Jeff Geerling's Vagrant Box Packer Builds
This project contains the Packer build configurations for all of Jeff Geerling's (geerlingguy's) Vagrant Boxes. Each box builds a minimal base box for use with VirtualBox. Available boxes include:
- geerlingguy/ubuntu1804 -
ubuntu1804
directory - geerlingguy/ubuntu1604 -
ubuntu1604
directory - geerlingguy/centos8 -
centos8
directory - geerlingguy/centos7 -
centos7
directory - geerlingguy/centos6 -
centos6
directory - geerlingguy/debian10 -
debian10
directory - geerlingguy/debian9 -
debian9
directory - geerlingguy/debian8 -
debian8
directory
All of these boxes are available as public, free Vagrant boxes and can be used with the command:
vagrant init geerlingguy/[box name here]
You can also fork this repository and customize a build configuration with your own Ansible roles and playbooks to build a fully custom Vagrant box using Packer. For one such example, see the Drupal VM Packer Build.
Requirements
The following software must be installed/present on your local machine before you can use Packer to build any of these Vagrant boxes:
Usage
Make sure all the required software (listed above) is installed, then cd into one of the box directories and run:
$ packer build -var 'version=1.2.0' box-config.json
After a few minutes, Packer should tell you the box was generated successfully, and the box was uploaded to Vagrant Cloud.
Note: This configuration includes a post-processor that pushes the built box to Vagrant Cloud (which requires a
VAGRANT_CLOUD_TOKEN
environment variable to be set); remove thevagrant-cloud
post-processor from the Packer template to build the box locally and not push it to Vagrant Cloud. You don't need to specify aversion
variable either, if not using thevagrant-cloud
post-processor.
Testing built boxes
There's an included Vagrantfile that allows quick testing of the built Vagrant boxes. From the same box directory, run the following command after building the box:
$ vagrant up
Test that the box works correctly, then tear it down with:
$ vagrant destroy -f
License
MIT
Author
These configurations are maintained by Jeff Geerling, author of Ansible for DevOps.