open-nomad/e2e/terraform/packer
Seth Hoenig fc5f48d936 cni: bump CNI version to v0.9.0
https://github.com/containernetworking/plugins/releases/tag/v0.9.0

Also make the copy-paste install instructions work with arm64 for
a better OOTB experience (AWS Graviton, Pi 4's).
2021-01-10 18:03:27 -06:00
..
ubuntu-bionic-amd64 cni: bump CNI version to v0.9.0 2021-01-10 18:03:27 -06:00
windows-2016-amd64 e2e: upgrade terraform consul to 1.9.0 2020-12-03 13:01:14 -06:00
README.md e2e: Windows provisioning improvements (#9246) 2020-11-09 13:29:40 -05:00
ubuntu-bionic-amd64.pkr.hcl E2E: switch packer build files to HCL2 (#9219) 2020-10-29 10:03:39 -04:00
windows-2016-amd64.pkr.hcl e2e: Windows provisioning improvements (#9246) 2020-11-09 13:29:40 -05:00

Packer Builds

These builds are run as-needed to update the AMIs used by the end-to-end test infrastructure.

What goes here?

  • steps that aren't specific to a given Nomad build: ex. all Linux instances need jq and awscli.
  • steps that aren't specific to a given EC2 instance: nothing that includes an IP address.
  • steps that infrequently change: the version of Consul or Vault we ship.

Running Packer builds

$ packer --version
1.6.4

# build Ubuntu Bionic AMI
$ packer build ubuntu-bionic-amd64.pkr.hcl

# build Windows AMI
$ packer build windows-2016-amd64.pkr.hcl

Debugging Packer Builds

To debug a Packer build you'll need to pass the -debug and -on-error flags. You can then ssh into the instance using the ec2_amazon-ebs.pem file that Packer drops in this directory.

Packer doesn't have a cleanup command if you've run -on-error=abort. So when you're done, clean up the machine by looking for "Packer" in the AWS console: