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Box File Format | boxes-format |
Box File Format
In the past, boxes were just tar files of VirtualBox exports. With Vagrant supporting multiple providers and versioning now, box files are slightly more complicated.
Box files made for Vagrant 1.0.x (the VirtualBox export tar
files) continue
to work with Vagrant today. When Vagrant encounters one of these old boxes,
it automatically updates it internally to the new format.
Today, there are two different components:
-
Box File - This is a compressed (
tar
,tar.gz
,zip
) file that is specific to a single provider and can contain anything. Vagrant core doesn't ever use the contents of this file. Instead, they are passed to the provider. Therefore, a VirtualBox box file has different contents from a VMware box file and so on. -
Box Catalog Metadata - This is a JSON document (typically exchanged during interactions with Vagrant Cloud) that specifies the name of the box, a description, available versions, available providers, and URLs to the actual box files (next component) for each provider and version. If this catalog metadata doesn't exist, a box file can still be added directly, but it will not support versioning and updating.
Each component is covered in more detail below.
Box File
The actual box file is the required portion for Vagrant. It is recommended you always use a metadata file alongside a box file, but direct box files are supported for legacy reasons in Vagrant.
Box files are compressed using tar
, tar.gz
, or zip
. The contents of the
archive can be anything, and is specific to each
provider. Vagrant core itself only unpacks
the boxes for use later.
Within the archive, Vagrant does expect a single file:
metadata.json
. This is a JSON file that is completely unrelated to
the above box catalog metadata component; there is only one
metadata.json
per box file (inside the box file), whereas one
catalog metadata JSON document can describe multiple versions of the
same box, potentially spanning multiple providers.
metadata.json
must contain at least the "provider" key with the
provider the box is for. Vagrant uses this to verify the provider of
the box. For example, if your box was for VirtualBox, the
metadata.json
would look like this:
{
"provider": "virtualbox"
}
If there is no metadata.json
file or the file does not contain valid JSON
with at least a "provider" key, then Vagrant will error when adding the box,
because it can't verify the provider.
Other keys/values may be added to the metadata without issue. The value of the metadata file is passed opaquely into Vagrant and plugins can make use of it. At this point, Vagrant core does not use any other keys in this file.
Box Metadata
The metadata is an optional component for a box (but highly recommended) that enables versioning, updating, multiple providers from a single file, and more.
It is a JSON document, structured in the following way:
{
"name": "hashicorp/precise64",
"description": "This box contains Ubuntu 12.04 LTS 64-bit.",
"versions": [{
"version": "0.1.0",
"providers": [{
"name": "virtualbox",
"url": "http://somewhere.com/precise64_010_virtualbox.box",
"checksum_type": "sha1",
"checksum": "foo"
}]
}]
}
As you can see, the JSON document can describe multiple versions of a box, multiple providers, and can add/remove providers in different versions.
This JSON file can be passed directly to vagrant box add
from the
local filesystem using a file path or via a URL, and Vagrant will
install the proper version of the box. In this case, the value for the
url
key in the JSON can also be a file path. If multiple providers
are available, Vagrant will ask what provider you want to use.