": "shell", 215 "inline": [ 216 "rm -f /usr/sbin/policy-rc.d" 217 ] 218 } 219 </pre>