82 lines
3.1 KiB
Markdown
82 lines
3.1 KiB
Markdown
---
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page_title: "Environmental Variables"
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sidebar_current: "other-envvars"
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---
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# Environmental Variables
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Vagrant has a set of environmental variables that can be used to
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configure and control it in a global way. This page lists those environmental
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variables.
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## VAGRANT\_CWWD
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`VAGRANT_CWD` can be set to change the working directory of Vagrant. By
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default, Vagrant uses the current directory you're in. The working directory
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is important because it is where Vagrant looks for the Vagrantfile. It
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also defines how relative paths in the Vagrantfile are expanded, since they're
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expanded relative to where the Vagrantfile is found.
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This environmental variable is most commonly set when running Vagrant from
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a scripting environment in order to set the directory that Vagrant sees.
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## VAGRANT\_HOME
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`VAGRANT_HOME` can be set to change the directory where Vagrant stores
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global state. By default, this is set to `~/.vagrant.d`. The Vagrant home
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directory is where things such as boxes are stored, so it can actually become
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quite large on disk.
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## VAGRANT\_LOG
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`VAGRANT_LOG` specifies the verbosity of log messages from Vagrant.
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By default, Vagrant does not actively show any log messages.
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Log messages are very useful when troubleshooting issues, reporting
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bugs, or getting support. At the most verbose level, Vagrant outputs
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basically everything it is doing.
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Available log levels are "debug," "info," "warn," and "error." Both
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"warn" and "error" are practically useless since there are very few
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cases of these, and Vagrant generally reports them within the normal
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output.
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"info" is a good level to start with if you're having problems, because
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while it is much louder than normal output, it is still very human-readable
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and can help identify certain issues.
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"debug" output is _extremely_ verbose and can be difficult to read without
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some knowledge of Vagrant internals. It is the best output to attach to
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a support request or bug report, however.
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## VAGRANT\_NO\_COLOR
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If this is set to any value, then Vagrant will not use any colorized
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output. This is useful if you're logging the output to a file or
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on a system that doesn't support colors.
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The equivalent behavior can be achieved by using the `--no-color` flag
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on a command-by-command basis. This environmental variable is useful
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for setting this flag globally.
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## VAGRANT\_NO\_PLUGINS
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If this is set to any value, then Vagrant will not load any 3rd party
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plugins. This is useful if you install a plugin and it is introducing
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instability to Vagrant, or if you want a specific Vagrant environment to
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not load plugins.
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Note that any `vagrant plugin` commands automatically don't load any
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plugins, so if you do install any unstable plugins, you can always use
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the `vagrant plugin` commands without having to worry.
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## VAGRANT\_VAGRANTFILE
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This specifies the filename of the Vagrantfile that Vagrant searches for.
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By default, this is "Vagrantfile." Note that this is _not_ a file path,
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but just a filename.
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This environmental variable is commonly used in scripting environments
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where a single folder may contain multiple Vagrantfiles representing
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different configurations.
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