website/content/docs/provisioners/powershell.mdx
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powershell provisionerThe powershell Packer provisioner runs PowerShell scripts on Windows machines.
The provisioner is designed for machines using WinRM as the communicator, but you can also use the provisioner with the SSH communicator. Refer to the Combining the PowerShell Provisioner with the SSH Communicator for
details.
@include 'path/separator-note.mdx'
The example below is fully functional.
<Tabs> <Tab heading="HCL2">provisioner "powershell" {
inline = ["dir c:/"]
}
{
"type": "powershell",
"inline": ["dir c:/"]
}
@include 'provisioners/shell-config.mdx'
debug_mode - If set, sets PowerShell's PSDebug mode
in order to make script debugging easier. For instance, setting the value to 1
results in adding this to the execute command:
Set-PSDebug -Trace 1
elevated_execute_command (string) - The command to use to execute the
elevated script. By default this is as follows:
powershell -executionpolicy bypass "& { if (Test-Path variable:global:ProgressPreference){$ProgressPreference='SilentlyContinue'};. {{.Vars}}; &'{{.Path}}'; exit $LastExitCode }"
This is a template engine. Therefore, you may use user variables and template functions in this field. In addition, you may use two extra variables:
Path: The path to the script to runVars: The location of a temp file containing the list of
environment_vars, if configured.env (map of strings) - A map of key/value pairs to inject prior to the
execute_command. Packer injects some environmental variables by default into
the environment, as well, which are covered in the section below. Duplicate
env settings override environment_vars settings. This is not a JSON
template engine enabled function. HCL interpolation works as usual.
environment_vars (array of strings) - An array of key/value pairs to
inject prior to the execute_command. The format should be key=value.
Packer injects some environmental variables by default into the
environment, as well, which are covered in the section below.
use_pwsh (boolean) - Run pwsh.exe instead of powershell.exe. Defaults to false.
This is a template engine. Therefore, you
may use user variables and template functions in this field. If you are
running on AWS, Azure, Google Compute, or OpenStack and would like to access
the autogenerated password that Packer uses to connect to the instance via
WinRM, you can use the build template engine to inject it using
{{ build `Password` }}. In HCL templates, you can do the same thing by
accessing the build variables For example:
provisioner "powershell" {
environment_vars = ["WINRMPASS=${build.Password}"]
inline = ["Write-Host \"Automatically generated aws password is: $Env:WINRMPASS\""]
}
{
"type": "powershell",
"environment_vars": ["WINRMPASS={{ build `Password` }}"],
"inline": ["Write-Host \"Automatically generated aws password is: $Env:WINRMPASS\""]
},
execute_command (string) - The command to use to execute the script. By
default this is as follows:
powershell -executionpolicy bypass "& { if (Test-Path variable:global:ProgressPreference){$ProgressPreference='SilentlyContinue'};. {{.Vars}}; &'{{.Path}}'; exit $LastExitCode }"
This is a template engine. Therefore, you may use user variables and template functions in this field. In addition, you may use two extra variables:
Path: The path to the script to runVars: The location of a temp file containing the list of
environment_vars, if configured.
The value of both Path and Vars can be manually configured by setting
the values for remote_path and remote_env_var_path respectively.If you use the SSH communicator and have changed your default shell, you
may need to modify your execute_command to make sure that the command is
valid and properly escaped; the default assumes that you have not changed
the default shell away from cmd.
elevated_user and elevated_password (string) - If specified, the
PowerShell script will be run with elevated privileges using the given
Windows user.
This is a template engine. Therefore, you
may use user variables and template functions in this field. If you are
running on AWS, Azure, Google Compute, or OpenStack and would like to access
the autogenerated password that Packer uses to connect to the instance via
WinRM, you can use the build template engine to inject it using
{{ build `Password` }}. In HCL templates, you can do the same thing by
accessing the build variables For example:
provisioner "powershell" {
elevated_user = "Administrator"
elevated_password = build.Password
}
{
"type": "powershell",
"elevated_user": "Administrator",
"elevated_password": "{{ build `Password` }}",
...
},
If you specify an empty elevated_password value then the PowerShell
script is run as a service account. For example:
provisioner "powershell" {
elevated_user = "SYSTEM"
elevated_password = ""
}
{
"type": "powershell",
"elevated_user": "SYSTEM",
"elevated_password": "",
...
},
execution_policy - To run ps scripts on Windows, Packer defaults this to
"bypass" and wraps the command to run. Setting this to "none" will prevent
wrapping, allowing to see exit codes on Docker for Windows. Possible values
are bypass, allsigned, default, remotesigned, restricted,
undefined, unrestricted, and none.
remote_path (string) - The path where the PowerShell script will be
uploaded to within the target build machine. This defaults to
C:/Windows/Temp/script-UUID.ps1 where UUID is replaced with a dynamically
generated string that uniquely identifies the script.
This setting allows users to override the default upload location. The value must be a writable location and any parent directories must already exist.
remote_env_var_path (string) - Environment variables required within the
remote environment are uploaded within a PowerShell script and then enabled
by 'dot sourcing' the script immediately prior to execution of the main
command or script.
The path the environment variables script will be uploaded to defaults to
C:/Windows/Temp/packer-ps-env-vars-UUID.ps1 where UUID is replaced with a
dynamically generated string that uniquely identifies the script.
This setting allows users to override the location the environment variable script is uploaded to. The value must be a writable location and any parent directories must already exist.
skip_clean (bool) - Whether to clean scripts up after executing the provisioner.
Defaults to false. When true any script created by a non-elevated Powershell
provisioner will be removed from the remote machine. Elevated scripts,
along with the scheduled tasks, will always be removed regardless of the
value set for skip_clean.
start_retry_timeout (string) - The amount of time to attempt to start
the remote process. By default this is 5m or 5 minutes. This setting
exists in order to deal with times when SSH may restart, such as a system
reboot. Set this to a higher value if reboots take a longer amount of time.
pause_after (string) - Wait the amount of time after provisioning a PowerShell
script, this pause be taken if all previous steps were successful.
@include 'provisioners/common-config.mdx'
In addition to being able to specify custom environmental variables using the
environment_vars configuration, the provisioner automatically defines certain
commonly useful environmental variables:
PACKER_BUILD_NAME is set to the name of the
build that Packer is running.
This is most useful when Packer is making multiple builds and you want to
distinguish them slightly from a common provisioning script.
PACKER_BUILDER_TYPE is the type of the builder that was used to create
the machine that the script is running on. This is useful if you want to
run only certain parts of the script on systems built with certain
builders.
PACKER_HTTP_ADDR If using a builder that provides an HTTP server for file
transfer (such as hyperv, parallels, qemu, virtualbox, and vmware), this
will be set to the address. You can use this address in your provisioner to
download large files over HTTP. This may be useful if you're experiencing
slower speeds using the default file provisioner. A file provisioner using
the winrm communicator may experience these types of difficulties.
The good news first. If you are using the Microsoft port of OpenSSH then the provisioner should just work as expected - no extra configuration effort is required.
Now the caveats. If you are using an alternative configuration, and your SSH
connection lands you in a *nix shell on the remote host, then you will most
likely need to manually set the execute_command; The default
execute_command used by Packer will not work for you. When configuring the
command you will need to ensure that any dollar signs or other characters that
may be incorrectly interpreted by the remote shell are escaped accordingly.
The following example shows how the standard execute_command can be
reconfigured to work on a remote system with
Cygwin/OpenSSH installed. The execute_command has each
dollar sign backslash escaped so that it is not interpreted by the remote Bash
shell - Bash being the default shell for Cygwin environments.
provisioner "powershell" {
execute_command = "powershell -executionpolicy bypass \"& { if (Test-Path variable:global:ProgressPreference){\\$ProgressPreference='SilentlyContinue'};. {{.Vars}}; &'{{.Path}}'; exit \\$LastExitCode }\""
inline = [ "Write-Host \"Hello from PowerShell\""]
}
"provisioners": [
{
"type": "powershell",
"execute_command": "powershell -executionpolicy bypass \"& { if (Test-Path variable:global:ProgressPreference){\\$ProgressPreference='SilentlyContinue'};. {{.Vars}}; &'{{.Path}}'; exit \\$LastExitCode }\"",
"inline": ["Write-Host \"Hello from PowerShell\""]
}
]
The escape character in PowerShell is the backtick, also sometimes referred
to as the grave accent. When, and when not, to escape characters special to
PowerShell is probably best demonstrated with a series of examples.
Users need to deal with escaping characters special to PowerShell when they
appear directly in commands used in the inline PowerShell provisioner and
when they appear directly in the users own scripts. Note that where double
quotes appear within double quotes, the addition of a backslash escape is
required for the JSON template to be parsed correctly.
provisioner "powershell" {
inline = [
"Write-Host \"A literal dollar `$ must be escaped\"",
"Write-Host \"A literal backtick `` must be escaped\"",
"Write-Host \"Here `\"double quotes`\" must be escaped\"",
"Write-Host \"Here `'single quotes`' don`'t really need to be\"",
"Write-Host \"escaped... but it doesn`'t hurt to do so.\"",
]
}
"provisioners": [
{
"type": "powershell",
"inline": [
"Write-Host \"A literal dollar `$ must be escaped\"",
"Write-Host \"A literal backtick `` must be escaped\"",
"Write-Host \"Here `\"double quotes`\" must be escaped\"",
"Write-Host \"Here `'single quotes`' don`'t really need to be\"",
"Write-Host \"escaped... but it doesn`'t hurt to do so.\""
]
}
]
The above snippet should result in the following output on the Packer console:
==> amazon-ebs: Provisioning with Powershell...
==> amazon-ebs: Provisioning with PowerShell script: /var/folders/15/d0f7gdg13rnd1cxp7tgmr55c0000gn/T/packer-powershell-provisioner508190439
amazon-ebs: A literal dollar $ must be escaped
amazon-ebs: A literal backtick ` must be escaped
amazon-ebs: Here "double quotes" must be escaped
amazon-ebs: Here 'single quotes' don't really need to be
amazon-ebs: escaped... but it doesn't hurt to do so.
Special characters appearing in user environment variable values and in the
elevated_user and elevated_password fields will be automatically dealt with
for the user. There is no need to use escapes in these instances.
variable "psvar" {
type = string
default = "My$tring"
}
build {
sources = ["source.amazon-ebs.example"]
provisioner "powershell" {
elevated_user = "Administrator"
elevated_password = "Super$3cr3t!"
inline = ["Write-Output \"The dollar in the elevated_password is interpreted correctly\""]
}
provisioner "powershell" {
environment_vars = [
"VAR1=A$Dollar",
"VAR2=A`Backtick",
"VAR3=A'SingleQuote",
"VAR4=A\"DoubleQuote",
"VAR5=${var.psvar}",
]
inline = [
"Write-Output \"In the following examples the special character is interpreted correctly:\"",
"Write-Output \"The dollar in VAR1: $Env:VAR1\"",
"Write-Output \"The backtick in VAR2: $Env:VAR2\"",
"Write-Output \"The single quote in VAR3: $Env:VAR3\"",
"Write-Output \"The double quote in VAR4: $Env:VAR4\"",
"Write-Output \"The dollar in VAR5 (expanded from a user var): $Env:VAR5\"",
]
}
}
{
"variables": {
"psvar": "My$tring"
},
...
"provisioners": [
{
"type": "powershell",
"elevated_user": "Administrator",
"elevated_password": "Super$3cr3t!",
"inline": "Write-Output \"The dollar in the elevated_password is interpreted correctly\""
},
{
"type": "powershell",
"environment_vars": [
"VAR1=A$Dollar",
"VAR2=A`Backtick",
"VAR3=A'SingleQuote",
"VAR4=A\"DoubleQuote",
"VAR5={{user `psvar`}}"
],
"inline": [
"Write-Output \"In the following examples the special character is interpreted correctly:\"",
"Write-Output \"The dollar in VAR1: $Env:VAR1\"",
"Write-Output \"The backtick in VAR2: $Env:VAR2\"",
"Write-Output \"The single quote in VAR3: $Env:VAR3\"",
"Write-Output \"The double quote in VAR4: $Env:VAR4\"",
"Write-Output \"The dollar in VAR5 (expanded from a user var): $Env:VAR5\""
]
}
]
...
}
The above snippet should result in the following output on the Packer console:
==> amazon-ebs: Provisioning with Powershell...
==> amazon-ebs: Provisioning with PowerShell script: /var/folders/15/d0f7gdg13rnd1cxp7tgmr55c0000gn/T/packer-powershell-provisioner961728919
amazon-ebs: The dollar in the elevated_password is interpreted correctly
==> amazon-ebs: Provisioning with Powershell...
==> amazon-ebs: Provisioning with PowerShell script: /var/folders/15/d0f7gdg13rnd1cxp7tgmr55c0000gn/T/packer-powershell-provisioner142826554
amazon-ebs: In the following examples the special character is interpreted correctly:
amazon-ebs: The dollar in VAR1: A$Dollar
amazon-ebs: The backtick in VAR2: A`Backtick
amazon-ebs: The single quote in VAR3: A'SingleQuote
amazon-ebs: The double quote in VAR4: A"DoubleQuote
amazon-ebs: The dollar in VAR5 (expanded from a user var): My$tring