github.com/marksheahan/packer@v0.10.2-0.20160613200515-1acb2d6645a0/website/source/docs/builders/azure.html.md (about) 1 --- 2 description: | 3 4 layout: docs 5 page_title: Azure Resource Manager 6 ... 7 8 # Azure Resource Manager Builder 9 10 Type: `azure-arm` 11 12 Packer supports building VHDs in [Azure Resource Manager](https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/documentation/articles/resource-group-overview/). Azure provides new users a [$200 credit for the first 30 days](https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/free/); after which you will incur costs for VMs built and stored using Packer. 13 14 Unlike most Packer builders, the artifact produced by the ARM builder is a VHD (virtual hard disk), not a full virtual machine image. This means you will need to [perform some additional steps](https://github.com/Azure/packer-azure/issues/201) in order to launch a VM from your build artifact. 15 16 Azure uses a combination of OAuth and Active Directory to authorize requests to the ARM API. Learn how to [authorize access to ARM](/docs/builders/azure-setup.html). 17 18 The documentation below references command output from the [Azure CLI](https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/documentation/articles/xplat-cli-install/). 19 20 ## Configuration Reference 21 22 The following configuration options are available for building Azure images. In addition to the options listed here, a 23 [communicator](/docs/templates/communicator.html) can be configured for this 24 builder. 25 26 ### Required: 27 28 - `client_id` (string) The Active Directory service principal associated with your builder. 29 30 - `client_secret` (string) The password or secret for your service principal. 31 32 - `resource_group_name` (string) Resource group under which the final artifact will be stored. 33 34 - `storage_account` (string) Storage account under which the final artifact will be stored. 35 36 - `subscription_id` (string) Subscription under which the build will be performed. **The service principal specified in `client_id` must have full access to this subscription.** 37 38 - `tenant_id` (string) The account identifier with which your `client_id` and `subscription_id` are associated. 39 40 - `capture_container_name` (string) Destination container name. Essentially the "folder" where your VHD will be organized in Azure. 41 42 - `capture_name_prefix` (string) VHD prefix. The final artifacts will be named `PREFIX-osDisk.UUID` and `PREFIX-vmTemplate.UUID`. 43 44 - `image_publisher` (string) PublisherName for your base image. See [documentation](https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/documentation/articles/resource-groups-vm-searching/) for details. 45 46 CLI example `azure vm image list-publishers -l westus` 47 48 - `image_offer` (string) Offer for your base image. See [documentation](https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/documentation/articles/resource-groups-vm-searching/) for details. 49 50 CLI example `azure vm image list-offers -l westus -p Canonical` 51 52 - `image_sku` (string) SKU for your base image. See [documentation](https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/documentation/articles/resource-groups-vm-searching/) for details. 53 54 CLI example `azure vm image list-skus -l westus -p Canonical -o UbuntuServer` 55 56 - `location` (string) Azure datacenter in which your VM will build. 57 58 CLI example `azure location list` 59 60 ### Optional: 61 62 - `cloud_environment_name` (string) One of `Public`, `China`, or 63 `USGovernment`. Defaults to `Public`. Long forms such as 64 `USGovernmentCloud` and `AzureUSGovernmentCloud` are also supported. 65 66 - `image_version` (string) Specify a specific version of an OS to boot from. Defaults to `latest`. There may be a 67 difference in versions available across regions due to image synchronization latency. To ensure a consistent 68 version across regions set this value to one that is available in all regions where you are deploying. 69 70 CLI example `azure vm image list -l westus -p Canonical -o UbuntuServer -k 16.04.0-LTS` 71 72 - `image_url` (string) Specify a custom VHD to use. If this value is set, do not set image_publisher, image_offer, 73 image_sku, or image_version. 74 75 - `object_id` (string) Specify an OAuth Object ID to protect WinRM certificates 76 created at runtime. This variable is required when creating images based on 77 Windows; this variable is not used by non-Windows builds. See `Windows` 78 behavior for `os_type`, below. 79 80 - `os_type` (string) If either `Linux` or `Windows` is specified Packer will 81 automatically configure authentication credentials for your machine. For 82 `Linux` this configures an SSH authorized key. For `Windows` this 83 configures your Tenant ID, Object ID, Key Vault Name, Key Vault Secret, and 84 WinRM certificate URL. 85 86 - `vm_size` (string) Size of the VM used for building. This can be changed 87 when you deploy a VM from your VHD. See 88 [pricing](https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/pricing/details/virtual-machines/) information. Defaults to `Standard_A1`. 89 90 CLI example `azure vm sizes -l westus` 91 92 93 ## Basic Example 94 95 Here is a basic example for Azure. 96 97 ``` {.javascript} 98 { 99 "type": "azure-arm", 100 101 "client_id": "fe354398-d7sf-4dc9-87fd-c432cd8a7e09", 102 "client_secret": "keepitsecret&#*$", 103 "resource_group_name": "packerdemo", 104 "storage_account": "virtualmachines", 105 "subscription_id": "44cae533-4247-4093-42cf-897ded6e7823", 106 "tenant_id": "de39842a-caba-497e-a798-7896aea43218", 107 108 "capture_container_name": "images", 109 "capture_name_prefix": "packer", 110 111 "os_type": "Linux", 112 "image_publisher": "Canonical", 113 "image_offer": "UbuntuServer", 114 "image_sku": "14.04.4-LTS", 115 116 "location": "West US", 117 "vm_size": "Standard_A2" 118 } 119 ``` 120 121 ## Implementation 122 123 \~> **Warning!** This is an advanced topic. You do not need to understand the implementation to use the Azure 124 builder. 125 126 The Azure builder uses ARM 127 [templates](https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/documentation/articles/resource-group-authoring-templates/) to deploy 128 resources. ARM templates make it easy to express the what without having to express the how. 129 130 The Azure builder works under the assumption that it creates everything it needs to execute a build. When the build has 131 completed it simply deletes the resource group to cleanup any runtime resources. Resource groups are named using the 132 form `packer-Resource-Group-<random>`. The value `<random>` is a random value that is generated at every invocation of 133 packer. The `<random>` value is re-used as much as possible when naming resources, so users can better identify and 134 group these transient resources when seen in their subscription. 135 136 > The VHD is created on a user specified storage account, not a random one created at runtime. When a virtual machine 137 is captured the resulting VHD is stored on the same storage account as the source VHD. The VHD created by Packer must 138 persist after a build is complete, which is why the storage account is set by the user. 139 140 The basic steps for a build are: 141 142 1. Create a resource group. 143 1. Validate and deploy a VM template. 144 1. Execute provision - defined by the user; typically shell commands. 145 1. Power off and capture the VM. 146 1. Delete the resource group. 147 1. Delete the temporary VM's OS disk. 148 149 The templates used for a build are currently fixed in the code. There is a template for Linux, Windows, and KeyVault. 150 The templates are themselves templated with place holders for names, passwords, SSH keys, certificates, etc. 151 152 ### What's Randomized? 153 154 The Azure builder creates the following random values at runtime. 155 156 * Administrator Password: a random 32-character value using the *password alphabet*. 157 * Certificate: a 2,048-bit certificate used to secure WinRM communication. The certificate is valid for 24-hours, which starts roughly at invocation time. 158 * Certificate Password: a random 32-character value using the *password alphabet* used to protect the private key of the certificate. 159 * Compute Name: a random 15-character name prefixed with pkrvm; the name of the VM. 160 * Deployment Name: a random 15-character name prefixed with pkfdp; the name of the deployment. 161 * KeyVault Name: a random 15-character name prefixed with pkrkv. 162 * OS Disk Name: a random 15-character name prefixed with pkros. 163 * Resource Group Name: a random 33-character name prefixed with packer-Resource-Group-. 164 * SSH Key Pair: a 2,048-bit asymmetric key pair; can be overriden by the user. 165 166 The default alphabet used for random values is **0123456789bcdfghjklmnpqrstvwxyz**. The alphabet was reduced (no 167 vowels) to prevent running afoul of Azure decency controls. 168 169 The password alphabet used for random values is **0123456789abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ**. 170 171 ### Windows 172 173 The Windows implementation is very similar to the Linux build, with the exception that it deploys a template to 174 configure KeyVault. Packer communicates with a Windows VM using the WinRM protocol. Windows VMs on Azure default to 175 using both password and certificate based authentication for WinRM. The password is easily set via the VM ARM template, 176 but the certificate requires an intermediary. The intermediary for Azure is KeyVault. The certificate is uploaded to a 177 new KeyVault provisioned in the same resource group as the VM. When the Windows VM is deployed, it links to the 178 certificate in KeyVault, and Azure will ensure the certificate is injected as part of deployment. 179 180 The basic steps for a Windows build are: 181 182 1. Create a resource group. 183 1. Validate and deploy a KeyVault template. 184 1. Validate and deploy a VM template. 185 1. Execute provision - defined by the user; typically shell commands. 186 1. Power off and capture the VM. 187 1. Delete the resource group. 188 1. Delete the temporary VM's OS disk. 189 190 A Windows build requires two templates and two deployments. Unfortunately, the KeyVault and VM cannot be deployed at 191 the same time hence the need for two templates and deployments. The time required to deploy a KeyVault template is 192 minimal, so overall impact is small. 193 194 > The KeyVault certificate is protected using the object_id of the SPN. This is why Windows builds require object_id, 195 and an SPN. The KeyVault is deleted when the resource group is deleted. 196 197 See the [examples/azure](https://github.com/mitchellh/packer/tree/master/examples/azure) folder in the packer project 198 for more examples.