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.
As described in /etc/sysconfig/network/ifcfg.template
Static template was already using the right one, but the dhcp configuration seems
to be copied from a Fedora/Redhat template.
This fixes the issue that the interface does not come up after reboot.
With this change, the existing host-based Ansible provisioner is
refactored to share a maximum of code with this new guest-based Ansible
provisioner.
At this stage of development, the existing unit tests are intentionally
modified as little as possible, to keep safe the existing funtionalities.
Other issues resolved by this changeset:
- Display a warning when running from a Windows host [GH-5292]
- Do not run `ansible-playbook` in verbose mode when the `verbose` option
is set to an empty string.
The benefits of the following "breaking change" are the following:
- default behaviour naturally fits with most common usage (i.e. always
connect with Vagrant SSH settings)
- the autogenerated inventory is more consistent by providing both the
SSH username and private key.
- no longer needed to explain how to override Ansible `remote_user` parameters
Important: With the `force_remote_user` option, people still can fall
back to the former behavior (prior to Vagrant 1.8.0), which means that
Vagrant integration capabilities are still quite open and flexible.
Here we implement a naive solution to #5605 which catches the case that
a provided source contains an object which cannot be inspected, because
an object contained within in has an #inspect string that returns a
string that is incompatible with the encoding in
`Encoding.default_external` or a string which cannot be downcast to
7-bit ascii.
The Ruby VM implementation of "#inspect" implements this checking on
these lines of code: http://git.io/vZYNS. A Ruby level override of
this method does not cause this problem. For example:
```ruby
class Foo
def inspect
"😍".encode("UTF-16LE")
end
```
will not cause the problem, because that's a Ruby implementation and the
VM's checks don't occur.
However, if we have an Object which **does** use the VM implementation
of inspect, that contains an object that has an inspect string which
returns non-ascii, we encounter the bug. For example:
```ruby
class Bar
def inspect
"😍".encode("UTF-16LE")
end
end
class Foo
def initialize
@bar = Bar.new
end
end
Foo.new.inspect
```
Will cause the issue.
The solution this patch provides basically catches the encoding error
and inserts a string which attempts to help the user work out which
object was provided without blowing up. Most likely, this was caused
by a user having a weird encoding coming out of one of the sources
passed in, but without a full repro case, it's not clear whether a patch
should be applied to a different object in the system.
Closes#5605.
We gained a ton of improvemnts to WinRM error handling in
https://github.com/mitchellh/vagrant/pull/4943, but we also got one bug.
The new code raises an exception when `winrm_info` does not return right
away. This was preventing us from catching the retry/timout logic that's
meant to wait until boot_timeout for the WinRM communicator to be ready.
This restores the proper behavior by rescuing the WinRMNotReady
exception and continuing to retry until the surrounding timeout fires.
With this change, the `Vagrant::plugins_enabled?` is now false when the
embedded Bundler is not available.
Resolve the broken RSpec unit tests after
479323f1e8.
When provisioning multiple machines in sequence (the default vagrant
behaviour), it doesn't make sense to require to provide the private ssh
key(s) via the custom ansible inventory script/file.
To align with the handling of multiple ssh keys per machine, we won't
rely any longer on `--private-key` command line argument, but only pass
the keys via `ANSIBLE_SSH_ARGS` environment variable.
Note that when vagrant generates the ansible inventory and that only one
key is associated to a VM, this step would be redundant, and therefore
won't be applied.
This change fixes the breaking change introduced by 3d62a91.
Revert 1c884fa4e5 which introduced the
following bug:
Instead of allowing to dump the `ansible-playbook` command details when
VAGRANT_LOG=debug was defined, it was then impossible to disable this
console output when VAGRANT_LOG was undefined (in such case,
``@logger.debug? systematically returns `true`)
In order to keep things simple and focused, it is preferable to drop the
bad idea to mix Ansible verbosity and Vagrant log level.
Fix#5803
After #5532 (e745436df3), it was no longer
possible to enable ansible colorized output. Even though
`ANSIBLE_NOCOLOR` has no effect *at the moment* in vagrant+ansible
integration, I agree to keep it for clarity and consistence.
The new `--no-color` behaviour (bug fix#5531) is now covered by a unit
test.
//cc @marsam, @sethvargo
Use of $stdin, $stdout, and $stderr globals makes testing difficult. By
exposing the IO objects as writable attributes, input/output can be more
easily simulated using StringIO or doubles.
This should fix the cleaning up of the default VirtualBox dhcpserver,
which we've been fighting with for ages over in #3083. We were checking
for a structure _including_ a netmask, but the driver was not populating
netmask.
This change helps to avoid troubles like reported in #5018 and #4860.
Note that for sake of configuration simplicity, no new `ansible.timeout`
option has been added. The users who want to set a different value can
rely on `ansible.raw_arguments`.
This SSH option is always set, except when Vagrant is running from an
operating system fo the Solaris-family, as this parameter is not
supported by SunSSH. Logic taken from
bed1f8335f/lib/vagrant/util/ssh.rb (L116-L121)Fix#5017
/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.
fixes#3083
Detect the presence of the default DHCP server that comes in a fresh
VirtualBox install and clean it up to prevent it from colliding with
Vagrant-managed network config.
In order to accomplish this, we:
- add a `remove_dhcp_server` call to the virtualbox driver
- fix dhcp options parsing to allow `:dhcp_{ip,lower,upper}`
configuration options to make it through (so a user can override the
removal behavior with some explicit configuration)
- add the full `:network_name` to the details returned from
`:read_dhcp_servers`, so we can have a durable value to pass to
`:remove_dhcp_server`
Note that we do have to eat one more `VBoxManage list dhcpservers` for
each network interface to support this, but this seemed like a nominal
cost
This is just a refactor, no behavior change.
Instead of stitching together dhcpserver info in the structure returned
from `read_host_only_interfaces`, sprout a new driver method called
`read_dhcp_servers` to return that information separately.
This means that driver clients (well there's really only _one_ client in
`ProviderVirtualBox::Action::Network`) have to do a bit more work to get
interface and DHCP server information.
But this gives us (a) a cleaner and more consistent driver interface and
(b) groundwork for a fix for #3083, which will require interacting with
DHCP servers outside of the context of host-only interfaces.
test-only change
when rsync is not installed on the machine running the unit tests, the
prepare_nfs_settings tests end up calling the :nfs_installed capability
on the host, which fails on the fake host wired up in tests.
this adds some explicit stubbing to prevent the implicit assumption that
rsync is installed.
Like Vagrant's default SSH behaviors (e.g ssh or ssh-config commands),
the Ansible provisioner should by default not modify or read the user
known host file (e.g. ~/.ssh/known_hosts).
Given that `UserKnownHostsFile=/dev/null` SSH option is usually combined
with `StrictHostKeyChecking=no`, it seems quite reasonable to bind the
activation/disactivation of both options to `host_key_checking`
provisioner attribute.
For the records, a discussion held in Ansible-Development mailing list
clearly confirmed that there is no short-term plan to adapt Ansible to
offer an extra option or change the behavior of
ANSIBLE_HOST_KEY_CHECKING. For this reason, the current implementation
seems reasonable and should be stable on the long run.
Close#3900
Related References:
- https://groups.google.com/forum/#!msg/ansible-devel/iuoZs1oImNs/6xrj5oa1CmoJ
- https://github.com/ansible/ansible/issues/9442
- force `--connection=ssh` (any other modes like paramiko or smart are not
supported)
- give the highest priority to `raw_arguments` for sake of simplicity (in
usage, in code and in documentation)
- fix position of the `--limit` argument (the generated inventory could be
shadowed by `raw_arguments`, while ansible.limit was able to override
`raw_arguments`
ref #3396
When `--connection` argument is not specified, Ansible will use the
'smart' mode, which can either use `ssh` or `paramiko` transports,
depending of the version of OpenSSH available. If OpenSSH version is new
enough to support ControlPersist technology, `ssh` will be used.
See also http://docs.ansible.com/intro_configuration.html#transport.
In order to support some advanced features of Vagrant (e.g. multiple ssh
private key identities or ssh forwarding), the Ansible provisioner
already must force `ssh` connection mode.
Having to deal with the possible fallback to `paramiko` increase the
burden of special cases that Ansible provisioner must handle, without
any added value, as Vagrant is based on OpenSSH and its users are
usually using modern operating systems.
With this change, the Ansible provisioner will officially only support
`ssh`. It will still be possible to switch to another connection mode
via `raw_arguments`, but it will breach the "contract", and no
(community) support can be expected in such use case.
ref #3900, #3396
For FreeBSD guests, Virtualbox can sometimes report the private network
interface IP address as "0.0.0.0". This will cause an invalid NFS
exports file to be generated for FreeBSD and OS X hosts.
Fixed by not allowing Virtualbox to report a guest IP address of
"0.0.0.0".
With this change, any caller of machine.ssh_info is assured that best
efforts will be done to fix possible wrong permissions on the private
key files.
Fix#4652
Vagrant::Box.load_metadata did not provide a way to specify the HTTPS
download options that could be specified when downloading boxes
(ca cert, ca path, client cert, insecure). As a result, while it was
possible to add a box whose metadata file needed to be downloaded with one of
those options specified, it was impossible to check for updates. The following
changes have been made to address the situation:
1. Create a DownloadMixins module to provide the --insecure, --cacert, --capth,
and --cert command line options to all of `vagrant box add`,
`vagrant box update`, and `vagrant box outdated`.
2. Extend `Vagrant::Box.has_update?` and `Vagrant::Box.load_metadata` to accept
said download options.
3. Extend `box outdated` and `box update` commands to pass download options
down.
4. Extend `Vagrant::Builtin::Action::BoxCheckOutdated` to honour download
options.
5. Options specified on the command line take precedence over options specified
in the machine configuration, if any.
6. Fix bug in `vagrant box add` where client cert was being passed down using
the wrong environment key.
7. Unit test coverage in update_test and box_check_outdated_test.
Resolves#4420