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The vSphere plugin is able to create vSphere virtual machines for use with any VMware product.
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vSphere Template
Type: vsphere-template
Artifact BuilderId: packer.post-processor.vsphere
The Packer vSphere Template post-processor takes an artifact from the
vmware-iso
builder, built on ESXi (i.e. remote) or an artifact from the
vSphere post-processor, marks the VM as a
template, and places it in the path of your choice.
Configuration
There are many configuration options available for the post-processor. They are provided below in two categories: required and optional parameters.
Required:
host
(string) - The vSphere endpoint that contains the VM built by thevmware-iso
builder.password
(string) - Password to use to authenticate to the vSphere endpoint.username
(string) - The username to use to authenticate to the vSphere endpoint.
Optional:
datacenter
(string) - If you have more than one, you will need to specify which one the ESXi host used.folder
(string) - Target path where the template will be created.insecure
(boolean) - Iftrue
, skips the verification of the server certificate. Default isfalse
.keep_input_artifact
(boolean) - Unlike most post-processors, this option has no effect forvsphere-template
. This is because in order for a template to work, you can't delete the vm that you generate the template from. The vSphere Template post-processor will therefore always preserve the original VM.snapshot_enable
(boolean) - Create a snapshot before marking as a template. Default isfalse
.snapshot_name
(string) - Name for the snapshot. Required whensnapshot_enable
istrue
.snapshot_description
(string) - Description for the snapshot. Required whensnapshot_enable
istrue
.reregister_vm
(boolean) - Use the method of unregister VM and reregister as a template, rather than using themarkAsTemplate
method.NOTE: If you are getting permission denied errors when trying to mark as a template, but it works fine in the vSphere UI, try setting this to
false
. Default istrue
.
Example
An example is shown below, showing only the post-processor configuration:
HCL2
JSON
Using the vSphere Template with local builders
Once the vSphere post-processor takes an artifact from the builder and uploads it to a vSphere endpoint, you may want the VM to be marked as a template. Packer can do this for you automatically using a sequence definition (a collection of post-processors that are treated as as single pipeline, see Post-Processors for more information):
HCL2
JSON
In the example above, the result of each builder is passed through the defined
sequence of post-processors starting with the vsphere
post-processor which
will upload the artifact to a vSphere endpoint. The resulting artifact is then
passed on to the vsphere-template
post-processor which handles marking a VM
as a template. In JSON, note that the vsphere
and vsphere-template
post-processors can be paired together in their own array.
Permissions
The vSphere post processor needs several privileges to be able to mark the vm as a template. Rather than giving full administrator access, you can create a role to give the post-processor the privileges necessary to run. Here is an example role that will work. Please note that this is a user-supplied list so there may be a few extraneous privilegess that are not strictly required.
For vSphere, the role needs the following privileges:
and either (if reregister_vm
is false
):
or (if reregister_vm
is true
or unset):
The role must be authorized on the:
Troubleshooting
Some users have reported that vSphere templates created from local vSphere builds
get their boot order reset to cdrom only instead of the original boot order
defined by the template. If this issue affects you, the solution is to set
"bios.hddOrder": "scsi0:0"
in your builder's vmx_data
.
Packer doesn't automatically do this for you because it causes strange upload
behavior in certain versions of ovftool
.