--- page_title: "Basic Usage - Provisioning" sidebar_current: "provisioning-basic" --- # Basic Usage of Provisioners While Vagrant offers multiple options for how you are able to provision your machine, there is a standard usage pattern as well as some important points common to all provisioners that are important to know. ## Configuration First, every provisioner is configured within your [Vagrantfile](/v2/vagrantfile/index.html) using the `config.vm.provision` method call. For example, the Vagrantfile below enables shell provisioning: ```ruby Vagrant.configure("2") do |config| # ... other configuration config.vm.provision "shell", inline: "echo hello" end ``` Every provisioner has a type, such as `"shell"`, used as the first parameter to the provisioning configuration. Following that is basic key/value for configuring that specific provisioner. Instead of basic key/value, you can also use a Ruby block for a syntax that is more like variable assignment. The following is effectively the same as the prior example: ```ruby Vagrant.configure("2") do |config| # ... other configuration config.vm.provision "shell" do |s| s.inline = "echo hello" end end ``` The benefit of the block-based syntax is that with more than a couple options it can greatly improve readability. Additionally, some provisioners, like the Chef provisioner, have special methods that can be called within that block to ease configuration that can't be done with the key/value approach. ## Running Provisioners Provisioners are run in three cases: the initial `vagrant up`, `vagrant provision`, and `vagrant reload --provision`. A `--no-provision` flag can be passed to `up` and `reload` if you don't want to run provisioners. Likewise, you can pass `--provision` to force provisioning. The `--provision-with` flag can be used if you only want to run a specific provisioner if you have multiple provisioners specified. For example, if you have a shell and Puppet provisioner and only want to run the shell one, you can do `vagrant provision --provision-with shell`. ## Run Once or Always By default, provisioners are only run once, during the first `vagrant up` since the last `vagrant destroy`, unless the `--provision` flag is set, as noted above. Optionally, you can configure provisioners to run on every `up` or `reload`. They'll only be not run if the `--no-provision` flag is explicitly specified. To do this set the `run` option to "always", as shown below: ```ruby Vagrant.configure("2") do |config| config.vm.provision "shell", inline: "echo hello", run: "always" ``` If you're using the block format, you must specify it outside of the block, as shown below: ```ruby Vagrant.configure("2") do |config| config.vm.provision "shell", run: "always" do |s| s.inline = "echo hello" end end ``` ## Multiple Provisioners Multiple `config.vm.provision` methods can be used to define multiple provisioners. These provisioners will be run in the order they're defined. This is useful for a variety of reasons, but most commonly it is used so that a shell script can bootstrap some of the system so that another provisioner can take over later. If you define provisioners at multiple "scope" levels (such as globally in the configuration block, then in a [multi-machine](/v2/multi-machine/index.html) definition, then maybe in a [provider-specific override](/v2/providers/configuration.html)), then the outer scopes will always run _before_ any inner scopes. For example, in the Vagrantfile below: ```ruby Vagrant.configure("2") do |config| config.vm.provision "shell", inline: "echo foo" config.vm.define "web" do |web| web.vm.provision "shell", inline: "echo bar" end config.vm.provision "shell", inline: "echo baz" end ``` The ordering of the provisioners will be to echo "foo", "baz", then "bar" (note the second one might not be what you expect!). Remember: ordering is _outside in_. ## Overriding Provisioner Settings

Warning: Advanced Topic! Provisioner overriding is an advanced topic that really only becomes useful if you're already using multi-machine and/or provider overrides. If you're just getting started with Vagrant, you can safely skip this.

When using features such as [multi-machine](/v2/multi-machine/index.html) or [provider-specific overrides](/v2/providers/configuration.html), you may want to define common provisioners in the global configuration scope of a Vagrantfile, but override certain aspects of them internally. Vagrant allows you to do this, but has some details to consider. To override settings, you must assign an ID to your provisioner. Then it is only a matter of specifying the same ID to override: ```ruby Vagrant.configure("2") do |config| config.vm.provision "shell", inline: "echo foo", id: "foo" config.vm.define "web" do |web| web.vm.provision "shell", inline: "echo bar", id: "foo" end end ``` In the above, only "bar" will be echoed, because the inline setting overloaded the outer provisioner. This overload is only effective within that scope: the "web" VM. If there were another VM defined, it would still echo "foo" unless it itself also overloaded the provisioner. **Be careful with ordering.** When overriding a provisioner in a sub-scope, the provisioner will run at _that point_. In the example below, the output would be "foo" then "bar": ```ruby Vagrant.configure("2") do |config| config.vm.provision "shell", inline: "echo ORIGINAL!", id: "foo" config.vm.define "web" do |web| web.vm.provision "shell", inline: "echo foo" web.vm.provision "shell", inline: "echo bar", id: "foo" end end ``` If you want to preserve the original ordering, you can specify the `preserve_order: true` flag.