This commit introduces a proper reboot cap for Windows guests. Once it
initiates a reboot on the guest, it calls out to the wait_for_reboot cap
to block on until the guest is finished rebooting.
Prior to this commit, if Windows was slow to reboot, Vagrant would fail
to find the right IP address to upload the wait_for_reboot script to.
This commit fixes this race condition by adding a timeout to ensure that
Vagrant can retry. It also properly catches an exception in the winrm
ready? method for checking if a guest is properly ready for
communications.
This commit is a workaround due to how older debian and ubuntu systems
fail to properly restart networking. Instead of relying on the init
scripts or ifup/down tools to restart each interface, this commit
instead restarts each interface individually
This commit adds some additional logic that falls back to using the
ifdown/ifup tools to restart networking. On Ubuntu 14.04, the init
script was designed to always fail to restart newtorking, so it needs
to use the ifdown/up tools instead. This commit will use the networking
init script as a last resort to restart networking, assuming other
commands haven't broken networking already.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/ifupdown/+bug/1301015
If the type of error changes on retry the messages will effectively
spam the user display with alternating messages. Log each message
sent and only re-display each message once within 10 seconds.
Prior to this commit, Vagrant would prompt for smb username and password
every time, even if only smb_username was defined. This commit changes
that by allowing a "default" username from the Vagrantfile, with the
option of overriding it.
Prior to this commit, the hostname was set with one big bash script and
attempted to determine what tools are available. This commit changes
that by splitting out that tool check on the Vagrant side of things with
the GuestInspection class, and adds back restarting networking to get a
DHCP lease with the change rather than using `dhclient`. This pattern
matches how hostnames are set in the redhat capability.