--- page_title: "Creating a Base Box" sidebar_current: "boxes-base" --- # Creating a Base Box There are a special category of boxes known as "base boxes." These boxes contain the bare minimum required for Vagrant to function, are generally not made by repackaging an existing Vagrant environment (hence the "base" in the "base box"). For example, the Ubuntu boxes provided by the Vagrant project (such as "precise64") are base boxes. They were created from a minimal Ubuntu install from an ISO, rather than repackaging an existing environment. Base boxes are extremely useful for having a clean slate starting point from which to build future development environments. The Vagrant project hopes in the future to be able to provide base boxes for many more operating systems. Until then, this page documents how you can create your own base box.

Advanced topic! Creating a base box can be a time consuming and tedious process, and is not recommended for new Vagrant users. If you're just getting started with Vagrant, we recommend trying to find existing base boxes to use first.

## What's in a Base Box? A base box typically consists of only a bare minimum set of software for Vagrant to function. As an example, a Linux box may contain only the following: * Package manager * SSH * SSH user so Vagrant can connect * Perhaps Chef, Puppet, etc. but not strictly required. In addition to this, each [provider](/v2/providers/index.html) may require additional software. For example, if you're making a base box for VirtualBox, you'll want to include the VirtualBox guest additions so that shared folders work properly. But if you're making an AWS base box, this is not required. ## Creating a Base Box Creating a base box is actually provider-specific. This means that depending on if you're using VirtualBox, VMware, AWS, etc. the process for creating a base box is different. Because of this, this one document can't be a full guide to creating a base box. This page will document some general guidelines for creating base boxes, however, and will link to provider-specific guides for creating base boxes. Provider-specific guides are linked below: * [VirtualBox Base Boxes](/v2/virtualbox/boxes.html) ### Disk Space When creating a base box, make sure the user will have enough disk space to do interesting things, without being annoying. For example, in VirtualBox, you should create a dynamically resizing drive with a large maximum size. This causes the actual footprint of the drive to be small initially, but to dynamically grow towards the max size as disk space is needed, providing the most flexibility for the end user. If you're creating an AWS base box, don't force the AMI to allocate terabytes of EBS storage, for example, since the user can do that on their own. But you should default to mounting ephemeral drives, because they're free and provide a lot of disk space. ### Memory Like disk space, finding the right balance of the default amount of memory is important. For most providers, the user can modify the memory with the Vagrantfile, so don't use too much by default. It would be a poor user experience (and mildly shocking) if a `vagrant up` from a base box instantly required many gigabytes of RAM. Instead, choose a value such as 512MB, which is usually enough to play around and do interesting things with a Vagrant machine, but can easily be increased when needed. ### Peripherals (Audio, USB, etc.) Disable any non-necessary hardware in a base box such as audio and USB controllers. These are generally unnecessary for Vagrant usage and, again, can be easily added via the Vagrantfile in most cases. ## Default User Settings Just about every aspect of Vagrant can be modified. However, Vagrant does expect some defaults which will cause your base box to "just work" out of the box. You should create these as defaults if you intent to publicly distribute your box. If you're creating a base box for private use, you should try _not_ to follow these, as they open up your base box to security risks (known users, passwords, private keys, etc.). ### "vagrant" User By default, Vagrant expects a "vagrant" user to SSH into the machine as. This user should be setup with the [insecure keypair](https://github.com/mitchellh/vagrant/tree/master/keys) that Vagrant uses as a default to attempt to SSH. Also, even though Vagrant uses key-based authentication by default, it is a general convention to set the password for the "vagrant" user to "vagrant". This lets people login as that user manually if they need to. To configure SSH access with the insecure keypair, place the public key into the `~/.ssh/authorized_keys` file for the "vagrant" user. Note that OpenSSH is very picky about file permissions. Therefore, make sure that `~/.ssh` has `0700` permissions and the authorized keys file has `0600` permissions. ### Root Password: "vagrant" Vagrant doesn't actually use or expect any root password. However, having a generally well known root password makes it easier for the general public to modify the machine if needed. Publicly available base boxes usually use a root password of "vagrant" to keep things easy. ### Password-less Sudo This is **important!**. Many aspects of Vagrant expect the default SSH user to have passwordless sudo configured. This lets Vagrant configure networks, mount synced folders, install software, and more. To begin, some minimal installations of operating systems don't even include `sudo` by default. Verify that you install `sudo` in some way. After installing sudo, configure it (usually using `visudo`) to allow passwordless sudo for the "vagrant" user. This can be done with the following line at the end of the configuration file: ``` vagrant ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD: ALL ``` Additionally, Vagrant doesn't use a pty or tty by default when connected via SSH. You'll need to ake sure there is no line that has `requiretty` in it. Remove that if it exists. This allows sudo to work properly without a tty. Note that you _can_ configure Vagrant to request a pty, which lets you keep this configuration. But Vagrant by default doesn't do this. ### SSH Tweaks In order to keep SSH speedy even when your machine or the Vagrant machine is not connected to the internet, set the `UseDNS` configuration to `no` in the SSH server configuration. This avoids a reverse DNS lookup on the connecting SSH client which can take many seconds. ## Other Software At this point, you have all the common software you absolutely _need_ for your base box to work with Vagrant. However, there is some additional software you can install if you wish. While we plan on it in the future, Vagrant still doesn't install Chef or Puppet automatically when using those provisioners. Uesrs can use a shell provisioner to do this, but if you want Chef/Puppet to just work out of the box, you'll have to install them in the base box. Installing this is outside the scope of this page, but should be fairly straightforward. In addition to this, feel free to install and configure any other software you want available by default for this base box. ## Packaging the Box Packaging the box into a `box` file is provider-specific. Please refer to the provider-specific documentation for creating a base box. Some provider-specific guides are linked to towards the top of this page. ## Testing the Box To test the box, pretend you're a new user of Vagrant and give it a shot: ``` $ vagrant box add my-box /path/to/the/new.box ... $ vagrant init my-box ... $ vagrant up ... ``` If you made a box for some other provider, be sure to specify the `--provider` option to `vagrant up`. If the up succeeded, then your box worked!