When using pty=true, removing files using sudo may request confirmation,
which will hang the connection.
Similarly, sometimes assumptions about file existence may be wrong and
in those cases it seems better to continue on as long as the file does
not exist, so -f makes sense there, too.
https://github.com/mitchellh/vagrant/issues/4307
Fix details:
Pass network interface name to template renderer and use it
in static and dhcp templates to render /etc/rc.conf entries.
modified: plugins/guests/freebsd/cap/configure_networks.rb
modified: templates/guests/freebsd/network_dhcp.erb
modified: templates/guests/freebsd/network_static.erb
Verification scenario:
Check if /etc/rc.conf contains vtnet entries when paravirtualized
NIC devices are used in FreeBSD guest.
On Fedora 20 virtual machines biosdevname command
'Returns 4 if running in a virtual machine.'
This patch:
- Uses the biosdevname command return value to detect if virtual
- Uses /sys/net to get interface names - Might be better solution
- Leaves unchanged the original 'bare metal' case - I wonder what for
though?
Tested with Fedora Cloud image adapted for vagrant-libvirt
Fixes issue #4104
Removed dependency upon netdom which is not always available on all Windows versions. This implementation that uses PowerShell and WMI should work on all OS and PowerShell versions.
Fixed another issue where host renames would always happen when the hostname was longer than 15 characters. The COMPUTERNAME environment variable only returns the first 15 characters so we no longer use that to check the current host name.
Reboot the Windows guest after renaming the computer so changes take affect immediately before attempting to provision the box.
- Changed rename from wmic to netdom since netdom seems to work correctly in Windows 2008R2 and newer OSs.
- Fixed Windows guest error translations, the wrong namespace was specified in the yaml file.
OS X's `xargs` does not support the `-r` flag (which means "do not
execute the command even once if there are no arguments"), but
behaves by default as if it was specified.
You can verify this yourself with this test:
$ touch zero-length-file
$ xargs echo <zero-length-file
If `echo` is executed, you will see a blank line. If it is not
executed (i.e. `-r` is specified or the behavior is implied) then
you will see no blank line.
CoreOS vagrant's configuration code look for interface names starting with 'enp0', but in my case when deploying CoreOS image to libvirt environment interfaces had names 'ens4v1', 'ens5v2'
This patch should fix it, but it might be part of a bigger issue and having these two patterns might not cover all possible configurations.