Book Image

HashiCorp Packer in Production

By : John Boero
Book Image

HashiCorp Packer in Production

By: John Boero

Overview of this book

Creating machine images can be time-consuming and error-prone when done manually. HashiCorp Packer enables you to automate this process by defining the configuration in a simple, declarative syntax. This configuration is then used to create machine images for multiple environments and cloud providers. The book begins by showing you how to create your first manifest while helping you understand the available components. You’ll then configure the most common built-in builder options for Packer and use runtime provisioners to reconfigure a source image for desired tasks. You’ll also learn how to control logging for troubleshooting errors in complex builds and explore monitoring options for multiple logs at once. As you advance, you’ll build on your initial manifest for a local application that’ll easily migrate to another builder or cloud. The chapters also help you get to grips with basic container image options in different formats while scaling large builds in production. Finally, you’ll develop a life cycle and retention policy for images, automate packer builds, and protect your production environment from nefarious plugins. By the end of this book, you’ll be equipped to smoothen collaboration and reduce the risk of errors by creating machine images consistently and automatically based on your defined configuration.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
1
Part 1: Packer’s Beginnings
7
Part 2: Managing Large Environments
11
Part 3: Advanced Customized Packer

Exploring basic GitHub Actions support

To work with GitHub Actions, you need a GitHub organization and admin access to your GitHub repository. You may choose to build your own repository from scratch or you can fork the book’s sample repository if you haven’t already. Now, you will have access to the Actions menu for your repo. The examples and screenshots in this section are taken from setting this up on the book repo.

GitHub supports multiple runners on a single repository. GitHub makes it simple enough to add a self-hosted runner, so let’s try that first. Here, GitHub will guide us to download the appropriate binary for our selected platform and architecture. macOS, Linux, and Windows are supported:

Figure 11.1 – GitHub guide for creating a self-hosted runner

Figure 11.1 – GitHub guide for creating a self-hosted runner

GitHub currently distributes standard archives for Linux platforms without distribution packaging, so be careful which download you get. Make sure to use the latest...