--- layout: "docs" page_title: "vagrant ssh - Command-Line Interface" sidebar_current: "cli-ssh" description: |- The "vagrant ssh" command is used to establish an SSH session into a running virtual machine to give you shell access. --- # SSH **Command: `vagrant ssh [name|id] [-- extra_ssh_args]`** This will SSH into a running Vagrant machine and give you access to a shell. On a simple vagrant project, the instance created will be named default. Vagrant will ssh into this instance without the instance name: ```bash $ vagrant ssh Welcome to your Vagrant-built virtual machine. Last login: Fri Sep 14 06:23:18 2012 from 10.0.2.2 $ logout Connection to 127.0.0.1 closed. ``` Or you could use the name: ```bash $ vagrant ssh default Welcome to your Vagrant-built virtual machine. Last login: Fri Jul 20 15:09:52 2018 from 10.0.2.2 $ logout Connection to 127.0.0.1 closed. $ ``` On multi-machine setups, you can login to each vm using the name as displayed on `vagrant status` ```bash $ vagrant status Current machine states: node1 running (virtualbox) node2 running (virtualbox) This environment represents multiple VMs. The VMs are all listed above with their current state. $ vagrant ssh node1 Welcome to your Vagrant-built virtual machine. Last login: Fri Sep 14 06:23:18 2012 from 10.0.2.2 vagrant@precise64:~$ logout Connection to 127.0.0.1 closed. $ vagrant ssh node2 Welcome to your Vagrant-built virtual machine. Last login: Fri Sep 14 06:23:18 2012 from 10.0.2.2 vagrant@precise64:~$ logout Connection to 127.0.0.1 closed. $ ``` On a system with machines running from different projects, you could use the id as listed in `vagrant global-status` ```bash $ vagrant global-status id name provider state directory ----------------------------------------------------------------------- 13759ff node1 virtualbox running /Users/user/vagrant/folder The above shows information about all known Vagrant environments on this machine. This data is cached and may not be completely up-to-date (use "vagrant global-status --prune" to prune invalid entries). To interact with any of the machines, you can go to that directory and run Vagrant, or you can use the ID directly with Vagrant commands from any directory. $ vagrant ssh 13759ff Welcome to your Vagrant-built virtual machine. Last login: Fri Jul 20 15:19:36 2018 from 10.0.2.2 vagrant@precise64:~$ logout Connection to 127.0.0.1 closed. $ ``` If a `--` (two hyphens) are found on the command line, any arguments after this are passed directly into the `ssh` executable. This allows you to pass any arbitrary commands to do things such as reverse tunneling down into the `ssh` program. ## Options * `-c COMMAND` or `--command COMMAND` - This executes a single SSH command, prints out the stdout and stderr, and exits. * `-p` or `--plain` - This does an SSH without authentication, leaving authentication up to the user. ## SSH client usage Vagrant will attempt to use the local SSH client installed on the host machine. On POSIX machines, an SSH client must be installed and available on the PATH. For Windows installations, an SSH client is provided within the installer image. If no SSH client is found on the current PATH, Vagrant will use the SSH client it provided. Depending on the local environment used for running Vagrant, the installer provided SSH client may not work correctly. For example, when using a cygwin or msys2 shell the SSH client will fail to work as expected when run interactively. Installing the SSH package built for the current working environment will resolve this issue. ## Background Execution If the command you specify runs in the background (such as appending a `&` to a shell command), it will be terminated almost immediately. This is because when Vagrant executes the command, it executes it within the context of a shell, and when the shell exits, all of the child processes also exit. To avoid this, you will need to detach the process from the shell. Please Google to learn how to do this for your shell. One method of doing this is the `nohup` command.