Packer
Parallels
@Parallels
The Parallels plugin can be used with HashiCorp Packer to create custom images on Parallels.
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Updated 2 years ago
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Parallels
The Parallels Packer Plugin is able to create Parallels Desktop for Mac virtual machines and export them in the PVM format.
Installation
To install this plugin, copy and paste this code into your Packer configuration, then run packer init
.
packer {
required_plugins {
parallels = {
version = ">= 1.1.5"
source = "github.com/parallels/parallels"
}
}
}
Alternatively, you can use packer plugins install
to manage installation of this plugin.
$ packer plugins install github.com/parallels/parallels
Requirements for Parallels Desktop v18 or Below
In addition to Parallels Desktop for Mac this requires the Parallels Virtualization SDK only if you are using Parallels Desktop for Mac v18 or below.
The SDK can be installed by downloading and following the instructions in the dmg.
Parallels Desktop for Mac 9 and later is supported, from PD 11 Pro or Business edition is required.
Components
Builders
The plugin comes with multiple builders able to create Parallels machines, depending on the strategy you want to use to build the image. Packer supports the following Parallels builders:
parallels-iso - Starts from an ISO file, creates a brand new Parallels VM, installs an OS, provisions software within the OS, then exports that machine to create an image. This is best for people who want to start from scratch.
parallels-pvm - This builder imports an existing PVM file, runs provisioners on top of that VM, and exports that machine to create an image. This is best if you have an existing Parallels VM export you want to use as the source. As an additional benefit, you can feed the artifact of this builder back into itself to iterate on a machine.
parallels-ipsw - Starts from an IPSW file, creates a brand new Parallels Mac OS VM, installs an OS, provisions software within the OS, then exports that machine to create an image. This is best for people who want to start from scratch.
parallels-macvm - This builder imports an existing Mac VM file, runs provisioners on top of that VM, and exports that machine to create an image. This is best if you have an existing Parallels Mac VM export you want to use as the source. As an additional benefit, you can feed the artifact of this builder back into itself to iterate on a machine.