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docs | Box Format - VMware Provider | providers-vmware-boxes | As with every Vagrant provider, the Vagrant VMware providers have a custom box format. |
Boxes
As with every Vagrant provider, the Vagrant VMware providers have a custom box format.
This page documents the format so that you can create your own base boxes. Note that currently you must make these base boxes by hand. A future release of Vagrant will provide additional mechanisms for automatically creating such images.
Prior to reading this page, please understand the basics of the box file format.
Contents
A VMware base box is a compressed archive of the necessary contents of a VMware "vmwarevm" file. Here is an example of what is contained in such a box:
$ tree
.
|-- disk-s001.vmdk
|-- disk-s002.vmdk
|-- ...
|-- disk.vmdk
|-- metadata.json
|-- precise64.nvram
|-- precise64.vmsd
|-- precise64.vmx
|-- precise64.vmxf
0 directories, 17 files
The files that are strictly required for a VMware machine to function are: nvram, vmsd, vmx, vmxf, and vmdk files.
There is also the "metadata.json" file used by Vagrant itself. This file contains nothing but the defaults which are documented on the box format page.
When bringing up a VMware backed machine, Vagrant copies all of the contents in the box into a privately managed "vmwarevm" folder, and uses the first "vmx" file found to control the machine.
VMX Whitelisting
Settings in the VMX file control the behavior of the VMware virtual machine when it is booted. In the past Vagrant has removed the configured network device when creating a new instance and inserted a new configuration. With the introduction of "predictable network interface names" this approach can cause unexpected behaviors or errors with VMware Vagrant boxes. While some boxes that use the predictable network interface names are configured to handle the VMX modifications Vagrant makes, it is better if Vagrant does not make the modification at all.
Vagrant will now warn if a whitelisted setting is detected within a Vagrant box VMX file. If it is detected, a warning will be shown alerting the user and providing a configuration snippet. The configuration snippet can be used in the Vagrantfile if Vagrant fails to start the virtual machine.
Making compatible boxes
These are the VMX settings the whitelisting applies to:
ethernet*.pcislotnumber
If the newly created box does not depend on Vagrant's existing behavior of modifying this setting, it can disable Vagrant from applying the modification by adding a Vagrantfile to the box with the following content:
Vagrant.configure("2") do |config|
config.vm.provider "vmware_desktop" do |vmware|
vmware.whitelist_verified = true
end
end
This will prevent Vagrant from displaying a warning to the user as well as disable the VMX settings modifications.
Installed Software
Base boxes for VMware should have the following software installed, as a bare minimum:
-
SSH server with key-based authentication setup. If you want the box to work with default Vagrant settings, the SSH user must be set to accept the insecure keypair that ships with Vagrant.
-
VMware Tools so that things such as shared folders can function. There are many other benefits to installing the tools, such as improved networking performance.
Optimizing Box Size
Prior to packaging up a box, you should shrink the hard drives as much as
possible. This can be done with vmware-vdiskmanager
which is usually
found in /Applications/VMware Fusion.app/Contents/Library
for VMware Fusion. You first
want to defragment then shrink the drive. Usage shown below:
$ vmware-vdiskmanager -d /path/to/main.vmdk
...
$ vmware-vdiskmanager -k /path/to/main.vmdk
...
Packaging
Remove any extraneous files from the "vmwarevm" folder and package it. Be sure to compress the tar with gzip (done below in a single command) since VMware hard disks are not compressed by default.
$ cd /path/to/my/vm.vmwarevm
$ tar cvzf custom.box ./*