ec6062dd2a
To work around an issue in the PV drivers for Windows, the floppy and installation ISO were removed before restarting the guest. This was due to the drivers bluescreening on a failed assert of the presence of a floppy disk. Now that behaviour has been fixed, the builder should behave in the expected way, and not introduce an extra shutdown/restart. Signed-off-by: Rob Dobson <rob.dobson@citrix.com> |
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builder/xenserver | ||
docs/builders | ||
examples | ||
plugin | ||
.gitignore | ||
.travis.yml | ||
build.sh | ||
LICENSE | ||
README.md |
XenServer packer.io builder
This builder plugin extends packer.io to support building images for XenServer.
You can check out packer here.
Dependencies
- Packer >= 0.7.2 (https://packer.io)
- XenServer > 6.2 (http://xenserver.org)
- Golang (tested with 1.2.1)
Install Go
Follow these instructions and install golang on your system:
Install Packer
Clone the Packer repository:
git clone https://github.com/mitchellh/packer.git
Then follow the instructions to build and install a development version of Packer.
Compile the plugin
Once you have installed Packer, you must compile this plugin and install the resulting binary.
cd $GOROOT
mkdir -p src/github.com/rdobson/
cd src/github.com/rdobson
git clone https://github.com/rdobson/packer-builder-xenserver.git
cd packer-builder-xenserver
./build.sh
If the build is successful, you should now have packer-builder-xenserver-iso
and
packer-builder-xenserver-xva
binaries in your $GOPATH/bin
directory and you are
ready to get going with packer; skip to the CentOS 6.6 example below.
In order to do a cross-compile, run instead:
XC_OS="windows linux" XC_ARCH="386 amd64" ./build.sh
This builds 32 and 64 bit binaries for both Windows and Linux. Native binaries will
be installed in $GOPATH/bin
as above, and cross-compiled ones in the pkg/
directory.
Don't forget to also cross compile Packer, by running
XC_OS="windows linux" XC_ARCH="386 amd64" make bin
(instead of make dev
) in the directory where you checked out Packer.
CentOS 6.6 Example
Once you've setup the above, you are good to go with an example.
To get you started, there is an example config file which you can use:
examples/centos-6.6.json
The example is functional, once suitable remote_host
, remote_username
and
remote_password
configurations have been substituted.
A brief explanation of what the config parameters mean:
type
- specifies the builder type. This is 'xenserver-iso', for installing a VM from scratch, or 'xenserver-xva' to import existing XVA as a starting point.remote_username
- the username for the XenServer host being used.remote_password
- the password for the XenServer host being used.remote_host
- the IP for the XenServer host being used.vm_name
- the name that should be given to the created VM.vm_memory
- the static memory configuration for the VM, in MB.disk_size
- the size of the disk the VM should be created with, in MB.iso_name
- the name of the ISO visible on a ISO SR connected to the XenServer host.http_directory
- the path to a local directory to serve up over http.ssh_username
- the username set by the installer for the instance.ssh_password
- the password set by the installer for the instance.boot_command
- a list of commands to be sent to the instance over VNC.
Note, the http_directory
parameter is only required if you
want Packer to serve up files over HTTP. In this example, the templated variables
{{ .HTTPIP }}
and {{ .HTTPPort }}
will be substituted for the local IP and
the port that Packer starts its HTTP service on.
Once you've updated the config file with your own parameters, you can use packer to build this VM with the following command:
packer build centos-6.6.json
Documentation
For complete documentation on configuration commands, see either the xenserver-iso docs or the xenserver-xva docs.