Installing Plugins
This topic describes how to install external plugins for Packer. Refer to Packer Plugins Overview for additional information about plugins.
Overview
Specify one or more required plugins in a Packer template and run the initialization command. During initialization, Packer queries the source repository for plugins specified in the template that match the version constraints for the host operating system. Packer downloads and installs plugins and other dependencies specified in the template.
You can specify a remote project on GitHub for Packer to install the plugin from. Refer to Requirements for additional information about installing plugins from a remote source.
When you run the Packer template, Packer first checks the directory for installed plugins that match the version requirements specified in the template. If a suitable version of the plugin is not installed, Packer prints an error. Packer downloads the required version from the source
configuration.
Manual installation method
You can manually install plugins if you are unable to specify plugins in an HCL template file. You may need to use the manual plugin installation method if the plugin source is a non-GitHub project or if your plugins are still in development.
Manually install a plugin using the packer plugins install
command. You specify a local or remote plugin source and include a path to the binary to generate the SHA256SUM file required to load the plugin during Packer builds. Refer to Requirements for additional information about installing plugins from a remote source.
Note that Packer checks the plugin installation directory against the required_plugins
block in the Packer template when you build artifacts using the template. Plugins specified in the template that have been installed manually must still comply with the version constraints set in the template.
Installation directory
By default, Packer installs plugins into the plugins directory at $HOME/.config/packer/plugins
on Unix and %APPDATA%\packer.d\plugins
on Windows, but you can specify a different directory using the PACKER_PLUGIN_PATH environment variable.
Plugin installation requires access to temporary files under
TMPDIR`. If the system's temp directory is non-writable or non-executable, use TMPDIR to override the location of the temporary file store used by Packer.
Refer to the Packer configuration reference for additional information.
Requirements
To install a plugin from a remote source, the plugin must meet the following requirements:
- The plugin project must be hosted on GitHub.
- The repository must be named
packer-plugin-<name>
. - The project must have semantic version tags per the following format:
v<major>.<minor>.<patch>
. - The release linked to the tag must be available with a
shasums
file that indicates which files are available in the release.
GitHub API token
GitHub's public API limits the number of unauthenticated requests per hour from a single IP address. Refer to the GitHub rate limits documentation for additional information.
If you expect to exceed the request rate limit, you can use a GitHub API token to authenticate requests and exceed the rate limit. We recommend setting a GitHub API token when running Packer from a continuous integration server to avoid potential rate limiting errors. Refer to Authenticate requests to the GitHub API for instructions.
Install a plugin
In your Packer template file, add the
required_plugins
block to thepacker
block.Specify the name of the plugin and its
version
andsource
parameters. Setting a correct version constraint string is important for pinning plugin versions for build reproducibility. Refer to thepacker
block configuration reference for additional information.The following example configures Packer to install a plugin called
happycloud
. When the template is initialized, Packer downloads version 2.7.0 or newer of the plugin from GitHub:```hclpacker { required_plugins { happycloud = { version = ">= 2.7.0" source = "github.com/hashicorp/happycloud" } }} ```
Run the
packer init
command. Packer lists all installed plugins then installs the latest plugin version matching the version constraints specified in therequired_plugins
block. Refer to theinit
command reference for additional information.
Manually install plugins using the CLI
You can use the packer plugins install
command to manually install plugin binaries.
Use the --path
flag to specify a local source. Packer then automatically calculates the SHA256SUM file and installs the files into the Packer plugin directory:
$ packer plugins install --path <path-to-downloaded-extracted-binary> <hostname>/<namespace>/<plugin-name>
The following example installs the happycloud
plugin from a locally-sourced binary:
$ unzip packer-plugin-happycloud.zip$ ls -l-rwxr-xr-x [...] happycloud$ packer plugins install --path happycloud github.com/hashicorp/happycloud
Refer to the packer plugins install
reference for additional information.
Upgrade plugins
To upgrade plugins that are already installed, run the packer init
with the --upgrade
flag. Packer retrieves the latest versions of installed plugins specified in the template configuration.
The following example upgrades plugins according to the template in the current directory:
$ packer init --upgrade .
Refer to packer init
command for additional information.
Use a plugin under development
If a development binary, such as a manually-built binary, is available at the specified source, Packer uses it in the build if it is the highest compatible version installed and if no final plugin version with the same version number is installed alongside it.
In the following example, version 1.1.0
or newer is required:
packer = { required_plugins = { amazon = { source = "github.com/hashicorp/amazon" version = ">= 1.1.0" } } . . . }
Packer uses the -dev
version of the Amazon plugin if the following binaries are available:
/Users/dev/.packer.d/plugins└─ github.com └─ hashicorp └── amazon ├── packer-plugin-amazon_v1.1.0_x5.0_darwin_arm64 ├── packer-plugin-amazon_v1.1.0_x5.0_darwin_arm64_SHA256SUM ├── packer-plugin-amazon_v1.1.1-dev_x5.0_darwin_arm64 └── packer-plugin-amazon_v1.1.1-dev_x5.0_darwin_arm64_SHA256SUM
When a non-development version of 1.1.1 becomes available, the binary takes precedence over the development binary:
/Users/dev/.packer.d/plugins└─ github.com └─ hashicorp └── amazon ├── packer-plugin-amazon_v1.1.1-dev_x5.0_darwin_arm64 ├── packer-plugin-amazon_v1.1.1-dev_x5.0_darwin_arm64_SHA256SUM ├── packer-plugin-amazon_v1.1.1_x5.0_darwin_arm64 └── packer-plugin-amazon_v1.1.1_x5.0_darwin_arm64_SHA256SUM
Example Docker plugin
Complete the following steps to build and install a custom version of the Docker plugin as an example:
Clone the plugin's GitHub repository.
$ git clone https://github.com/hashicorp/packer-plugin-docker.git
Change to the plugin directory root and run the
go build
command to build the plugin as a development binary.$ cd packer-plugin-docker$ go build -ldflags="-X github.com/hashicorp/packer-plugin-docker/version.VersionPrerelease=dev" -o packer-plugin-docker-dev
Validate the release version.
$ ./packer-plugin-docker-dev describe{"version":"1.0.10-dev","sdk_version":"0.5.2","api_version":"x5.0","builders":["-packer-default-plugin-name-"],"post_processors":["import","push","save","tag"],"provisioners":[],"datasources":[]}
Use the
packer plugins install
command to install the development binary.packer plugins install --path packer-plugin-docker-dev github.com/hashicorp/dockerSuccessfully installed plugin github.com/hashicorp/docker from $HOME/Development/packer-plugin-docker/packer-plugin-docker-dev to ~/github.com/hashicorp/docker/packer-plugin-docker_v1.0.10-dev_x5.0_darwin_arm64
Run a
packer build
with the newly installed plugin.$ packer build .
For convenience, the makefile in the Packer plugin scaffolding repository builds and installs development binaries using make dev
.
Refer to the documentation in the Packer plugin scaffolding repository for additional information.
Authenticate requests to the GitHub API
You can set the PACKER_GITHUB_API_TOKEN
environment variable to send more requests per hour than the limits imposed by the GitHub API:
Go to your personal access token page to generate a new token.
Set the
PACKER_GITHUB_API_TOKEN
environment variable to your token value:$ export PACKER_GITHUB_API_TOKEN=<token>