The post-processor block
Note: This page is about HCL2 Packer templates. HCL2 templates were first introduced as a beta feature into Packer version 1.5. As of v1.7, HCL2 support is no longer in beta, and is the preferred way to write Packer configuration. For the old-style stable configuration language see template docs. As of v1.6.2, you can convert your legacy JSON template into an HCL2 config file using the hcl2_upgrade command.
The post-processor
block defines how a post-processor is configured.
Each post-processor
runs after each defined build. A post-processor takes the
Artifact
from a build. Post-processors are optional, and they can be used to
upload artifacts, re-package, or more. The list of available post-processors
can be found in the post-processors section.
A post-processor
can also take the Artifact
from another post-processor
when it is defined in a post-processors
block list, that is a list of
chained post processors.
Note: The input 'artifact' received by a post-processor will be automatically deleted by default.
Keep an input artifact
To prevent an input artifact from being deleted, you can set the
keep_input_artifact
field to true to make Packer keep both artifacts. For
example if we want to checksum an artifact and keep the artifact:
Run on Specific Builds
You can use the only
or except
configurations to run a post-processor only
with specific sources. These two configurations do what you expect: only
will
only run the post-processor on the specified sources and except
will run the
post-processor on anything other than the specified sources.
An example of only
being used is shown below, but the usage of except
is
effectively the same:
The values within only
or except
are source names, not builder types.
If you want to exclude certain post-processors when running packer build
from the command line, you can do so:
packer build --except=checksum mytemplate.pkr.hcl
will not run the checksum
post-processor. This command line exclusion works by referencing post-processor
name. By default, the post-processor is named after is its type, as
demonstrated above in the checksum
example. You can make a post-processor's
name unique by adding a "name" field to each post-processor block.
While the -except
flag can be used to filter out post-processors on the
command line, the -only
flag does not work for post-processors. If you wish
to only run a post-processor for a given source build you must use the
only=[source]
syntax inside of your hcl templates, as described above.
Build Contextual Variables
Packer allows to access connection information and basic instance state
information from a post-processor. These information are stored in the build
variable. Check out the Contextual
Variables documentation to learn more
about and see some examples of how to use them.
Related
- The
post-processors
block allows to define one or more chain ofpost-processor
s that will take the output from the build and provision steps.