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docs | vagrant snapshot - Command-Line Interface | cli-snapshot | The "vagrant snapshot" command is used to manage snapshots of the guest machine. |
Snapshot
Command: vagrant snapshot
This is the command used to manage snapshots with the guest machine. Snapshots record a point-in-time state of a guest machine. You can then quickly restore to this environment. This lets you experiment and try things and quickly restore back to a previous state.
Snapshotting is not supported by every provider. If it is not supported, Vagrant will give you an error message.
The main functionality of this command is exposed via even more subcommands:
push
pop
save
restore
list
delete
Snapshot Push
Command: vagrant snapshot push
This takes a snapshot and pushes it onto the snapshot stack.
This is a shorthand for vagrant snapshot save
where you do not need
to specify a name. When you call the inverse vagrant snapshot pop
, it will
restore the pushed state.
~> Warning: If you are using push
and pop
, avoid using save
and restore
which are unsafe to mix.
Snapshot Pop
Command: vagrant snapshot pop
This command is the inverse of vagrant snapshot push
: it will restore
the pushed state.
Options
-
--[no-]provision
- Force the provisioners to run (or prevent them from doing so). -
--no-delete
- Prevents deletion of the snapshot after restoring (so that you can restore to the same point again later).
Snapshot Save
Command: vagrant snapshot save NAME
This command saves a new named snapshot. If this command is used, the
push
and pop
subcommands cannot be safely used.
Snapshot Restore
Command: vagrant snapshot restore NAME
This command restores the named snapshot.
--[no-]provision
- Force the provisioners to run (or prevent them from doing so).
Snapshot List
Command: vagrant snapshot list
This command will list all the snapshots taken.
Snapshot Delete
Command: vagrant snapshot delete NAME
This command will delete the named snapshot.
Some providers require all "child" snapshots to be deleted first. Vagrant itself does not track what these children are. If this is the case (such as with VirtualBox), then you must be sure to delete the snapshots in the reverse order they were taken.
This command is typically much faster if the machine is halted prior to snapshotting. If this is not an option, or is not ideal, then the deletion can also be done online with most providers.