Prior to this commit, providers like docker would fail to be brought up
because they do not store box objects like virtualbox or vmware
provider guests. This commit fixes that by making sure the box object
exists before writing the metadata file to disk.
This commit introduces the `--force` flag to the reload command. This
change means that if the flag is included, the halt step of the reload
will forcefully shutdown the virtual machine rather than a graceful
halt.
When performing a box update and the box version has been updated
to be different than the installed version, perform a lookup for
the latest available installed box to allow the update command to
continue successfully
When a guest is created, the box metadata information is stored in the
machine data directory. This allows modifications to happen to the
Vagrantfile definition of the box in use (box name change, box version
change, etc) while still allowing the Machine instance of an active
guest successfully load the box currently backing it.
Due to the behavior of URI.parse on Ruby < 2.5 returning the string
value of the parsed URI object may modify the original URL. Specifically
it will remove the `//` prefix characters from SMB paths. When no
host modifications are being made, always return the original value.
Fixes#9636
Always remap old hosts to target host when encountered. When custom
vagrant server is defined, warn when tokens may be attached and allow
time for user to cancel.
Fixes#9442
Prior to this commit, when the `--global` flag was used with the
`vagrant box outdated` command, it would ignore box providers and not
inform the user of all outdated boxes. This commit fixes that by
displaying each box within the users environment, and includes the
provider of the box in the message.
As of `net-ssh` version 4.2.0, the key :paranoid has been deprecated in
favor of using :verify_host_key. This commit updates Vagrants ssh config
to use the new key, and deprecates the use of :paranoid.
This commit adds better messaging to the user if the parallel flag is
used without the force flag. It also makes the state checking based on
the delta between the initial and final states of the guests due to the
fact that there is no guarantee what the "destroyed" state id will be
between providers.
Prior to this commit, if the ssh-config command was invoked within
cygwin or msys2, it would show a regular windows style path for private
keys rather than a path that could be used within msys2 or cygwin. This
commit updates that behavior by converting all of the private key paths
to the proper msys2 or cygwin path if the platform is windows and the
command was invoked from one of those two shells.
Prior to this commit, when using a global id to bring up a vagrant vm,
vagrant would fail during the "install provider" step due to the fact
that the global vagrant machine was not configured for the local vagrant
environment. Since this global vm exists elsewhere, we disable the
install provider step so that vagrant can just bring up the global
vagrant machine.
Prior to this commit, the `vagrant validate` command would only validate
the first machine in a vagrant file. This commit improves that by
validating all known machines in the environment. If one is not found,
it will properly throw an exception instead of a stacktrace.
This adds a prompt for a token description, which is now supported in
Vagrant Cloud. Pressing enter on the prompt uses the default description
of `"Vagrant login"`.
$ vagrant login
In a moment we will ask for your username and password to HashiCorp's
Vagrant Cloud. After authenticating, we will store an access token locally on
disk. Your login details will be transmitted over a secure connection, and
are never stored on disk locally.
If you do not have an Vagrant Cloud account, sign up at
https://www.vagrantcloud.com
Vagrant Cloud Username: justincampbell
Password (will be hidden):
Token description (Defaults to "Vagrant login"):
You are now logged in.
$
Which created a token with the default description of "Vagrant login":
![](http://c.justincampbell.me/2V0p0T0U0d0O/Screen%20Shot%202017-08-10%20at%205.08.21%20PM.png)
Entering a description:
Token description (Defaults to "Vagrant login"): Justin's MacBook Pro
![](http://c.justincampbell.me/2m1N0d1M3k3P/Screen%20Shot%202017-08-10%20at%205.09.39%20PM.png)
Prior to this commit, if a state was reached where the action_box_add
command needed a force flag, it would fail requesting the user to
provide that flag to override adding a new box. However that flag did
not exist on the box update command, and could not be passed onto the
action_box_add action. This commit updates that to include a force flag,
and if used, pass that value onto the action_box_add action.
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 ran the `vagrant ssh -c CMD` command, it
would not allow the user to configure pseudo-terminal allocation. This
commit introduces a -t flag for the `vagrant ssh` command which defaults
to true if not specified.
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.
Issue #8159
while using:
$ vagrant package --base ${VIRTUALBOXNAME}
this error occurs:
/usr/share/rubygems-integration/all/gems/vagrant-1.9.0/plugins/commands/package/command.rb:59:in `package_base': uninitialized constant VagrantPlugins::CommandPackage::Command::SecureRandom (NameError)
Did you mean? SecureRandom
from /usr/share/rubygems-integration/all/gems/vagrant-1.9.0/plugins/commands/package/command.rb:42:in `execute'
from /usr/share/rubygems-integration/all/gems/vagrant-1.9.0/lib/vagrant/cli.rb:42:in `execute'
from /usr/share/rubygems-integration/all/gems/vagrant-1.9.0/lib/vagrant/environment.rb:274:in `cli'
from /usr/share/rubygems-integration/all/gems/vagrant-1.9.0/bin/vagrant:118:in `<top (required)>'
from /usr/bin/vagrant:22:in `load'
from /usr/bin/vagrant:22:in `<main>'
Usage: vagrant box prune [options]
Options:
-p, --provider PROVIDER The specific provider type for the boxes to destroy.
-n, --dry-run Only print the boxes that would be removed.
--name NAME The specific box name to check for outdated versions.
-f, --force Destroy without confirmation even when box is in use.
-h, --help Print this help
Vagrant's environment (which includes the known list of boxes and
versions) is established at the start of the Vagrant run. This means
that box downloads which occur during the run are not contained in the
set until the next run. This causes duplicate box downloads to raise an
error in multi-machine Vagrantfiles.
This commit fixes that issue by pre-processing the machines by provider
and version, creating a unique set of boxes to update.
Fixes GH-6042
The sentinal file was always being ignored when running the
resume command. This is fixed along with allowing provision
options to be used with resume. Fixes#6787