This commit adds some better handling around the snapshot restore and
delete commands for the virtualbox provider. If a user attempts to restore from
a vm that does not exist, instead of exiting 0 it will raise an
exception saying the virtual machine has not been created yet.
Addtionally, if a user attempts to restore from a snapshot id that does
not exist, instead of printing a complicated exception from the
virtualbox cli tool, it prints a more useful error message telling the
user that the snapshot does not exist.
Prior to this commit, if a user attempted to use the `vagrant snapshot
save` or `vagrant snapshot list` commands on a vm whose provider did not
support snapshots, it would simply print a warning. This commit changes
that behavior by instead raising an error.
Prior to this commit, the vagrant snapshot plugin would save snapshots
with existing names which lead to duplicate snapshot names being saved.
This commit fixes that by checking to see if the given snapshot name
already exists and if so, fails telling the user the given snapshot name
already exists. If a user passes a --force flag, vagrant will first
delete the existing snapshot, and take a new one with the given name.
This commit attempts to uniquely identify the temporary files and
directories that are created during test runs. Where it was a quick
fix, this commit also removes the temporary files and directories.
There are still a ton of temporary files due to calls to
.isolated_environment in the tests without an easy API an easy way
to provide a closer to that function.
This fixes GH-6395 by only appending the access_token once. It also fixes a
bug that was never reported. If a user supplied an access_token for a box URL,
Vagrant would silently overwrite it.
After this commit, Vagrant only appends an access_token to the URL if no
value exists at the key.
/cc @sethvargo - Some weirdness here but overall should work fine. I'm
not sure if there was a GH issue this should be attached to or close. To
explain:
We just use the first machine with the default provider. A
Vagrant::Environment guarantees there is at least one machine, so
`env.machine_names.first` will always work. And we can just use the
default provider because we don't really care. Finally, it can be any
old machine we pass in because we just want the "global" config to
validate and there is no way to say "don't validate machine-specific
configs", so we might as well just pick the first machine to validate.