github.com/mmcquillan/packer@v1.1.1-0.20171009221028-c85cf0483a5d/website/source/docs/builders/vmware-iso.html.md (about) 1 --- 2 description: | 3 This VMware Packer builder is able to create VMware virtual machines from an 4 ISO file as a source. It currently supports building virtual machines on hosts 5 running VMware Fusion for OS X, VMware Workstation for Linux and Windows, and 6 VMware Player on Linux. It can also build machines directly on VMware vSphere 7 Hypervisor using SSH as opposed to the vSphere API. 8 layout: docs 9 page_title: 'VMware ISO - Builders' 10 sidebar_current: 'docs-builders-vmware-iso' 11 --- 12 13 # VMware Builder (from ISO) 14 15 Type: `vmware-iso` 16 17 This VMware Packer builder is able to create VMware virtual machines from an ISO 18 file as a source. It currently supports building virtual machines on hosts 19 running [VMware Fusion](https://www.vmware.com/products/fusion/overview.html) for 20 OS X, [VMware 21 Workstation](https://www.vmware.com/products/workstation/overview.html) for Linux 22 and Windows, and [VMware Player](https://www.vmware.com/products/player/) on 23 Linux. It can also build machines directly on [VMware vSphere 24 Hypervisor](https://www.vmware.com/products/vsphere-hypervisor/) using SSH as 25 opposed to the vSphere API. 26 27 The builder builds a virtual machine by creating a new virtual machine from 28 scratch, booting it, installing an OS, provisioning software within the OS, then 29 shutting it down. The result of the VMware builder is a directory containing all 30 the files necessary to run the virtual machine. 31 32 ## Basic Example 33 34 Here is a basic example. This example is not functional. It will start the OS 35 installer but then fail because we don't provide the preseed file for Ubuntu to 36 self-install. Still, the example serves to show the basic configuration: 37 38 ``` json 39 { 40 "type": "vmware-iso", 41 "iso_url": "http://old-releases.ubuntu.com/releases/precise/ubuntu-12.04.2-server-amd64.iso", 42 "iso_checksum": "af5f788aee1b32c4b2634734309cc9e9", 43 "iso_checksum_type": "md5", 44 "ssh_username": "packer", 45 "ssh_password": "packer", 46 "shutdown_command": "shutdown -P now" 47 } 48 ``` 49 50 ## Configuration Reference 51 52 There are many configuration options available for the VMware builder. They are 53 organized below into two categories: required and optional. Within each 54 category, the available options are alphabetized and described. 55 56 In addition to the options listed here, a 57 [communicator](/docs/templates/communicator.html) can be configured for this 58 builder. 59 60 ### Required: 61 62 - `iso_checksum` (string) - The checksum for the OS ISO file. Because ISO 63 files are so large, this is required and Packer will verify it prior to 64 booting a virtual machine with the ISO attached. The type of the checksum is 65 specified with `iso_checksum_type`, documented below. At least one of 66 `iso_checksum` and `iso_checksum_url` must be defined. This has precedence 67 over `iso_checksum_url` type. 68 69 - `iso_checksum_type` (string) - The type of the checksum specified in 70 `iso_checksum`. Valid values are "none", "md5", "sha1", "sha256", or 71 "sha512" currently. While "none" will skip checksumming, this is not 72 recommended since ISO files are generally large and corruption does happen 73 from time to time. 74 75 - `iso_checksum_url` (string) - A URL to a GNU or BSD style checksum file 76 containing a checksum for the OS ISO file. At least one of `iso_checksum` 77 and `iso_checksum_url` must be defined. This will be ignored if 78 `iso_checksum` is non empty. 79 80 - `iso_url` (string) - A URL to the ISO containing the installation image. 81 This URL can be either an HTTP URL or a file URL (or path to a file). If 82 this is an HTTP URL, Packer will download it and cache it between runs. 83 84 ### Optional: 85 86 - `boot_command` (array of strings) - This is an array of commands to type 87 when the virtual machine is first booted. The goal of these commands should 88 be to type just enough to initialize the operating system installer. Special 89 keys can be typed as well, and are covered in the section below on the 90 boot command. If this is not specified, it is assumed the installer will 91 start itself. 92 93 - `boot_wait` (string) - The time to wait after booting the initial virtual 94 machine before typing the `boot_command`. The value of this should be 95 a duration. Examples are "5s" and "1m30s" which will cause Packer to wait 96 five seconds and one minute 30 seconds, respectively. If this isn't 97 specified, the default is 10 seconds. 98 99 - `disk_additional_size` (array of integers) - The size(s) of any additional 100 hard disks for the VM in megabytes. If this is not specified then the VM 101 will only contain a primary hard disk. The builder uses expandable, not 102 fixed-size virtual hard disks, so the actual file representing the disk will 103 not use the full size unless it is full. 104 105 - `disk_size` (integer) - The size of the hard disk for the VM in megabytes. 106 The builder uses expandable, not fixed-size virtual hard disks, so the 107 actual file representing the disk will not use the full size unless it 108 is full. By default this is set to 40,000 (about 40 GB). 109 110 - `disk_type_id` (string) - The type of VMware virtual disk to create. The 111 default is "1", which corresponds to a growable virtual disk split in 112 2GB files. This option is for advanced usage, modify only if you know what 113 you're doing. For more information, please consult the [Virtual Disk Manager 114 User's Guide](https://www.vmware.com/pdf/VirtualDiskManager.pdf) for desktop 115 VMware clients. For ESXi, refer to the proper ESXi documentation. 116 117 - `floppy_files` (array of strings) - A list of files to place onto a floppy 118 disk that is attached when the VM is booted. This is most useful for 119 unattended Windows installs, which look for an `Autounattend.xml` file on 120 removable media. By default, no floppy will be attached. All files listed in 121 this setting get placed into the root directory of the floppy and the floppy 122 is attached as the first floppy device. Currently, no support exists for 123 creating sub-directories on the floppy. Wildcard characters (\*, ?, 124 and \[\]) are allowed. Directory names are also allowed, which will add all 125 the files found in the directory to the floppy. 126 127 - `floppy_dirs` (array of strings) - A list of directories to place onto 128 the floppy disk recursively. This is similar to the `floppy_files` option 129 except that the directory structure is preserved. This is useful for when 130 your floppy disk includes drivers or if you just want to organize it's 131 contents as a hierarchy. Wildcard characters (\*, ?, and \[\]) are allowed. 132 133 - `fusion_app_path` (string) - Path to "VMware Fusion.app". By default this is 134 "/Applications/VMware Fusion.app" but this setting allows you to 135 customize this. 136 137 - `guest_os_type` (string) - The guest OS type being installed. This will be 138 set in the VMware VMX. By default this is "other". By specifying a more 139 specific OS type, VMware may perform some optimizations or virtual hardware 140 changes to better support the operating system running in the 141 virtual machine. 142 143 - `headless` (boolean) - Packer defaults to building VMware virtual machines 144 by launching a GUI that shows the console of the machine being built. When 145 this value is set to true, the machine will start without a console. For 146 VMware machines, Packer will output VNC connection information in case you 147 need to connect to the console to debug the build process. 148 149 - `http_directory` (string) - Path to a directory to serve using an 150 HTTP server. The files in this directory will be available over HTTP that 151 will be requestable from the virtual machine. This is useful for hosting 152 kickstart files and so on. By default this is "", which means no HTTP server 153 will be started. The address and port of the HTTP server will be available 154 as variables in `boot_command`. This is covered in more detail below. 155 156 - `http_port_min` and `http_port_max` (integer) - These are the minimum and 157 maximum port to use for the HTTP server started to serve the 158 `http_directory`. Because Packer often runs in parallel, Packer will choose 159 a randomly available port in this range to run the HTTP server. If you want 160 to force the HTTP server to be on one port, make this minimum and maximum 161 port the same. By default the values are 8000 and 9000, respectively. 162 163 - `iso_target_extension` (string) - The extension of the iso file after 164 download. This defaults to "iso". 165 166 - `iso_target_path` (string) - The path where the iso should be saved after 167 download. By default will go in the packer cache, with a hash of the 168 original filename as its name. 169 170 - `iso_urls` (array of strings) - Multiple URLs for the ISO to download. 171 Packer will try these in order. If anything goes wrong attempting to 172 download or while downloading a single URL, it will move on to the next. All 173 URLs must point to the same file (same checksum). By default this is empty 174 and `iso_url` is used. Only one of `iso_url` or `iso_urls` can be specified. 175 176 - `output_directory` (string) - This is the path to the directory where the 177 resulting virtual machine will be created. This may be relative or absolute. 178 If relative, the path is relative to the working directory when `packer` 179 is executed. This directory must not exist or be empty prior to running 180 the builder. By default this is "output-BUILDNAME" where "BUILDNAME" is the 181 name of the build. 182 183 - `remote_cache_datastore` (string) - The path to the datastore where 184 supporting files will be stored during the build on the remote machine. By 185 default this is the same as the `remote_datastore` option. This only has an 186 effect if `remote_type` is enabled. 187 188 - `remote_cache_directory` (string) - The path where the ISO and/or floppy 189 files will be stored during the build on the remote machine. The path is 190 relative to the `remote_cache_datastore` on the remote machine. By default 191 this is "packer\_cache". This only has an effect if `remote_type` 192 is enabled. 193 194 - `remote_datastore` (string) - The path to the datastore where the resulting 195 VM will be stored when it is built on the remote machine. By default this 196 is "datastore1". This only has an effect if `remote_type` is enabled. 197 198 - `remote_host` (string) - The host of the remote machine used for access. 199 This is only required if `remote_type` is enabled. 200 201 - `remote_password` (string) - The SSH password for the user used to access 202 the remote machine. By default this is empty. This only has an effect if 203 `remote_type` is enabled. 204 205 - `remote_private_key_file` (string) - The path to the PEM encoded private key 206 file for the user used to access the remote machine. By default this is empty. 207 This only has an effect if `remote_type` is enabled. 208 209 - `remote_type` (string) - The type of remote machine that will be used to 210 build this VM rather than a local desktop product. The only value accepted 211 for this currently is "esx5". If this is not set, a desktop product will 212 be used. By default, this is not set. 213 214 - `remote_username` (string) - The username for the SSH user that will access 215 the remote machine. This is required if `remote_type` is enabled. 216 217 - `shutdown_command` (string) - The command to use to gracefully shut down the 218 machine once all the provisioning is done. By default this is an empty 219 string, which tells Packer to just forcefully shut down the machine. 220 221 - `shutdown_timeout` (string) - The amount of time to wait after executing the 222 `shutdown_command` for the virtual machine to actually shut down. If it 223 doesn't shut down in this time, it is an error. By default, the timeout is 224 "5m", or five minutes. 225 226 - `skip_compaction` (boolean) - VMware-created disks are defragmented and 227 compacted at the end of the build process using `vmware-vdiskmanager`. In 228 certain rare cases, this might actually end up making the resulting disks 229 slightly larger. If you find this to be the case, you can disable compaction 230 using this configuration value. Defaults to `false`. 231 232 - `skip_export` (boolean) - Defaults to `false`. When enabled, Packer will 233 not export the VM. Useful if the build output is not the resultant image, 234 but created inside the VM. 235 236 - `keep_registered` (boolean) - Set this to `true` if you would like to keep 237 the VM registered with the remote ESXi server. This is convenient if you 238 use packer to provision VMs on ESXi and don't want to use ovftool to 239 deploy the resulting artifact (VMX or OVA or whatever you used as `format`). 240 Defaults to `false`. 241 242 - `ovftool_options` (array of strings) - Extra options to pass to ovftool 243 during export. Each item in the array is a new argument. The options 244 `--noSSLVerify`, `--skipManifestCheck`, and `--targetType` are reserved, 245 and should not be passed to this argument. 246 247 - `tools_upload_flavor` (string) - The flavor of the VMware Tools ISO to 248 upload into the VM. Valid values are "darwin", "linux", and "windows". By 249 default, this is empty, which means VMware tools won't be uploaded. 250 251 - `tools_upload_path` (string) - The path in the VM to upload the 252 VMware tools. This only takes effect if `tools_upload_flavor` is non-empty. 253 This is a [configuration 254 template](/docs/templates/engine.html) that has a single 255 valid variable: `Flavor`, which will be the value of `tools_upload_flavor`. 256 By default the upload path is set to `{{.Flavor}}.iso`. This setting is not 257 used when `remote_type` is "esx5". 258 259 - `version` (string) - The [vmx hardware 260 version](http://kb.vmware.com/selfservice/microsites/search.do?language=en_US&cmd=displayKC&externalId=1003746) 261 for the new virtual machine. Only the default value has been tested, any 262 other value is experimental. Default value is '9'. 263 264 - `vm_name` (string) - This is the name of the VMX file for the new virtual 265 machine, without the file extension. By default this is "packer-BUILDNAME", 266 where "BUILDNAME" is the name of the build. 267 268 - `vmdk_name` (string) - The filename of the virtual disk that'll be created, 269 without the extension. This defaults to "packer". 270 271 - `vmx_data` (object of key/value strings) - Arbitrary key/values to enter 272 into the virtual machine VMX file. This is for advanced users who want to 273 set properties such as memory, CPU, etc. 274 275 - `vmx_data_post` (object of key/value strings) - Identical to `vmx_data`, 276 except that it is run after the virtual machine is shutdown, and before the 277 virtual machine is exported. 278 279 - `vmx_remove_ethernet_interfaces` (boolean) - Remove all ethernet interfaces from 280 the VMX file after building. This is for advanced users who understand the 281 ramifications, but is useful for building Vagrant boxes since Vagrant will 282 create ethernet interfaces when provisioning a box. 283 284 - `vmx_template_path` (string) - Path to a [configuration 285 template](/docs/templates/engine.html) that defines the 286 contents of the virtual machine VMX file for VMware. This is for **advanced 287 users only** as this can render the virtual machine non-functional. See 288 below for more information. For basic VMX modifications, try 289 `vmx_data` first. 290 291 - `vnc_bind_address` (string / IP address) - The IP address that should be binded 292 to for VNC. By default packer will use 127.0.0.1 for this. If you wish to bind 293 to all interfaces use 0.0.0.0 294 295 - `vnc_disable_password` (boolean) - Don't auto-generate a VNC password that is 296 used to secure the VNC communication with the VM. 297 298 - `vnc_port_min` and `vnc_port_max` (integer) - The minimum and maximum port 299 to use for VNC access to the virtual machine. The builder uses VNC to type 300 the initial `boot_command`. Because Packer generally runs in parallel, 301 Packer uses a randomly chosen port in this range that appears available. By 302 default this is 5900 to 6000. The minimum and maximum ports are inclusive. 303 304 ## Boot Command 305 306 The `boot_command` configuration is very important: it specifies the keys to 307 type when the virtual machine is first booted in order to start the OS 308 installer. This command is typed after `boot_wait`, which gives the virtual 309 machine some time to actually load the ISO. 310 311 As documented above, the `boot_command` is an array of strings. The strings are 312 all typed in sequence. It is an array only to improve readability within the 313 template. 314 315 The boot command is "typed" character for character over a VNC connection to the 316 machine, simulating a human actually typing the keyboard. 317 318 -> Keystrokes are typed as separate key up/down events over VNC with a 319 default 100ms delay. The delay alleviates issues with latency and CPU 320 contention. For local builds you can tune this delay by specifying 321 e.g. `PACKER_KEY_INTERVAL=10ms` to speed through the boot command. 322 323 There are a set of special keys available. If these are in your boot 324 command, they will be replaced by the proper key: 325 326 - `<bs>` - Backspace 327 328 - `<del>` - Delete 329 330 - `<enter>` and `<return>` - Simulates an actual "enter" or "return" keypress. 331 332 - `<esc>` - Simulates pressing the escape key. 333 334 - `<tab>` - Simulates pressing the tab key. 335 336 - `<f1>` - `<f12>` - Simulates pressing a function key. 337 338 - `<up>` `<down>` `<left>` `<right>` - Simulates pressing an arrow key. 339 340 - `<spacebar>` - Simulates pressing the spacebar. 341 342 - `<insert>` - Simulates pressing the insert key. 343 344 - `<home>` `<end>` - Simulates pressing the home and end keys. 345 346 - `<pageUp>` `<pageDown>` - Simulates pressing the page up and page down keys. 347 348 - `<leftAlt>` `<rightAlt>` - Simulates pressing the alt key. 349 350 - `<leftCtrl>` `<rightCtrl>` - Simulates pressing the ctrl key. 351 352 - `<leftShift>` `<rightShift>` - Simulates pressing the shift key. 353 354 - `<leftAltOn>` `<rightAltOn>` - Simulates pressing and holding the alt key. 355 356 - `<leftCtrlOn>` `<rightCtrlOn>` - Simulates pressing and holding the ctrl key. 357 358 - `<leftShiftOn>` `<rightShiftOn>` - Simulates pressing and holding the shift key. 359 360 - `<leftAltOff>` `<rightAltOff>` - Simulates releasing a held alt key. 361 362 - `<leftCtrlOff>` `<rightCtrlOff>` - Simulates releasing a held ctrl key. 363 364 - `<leftShiftOff>` `<rightShiftOff>` - Simulates releasing a held shift key. 365 366 - `<wait>` `<wait5>` `<wait10>` - Adds a 1, 5 or 10 second pause before 367 sending any additional keys. This is useful if you have to generally wait 368 for the UI to update before typing more. 369 370 When using modifier keys `ctrl`, `alt`, `shift` ensure that you release them, 371 otherwise they will be held down until the machine reboots. Use lowercase 372 characters as well inside modifiers. 373 374 For example: to simulate ctrl+c use `<leftCtrlOn>c<leftCtrlOff>`. 375 376 In addition to the special keys, each command to type is treated as a 377 [template engine](/docs/templates/engine.html). The 378 available variables are: 379 380 - `HTTPIP` and `HTTPPort` - The IP and port, respectively of an HTTP server 381 that is started serving the directory specified by the `http_directory` 382 configuration parameter. If `http_directory` isn't specified, these will be 383 blank! 384 385 Example boot command. This is actually a working boot command used to start an 386 Ubuntu 12.04 installer: 387 388 ``` text 389 [ 390 "<esc><esc><enter><wait>", 391 "/install/vmlinuz noapic ", 392 "preseed/url=http://{{ .HTTPIP }}:{{ .HTTPPort }}/preseed.cfg ", 393 "debian-installer=en_US auto locale=en_US kbd-chooser/method=us ", 394 "hostname={{ .Name }} ", 395 "fb=false debconf/frontend=noninteractive ", 396 "keyboard-configuration/modelcode=SKIP keyboard-configuration/layout=USA ", 397 "keyboard-configuration/variant=USA console-setup/ask_detect=false ", 398 "initrd=/install/initrd.gz -- <enter>" 399 ] 400 ``` 401 402 ## VMX Template 403 404 The heart of a VMware machine is the "vmx" file. This contains all the virtual 405 hardware metadata necessary for the VM to function. Packer by default uses a 406 [safe, flexible VMX 407 file](https://github.com/hashicorp/packer/blob/20541a7eda085aa5cf35bfed5069592ca49d106e/builder/vmware/step_create_vmx.go#L84). 408 But for advanced users, this template can be customized. This allows Packer to 409 build virtual machines of effectively any guest operating system type. 410 411 ~> **This is an advanced feature.** Modifying the VMX template can easily 412 cause your virtual machine to not boot properly. Please only modify the template 413 if you know what you're doing. 414 415 Within the template, a handful of variables are available so that your template 416 can continue working with the rest of the Packer machinery. Using these 417 variables isn't required, however. 418 419 - `Name` - The name of the virtual machine. 420 - `GuestOS` - The VMware-valid guest OS type. 421 - `DiskName` - The filename (without the suffix) of the main virtual disk. 422 - `ISOPath` - The path to the ISO to use for the OS installation. 423 - `Version` - The Hardware version VMWare will execute this vm under. Also 424 known as the `virtualhw.version`. 425 426 ## Building on a Remote vSphere Hypervisor 427 428 In addition to using the desktop products of VMware locally to build virtual 429 machines, Packer can use a remote VMware Hypervisor to build the virtual 430 machine. 431 432 -> **Note:** Packer supports ESXi 5.1 and above. 433 434 Before using a remote vSphere Hypervisor, you need to enable GuestIPHack by 435 running the following command: 436 437 ``` text 438 esxcli system settings advanced set -o /Net/GuestIPHack -i 1 439 ``` 440 441 When using a remote VMware Hypervisor, the builder still downloads the ISO and 442 various files locally, and uploads these to the remote machine. Packer currently 443 uses SSH to communicate to the ESXi machine rather than the vSphere API. At some 444 point, the vSphere API may be used. 445 446 Packer also requires VNC to issue boot commands during a build, which may be 447 disabled on some remote VMware Hypervisors. Please consult the appropriate 448 documentation on how to update VMware Hypervisor's firewall to allow these 449 connections. 450 451 To use a remote VMware vSphere Hypervisor to build your virtual machine, fill in 452 the required `remote_*` configurations: 453 454 - `remote_type` - This must be set to "esx5". 455 456 - `remote_host` - The host of the remote machine. 457 458 Additionally, there are some optional configurations that you'll likely have to 459 modify as well: 460 461 - `remote_port` - The SSH port of the remote machine 462 463 - `remote_datastore` - The path to the datastore where the VM will be stored 464 on the ESXi machine. 465 466 - `remote_cache_datastore` - The path to the datastore where supporting files 467 will be stored during the build on the remote machine. 468 469 - `remote_cache_directory` - The path where the ISO and/or floppy files will 470 be stored during the build on the remote machine. The path is relative to 471 the `remote_cache_datastore` on the remote machine. 472 473 - `remote_username` - The SSH username used to access the remote machine. 474 475 - `remote_password` - The SSH password for access to the remote machine. 476 477 - `remote_private_key_file` - The SSH key for access to the remote machine. 478 479 - `format` (string) - Either "ovf", "ova" or "vmx", this specifies the output 480 format of the exported virtual machine. This defaults to "ovf". 481 Before using this option, you need to install `ovftool`. This option 482 works currently only with option remote_type set to "esx5". 483 484 ### VNC port discovery 485 486 Packer needs to decide on a port to use for VNC when building remotely. To find 487 an open port, we try to connect to ports in the range of `vnc_port_min` to 488 `vnc_port_max`. If we notice something is listening on a port in the range, we 489 try to connect to the next one, and so on until we find a port that has nothing 490 listening on it. If you have many clients building on the ESXi host, there 491 might be competition for the VNC ports. You can adjust how long packer waits 492 for a connection timeout by setting `PACKER_ESXI_VNC_PROBE_TIMEOUT`. This 493 defaults to 15 seconds. Set this shorter if vnc connections are refused, and 494 set it longer if Packer can't find an open port. This is intended as an 495 advanced configuration option. Please make sure your firewall settings are 496 correct before adjusting. 497 498 ### Using a Floppy for Linux kickstart file or preseed 499 500 Depending on your network configuration, it may be difficult to use packer's 501 built-in HTTP server with ESXi. Instead, you can provide a kickstart or preseed 502 file by attaching a floppy disk. An example below, based on RHEL: 503 504 ``` json 505 { 506 "builders": [ 507 { 508 "type":"vmware-iso", 509 "floppy_files": [ 510 "folder/ks.cfg" 511 ], 512 "boot_command": "<tab> text ks=floppy <enter><wait>" 513 } 514 ] 515 } 516 ``` 517 518 It's also worth noting that `ks=floppy` has been deprecated. Later versions of the Anaconda installer (used in RHEL/CentOS 7 and Fedora) may require a different syntax to source a kickstart file from a mounted floppy image. 519 520 ``` json 521 { 522 "builders": [ 523 { 524 "type":"vmware-iso", 525 "floppy_files": [ 526 "folder/ks.cfg" 527 ], 528 "boot_command": "<tab> inst.text inst.ks=hd:fd0:/ks.cfg <enter><wait>" 529 } 530 ] 531 } 532 ```