This is a set of Packer templates and support scripts that will prepare an OS X installer media that performs an unattended install for use with Packer and VeeWee. These were originally developed for VeeWee, but support for the VeeWee template has not been maintained since Packer's release and so it is only provided for historical purposes. I plan on removing VeeWee support from this repo soon, but VeeWee can still make use of the preparation script and the OS X template remains in the core VeeWee repo.
The machine built by this Packer template defaults to being configured for use with Vagrant, and supports three Vagrant providers by using Packer's respective builders:
- The Hashicorp VMware Fusion provider (recommended)
- Vagrant's included VirtualBox provider
- Parallels
It's possible to build a machine with different admin account settings, and without the vagrant ssh keys, for use with other systems, e.g. continuous integration.
Use with the Fusion provider requires Vagrant 1.3.0, and use with the VirtualBox provider Vagrant 1.6.3 if using the Rsync file sync mechanism. Note that the VeeWee template also does not have any VirtualBox or Parallels support.
Provisioning steps that are defined in the template via items in the scripts directory:
- Vagrant-specific configuration
- VM guest tools installation if on VMware
- Xcode CLI tools installation
- Chef installation via the Chef Omnitruck method
- Puppet installation via Puppetlabs Mac installers, both legacy and 4
- Disk shrinking for VMware
Currently this prepare script and template supports all versions of OS X that are distributed through the App Store: OS X Lion (10.7) through El Capitan (10.11), and macOS Sierra (10.12).
This project currently only supplies a single Packer template (template.json
), so the hypervisor's configured guest OS version (i.e. darwin12-64
) does not accurately reflect the actual installed OS. I haven't found there to be any functional differences depending on these configured guest versions.
To build a VMware box of an OS version less than El Capitan (10.11), note that as of VMare Fusion 8.5.4, you will need to change the tools_upload_flavor
from darwin
to darwinPre15
.
Important note: The Sierra 10.12.4 installer seems to no longer support including custom packages as part of the installer, unless they are signed by Apple. This produces an error with the text, "macOS could not be installed on your computer.. The package veewee-config.pkg is not signed."
The prepare_iso.sh
script in this repo makes use of functionality Apple supports as part of a NetInstall workflow, but because of this (undocumented) additional requirement of additional packages needing to be signed by Apple as of 10.12.4, these tools can't currently install the necessary configuration for Packer to log in to perform additional configuration, installing guest tools, etc. The rest of the OS install still completes successfully.
It may be possible to work around this by modifying the rc script directly with the contents of our postinstall script.
The prepare_vdi.sh
script uses AutoDMG's approach running the installer's OSInstall.pkg
creating a fresh install in a temporary DMG sparse disk image which is converted into a VDI disk image using VirtualBox's command line tools.
OS X's installer cannot be bootstrapped as easily as can Linux or Windows, and so exists the prepare_iso.sh script to perform modifications to it that will allow for an automated install and ultimately allow Packer and later, Vagrant, to have SSH access.
Note: VirtualBox users currently have to disable Remote Management to avoid periodic freezing of the VM by adding -D DISABLE_REMOTE_MANAGEMENT
to the prepare_iso.sh
options. See Remote Management freezing issue for more information.
Run the prepare_iso.sh
script with two arguments: the path to an Install OS X.app
or the InstallESD.dmg
contained within, and an output directory. Root privileges are required in order to write a new DMG with the correct file ownerships. For example, with a 10.8.4 Mountain Lion installer:
sudo prepare_iso/prepare_iso.sh "/Applications/Install OS X Mountain Lion.app" out
...should output progress information ending in something this:
-- MD5: dc93ded64396574897a5f41d6dd7066c
-- Done. Built image is located at out/OSX_InstallESD_10.8.4_12E55.dmg. Add this iso and its checksum to your template.
prepare_iso.sh
accepts command line switches to modify the details of the admin user installed by the script.
-u
modifies the name of the admin account, defaulting tovagrant
-p
modifies the password of the same account, defaulting tovagrant
-i
sets the path of the account's avatar image, defaulting toprepare_iso/support/vagrant.jpg
For example:
sudo prepare_iso/prepare_iso.sh -u admin -p password -i /path/to/image.jpg "/Applications/Install OS X Mountain Lion.app" out
Additionally, flags can be set to disable certain default configuration options.
-D DISABLE_REMOTE_MANAGEMENT
disables the Remote Management service.-D DISABLE_SCREEN_SHARING
disables the Screen Sharing service.
The prepare_iso.sh
script needs the support
directory and its content. In other words, the easiest way to run the script is after cloning this repository.
The path can now be added to your Packer template or provided as user variables. The packer
directory contains a template that can be used with the vmware-iso
and virtualbox-iso
builders. The checksum does not need to be added because the iso_checksum_type
has been set to "none". The veewee
directory contains a definition, though as mentioned above it is not currently being maintained.
The Packer template adds some additional VM options required for OS X guests. Note that the paths given in the Packer template's iso_url
builder key accepts file paths, both absolute and relative (to the current working directory).
Given the above output, we could run then run packer:
cd packer
packer build \
-var iso_url=../out/OSX_InstallESD_10.8.4_12E55.dmg \
template.json
You might also use the -only
option to restrict to either the vmware-iso
or virtualbox-iso
builders.
If you modified the name or password of the admin account in the prepare_iso
stage, you'll need to pass in the modified details as packer variables. You can also prevent the vagrant SSH keys from being installed for that user.
For example:
packer build \
-var iso_url=../out/OSX_InstallESD_10.8.4_12E55.dmg \
-var username=youruser \
-var password=yourpassword \
-var install_vagrant_keys=false \
template.json
Local VM builds take up a lot of space. It's possible to make packer work in different directories.
PACKER_CACHE_DIR
is an out-of-the-box environment variable that configures where it will cache ISOs etc.PACKER_OUTPUT_DIR
: configure where packer will build artifacts (like OVF files) toPACKER_VAGRANT_BOX_DIR
: configure where packer will build vagrant boxes via the post-processor to.
Note: don't make PACKER_OUTPUT_DIR
and PACKER_VAGRANT_BOX_DIR
the same place. keep_input_artifacts
in the post-processor defaults to false
, and it removes them by removing the directory, not the individual files. So if you use the same place, you'll end up with no output at all (packer v1.0.0
).
OS X's installer supports a kind of bootstrap install functionality similar to Linux and Windows, however it must be invoked using pre-existing files placed on the booted installation media. This approach is roughly equivalent to that used by Apple's System Image Utility for deploying automated OS X installations and image restoration.
The prepare_iso.sh
script in this repo takes care of mounting and modifying a vanilla OS X installer downloaded from the Mac App Store. The resulting .dmg file can then be added to the Packer template. Because the preparation is done up front, no boot command sequences, attached devices or web server access is required.
More details as to the modifications to the installer media are provided in the comments of the script.
For some kinds of automated tasks, it may be necessary to have an active GUI login session (for example, test suites requiring a GUI, or Jenkins SSH slaves requiring a window server for their tasks). The Packer templates support enabling this automatically by using the autologin
user variable, which can be set to 1
or true
, for example:
packer build -var autologin=true template.json
This was easily made possible thanks to Per Olofsson's CreateUserPkg utility, which was used to help create the box's vagrant user in the prepare_iso
script, and which also supports generating the magic kcpassword file with a particular hash format to set up the auto-login.
By default, the packer template does not install the Chef or Puppet configuration management tools. You can enable the installation of configuration management by setting the chef_version
, puppet_agent_version
, puppet_version
, facter_version
, and hiera_version
variables to latest
, or to a specific version.
To install the latest version of Chef:
packer build -var chef_version=latest template.json
To install the last version of Puppet Agent:
packer build -var pupet_agent_version=latest template.json
To install the last versions of the deprecated standalone Puppet, Facter and Hiera packages:
packer build -var puppet_version=latest facter_version=latest hiera_version=latest template.json
The Xcode CLI tools are installed by the packer template by default. To disable the installation, set the install_xcode_cli_tools
variable to false
:
packer build -var install_xcode_cli_tools=false template.json
Packer will instruct the system to download and install all available OS X updates, if you want to disable this default behaviour, use update_system
variable:
packer build -var update_system=0 template.json
In some cases, it may be helpful to insert a delay into the beginning of the provisioning process. Adding a delay of about 30 seconds may help subsequent provisioning steps that install software from the internet complete successfully. By default, the delay is set to 0
, but you can change the delay by setting the provisioning_delay
variable:
packer build -var provisioning_delay=30 template.json`
VirtualBox support is thanks entirely to contributions by Matt Behrens (@zigg) to this repo, Vagrant and Packer.
The default prepare_iso.sh
configuration enables Remote Management during installation, which causes the resulting virtual machine to periodically freeze. You can avoid enabling Remote Management when using prepare_iso.sh
by passing -D DISABLE_REMOTE_MANAGEMENT
this:
sudo ./prepare_iso/prepare_iso.sh -D DISABLE_REMOTE_MANAGEMENT "/Applications/Install OS X El Capitan.app" out
Oracle's support for OS X in VirtualBox is very limited, including the lack of guest tools to provide a shared folder mechanism. If using the VirtualBox provider in Vagrant, you will need to configure the shared folder that's set up by default (current folder mapped to /vagrant
) to use either the rsync
or nfs
synced folder mechanisms. You can do this like any other synced folder config in your Vagrantfile:
Vagrant.configure("2") do |config|
config.vm.provider "virtualbox" do |vb|
config.vm.synced_folder ".", "/vagrant", type: "rsync"
end
end
This approach requires VirtualBox and unfortunately almost 30GB of free space.
The prepare_vdi.sh
command will run the installer's OSInstall.pkg
creating a fresh install in a temporary disk image which is converted into a VDI disk image.
cd packer
sudo ../prepare_iso/prepare_vdi.sh \
-D DISABLE_REMOTE_MANAGEMENT \
-o macOS_10.12.vdi \
/Applications/Install\ macOS\ Sierra.app/ \
.
The prepare_ovf.sh
command takes a virtual image disk and adds it into a temporary VirtualBox machine which is exported into a packed virtual machine using the OVF (Open Virtualization Format).
../prepare_iso/prepare_ovf.sh \
macOS_10.12.vdi
Finally the virtualbox-ovf allows to use the previously generated exported virtual machine to generate the provisioned packer box.
packer build \
-var provisioning_delay=30 \
-var source_path=macOS_10.12.ovf \
template.json
A built box with CLI tools, Puppet and Chef is over 5GB in size. It might be advisable to remove (with care) some unwanted applications in an additional postinstall script. It should also be possible to modify the OS X installer package to install fewer components, but this is non-trivial. One can also supply a custom "choice changes XML" file to modify the installer choices in a supported way, but from my testing, this only allows removing several auxiliary packages that make up no more than 6-8% of the installed footprint (for example, multilingual voices and dictionary files).
Joe Chilcote has written a tool, vfuse, which converts a never-booted OS X image (such as created with a tool like AutoDMG) into a VMDK and configures a VMware Fusion VM. vfuse can also configure a Packer template alongside the VM, configured with the vmware-vmx
builder.