This branch brings in a whole lot of awesome. The name does not do it
justice. The list of things that comes into play here:
* "virtualbox" is no longer hardcoded anywhere in core. It is the default
provider, yes, but it is 100% possible now to slip in another provider
and have it work.
* `vagrant up --provider` is a thing. This allows you to specify an
alternate provider. Note that the other commands don't support
`--provider` yet so its not THAT useful, but its getting really close.
* True V2 configuration is in place. That means that `Vagrant.configure`
calls now are loading a completely new configuration version, and old
1.0.x Vagrantfiles are V1 configuration. V1 configuration is upgraded
automatically internally, so backwards compatibility is maintained.
Magic, people, magic.
* `config.vm.provider` is the major new configuration option. This is
how provider-specific configuration will be done. For example, Vagrant
has always provided a way to make a pass of `VBoxManage` calls to
customize your VM via `config.vm.customize` in V1. This now exists
as a VirtualBox configuration option. See the example here:
https://gist.github.com/98f5a0df6a05286dfb73
* Unit tests no longer depend on VirtualBox being installed, because for
unit tests we slip in a "no-op" provider, which is a fully valid
Vagrant provider plug-in that does... NOTHING! Brilliant!
* Lots of core middleware executor improvements that make writing and
using middleware stacks a lot more enjoyable. Enjoy a set of "standard
library middlewares" provided by Vagrant in Vagrant::Action::Builtin.
The multi-provider is really shaping up here.
This works by registering a `config` with `:provider => true` with the
same name as your provider. Vagrant will then automatically configure
the provider when `config.vm.provider` is used.
This will eventually replace the Environment#vms method. Because of the
introduction of providers, the environment doesn't know what the backing
of the machines will be (and they're _machines_ now, not _vms_).
Instead, users of Environment will now call `#machine` on the
environment to retrieve a machine with the given backing provider as it
needs it.
The sudo() block and/or the Puppet provisioner often returns newline
characters as separate strings. This makes the chomp() ineffective and
results in extraneous spacing between the output lines.
Separate out the call to chomp() so that we only do it once. Then only
output info if that line is not an empty string.
Previously, failures in applying the puppet manifests would be
ignored, because puppet apply/agent don't have any useful exit codes
by default. (Errors are printed, but vagrant continues.)
Use the option --detailed-exitcodes of puppet apply/agent to check for
success.
This branch brings in the "machine abstraction" code. This is a major
milestone in the development of Vagrant as it abstracts all of the
VirtualBox-specific code out into a plugin. There is zero VirtualBox
specific code in the core ("lib/") directory at this point. Read on for
important points.
== Gotchas
White it is technically possible now to write plugins for other
providers, there is still major work to be done to make this feasible.
The plugin interface itself is pretty much done, but there are some
issues:
* ":virtualbox" is the hardcoded provider to be used at the moment.
* There is no way to configure a provider. For example,
`config.vm.customize` would never work for anything other than
VirtualBox, so there needs to be a way to have provider-specific
configuration. This will come soon.
* Shared folders and networking need to be rearchitected to be friendly
for multiple providers, since it is unrealistic that a provider such as
EC2 could provide the same level of networking, for example.
* There is no way easy way (like `vagrant package --base`) to create
boxes for providers other than VirtualBox. This will be addressed in a
whole new feature of Vagrant probably in a future release after
provider stuff has shipped.
== Writing a Provider
To write a provider, you create a Vagrant plugin that defines a
"provider". See the "plugins/providers/virtualbox/plugin.rb" for more
details. Providers themselves have an exremely simple API. The burden
for writing providers mostly rests on the fact that you must define
complex middleware sequences.
Lots more work to come in the future, but this is a BIG MILESTONE!
`vagrant package --base` is deprecated for a future feature so I didn't
want to waste any brain cycles on how to do this the "right" way since a
new system will be introduced to do this sort of thing in teh future.
The built-in middleware sequences will now be hardcoded onto
Vagrant::Action. Other plugins can hook into these sequences to provide
verification and so on. So the VirtualBox plugin will hook into that
action sequence and add verification.
This required some modifications to the linux guest implementation. And
the other guests will have to be modified as well. This is because
`channel` is now `communicate`.
This works by now calling the `:ssh` action on the provider. This action
is allowed to do whatever it pleases, but should at some point probably
call the `SSHExec` built-in middleware.
The `SSHExec` built-in middleware was added. This uses the information
returned by `Machine#ssh_info` and uses the `Vagrant::Util::SSH` helper
to exec into the remote machine. The provider should do any work upfront
in verifying that the machine is ready to be SSHed into.
This starts the transition of replacing VM with Machine. Machine still
isn't ready to fully replace VM but by moving it now, I'm able to find
the spots that need to be fixed. At this point `vagrant status` works
with the new provider interface.
On Debian systems config.hostname directive should change /etc/mailname
in order to prevent problems with default mailer trying to contact
default vm's name.
* Renamed the run_puppet_client method in the puppet provisioner
to clarify it's function running Puppet in apply mode from the
command line.
* Renamed the run_puppet_client method in the puppet server provisioner
to clarify the agent is being run.
* Changed the Puppet server provisioner to use the more standard Git-style
command line structure. The puppetd binary has been deprecated in favour of
puppet with the agent flag.
This moves out the concept of a "default VM" from the Environment class
and makes it the responsibility of the V1 configuration that at least
one VM is defined on it. This lets the configuration ultimately decide
what a "default" implementation is.
Previously, all procs were assumed to just be the current version. This
is certainly not going to be true always so now the version number of
the configuration must be explicit if you're assigning a proc to the
configuration loader.
I don't use `activated` here because I'd really like to optimize
performance as much as possible, and loading files from disk is
generally slow. So instead of using `activated` I load the file at the
last possible moment which is when the exact class is being requested.
I don't think many people will do this outside of the core, and I'm not
too concerned.
Easy commands are well... easy! They don't offer the full power of
creating a completely custom command class, but they let you do the
basics (what almost everyone needs) with minimal fuss. Example:
class MyPlugin < Vagrant.plugin("1")
name "my-plugin"
easy_command "foo" do |action|
puts "HELLO!"
end
end
NOTE: The "action" stuff isn't done yet, but will be soon!