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packer templates for arch & nixos on hetzner cloud

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hcloud-packer-templates

This repo is used to build linux images (as snapshots) for use with Hetzner Cloud by means of HashiCorp's Packer.

Templates for the following distros are currently provided:

  • archlinux
  • nixos

I recommend the use of Hetzner's hcloud command line tool to manage the resulting images. Hetzner also provides a dedicated Terraform Provider that you can use to build servers from these images. Please note that your images cannot yet be (easily) exported from Hetzner's Cloud.

Building Images using this Repo

Please ensure that you have done the following:

  • installed packer on your development machine
  • set the HCLOUD_TOKEN environment variable to your API token
  • reviewed/overriden the templates' variables (as necessary)

Getting Started

To build VM images:

  • $ packer build templates/archlinux.pkr.hcl
  • $ packer build templates/nixos.pkr.hcl

To view info about past builds:

  • $ less packer-manifest.json

To debug a build:

  • $ packer build -debug -on-error=ask packer/nixos.pkr.hcl
  • $ ssh -F/dev/null -i ssh_key_hcloud.pem [email protected] -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no

Internals

The resulting images are intended to support a Terraform-based (or custom) workflow that feels close to the one of native Hetzner VMs.

Hetzner's server infrastructure (mirrors, repos, DNS, NTP, DHCP) and configuration endpoints are used where possible. This necessarily involves some analysis of their (partially undocumented) setups and translations of these to our images, so this may become outdated, may break, or may not work completely as expected. Error handling is also pretty bare-bones.

In particular, support for the following features available on standard Hetzner VMs is desired:

  • dynamic hostname
  • dynamic root ssh keys
  • free-form cloud-init userdata
  • full IPv6/IPv4 support
  • Hetzner Cloud Networks
  • Hetzner Cloud Volumes

The following features are notably unsupported:

  • dynamic initial root passwords (please prefer ssh keys)
  • automatic server resizing (use rescue mode, or a new server)

A general problem is that much of the data necessary for the features in the lists above is only allocated after a server is instantiated from a given image and thus can't be taken into account at image built-time. Hetzer VMs use an hcloud-specific cloud-init provider for this initialization after their instantiation.

However, the current state of cloud-init on Archlinux is less than ideal, and NixOS has a workflow that's not really compatible. Thus, these images instead use hcloud-dl-metadata.service, which aggregates and outputs the data normally available to Hetzner VMs to /etc/hcloud-metadata.json, which can then be used in further distro-specific mechanisms (or directly by you).

Finally, your custom cloud-init userdata, which the Hetzner VMs happen to treat as an execute-on-boot script, is instead handled by hcloud-dl-userdata.service, which only transcribes it into /etc/hcloud-userdata and nothing else.

Archlinux

Archlinux images use the file /etc/hcloud-metadata.json to drive a few systemd services, which in turn implement the dynamic features mentioned above:

  • hcloud-hostname.service (sets hostname)
  • hcloud-network.service (configures primary and attached networks)
  • hcloud-ssh-keys.service (sets ssh root keys)

Any further configuration is up to your provisioning tool.

NixOS

NixOS images export the metadata from /etc/hcloud-metadata.json as the config.hcloud.* hierarchy. Since not all config.hcloud.* data is known at snapshop build-time, the system configuration is initially partially stubbed out at built-time, and the freshly instantiated server runs nix-channel --update and nixos-rebuild after hcloud-dl-metadata.service has finished.

The dynamic features mentioned above are implemented with a few nix expressions in /etc/nixos/ using these config.hcloud.* attributes. These settings use the mkDefaultOption mechanism, so you're free to override them as you see fit.

In general, you can provide the nix-config-path packer variable to point to a directory of nix expression and other data, like the one you would place in /etc/nixos, which is then baked into the built image. Note that the whole directory is included in this, including any .git/ folder and other data, and that it uses the file configuration.nix as its entrypoint. You do not need to manage hardware-configuration.nix here.

This nix-config-path mechanism allows both small customizations to the barebones image (producing images primarily intended for additional provisioning), while also enabling fully baked system images (for rapid deployment / autoscaling).

It is planned to transition some or all of the above NixOS workflow to use flakes instead, but this isn't implemented yet.

Known Issues

  • The upstream archlinux bootstrap image's filename is derived from its release day. I know of no good way to automatically get this date. Set -var arch-image=archlinux-bootstrap-20XX.XX.XX-x86_64.tar.gz if your builds are failing because of this issue.

  • Verifying the archlinux bootstrap image is relatively complex due to the trust setup the archlinux team uses. We don't properly derive developer key trust from the master key(s), but instead pin the key of the developer that usually signs the releases.

GPG Keys

The upstream for the GPG keys used by the installation scripts can be found on these pages:

License

You can redistribute and/or modify these files unter the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. See the LICENSE file for details.