| .. _boxSetup: |
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| .. toctree:: |
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| Vagrantfiles |
| ============ |
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| A `Vagrantfile <https://www.vagrantup.com/docs/vagrantfile/>`_ contains the box and provision configuration settings for your VM. The syntax of Vagrantfiles is Ruby (Ruby experience is not necessary). |
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| The command **vagrant up** creates a *Vagrant Box* based on your Vagrantfile. A Vagrant box is one of the motivations for using Vagrant - its a "development-ready box" that can be copied to other machines to recreate the same environment. |
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| It's common for people to think that a Vagrant box *is* the VM. But rather, the VM is *inside* a Vagrant box, with the box containing additional configuration options you can set, such as VM options, scripts to run on boot, etc. |
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| This `Vagrant website for boxes <https://app.vagrantup.com/boxes/search>`_ shows you how to configure a basic Vagrantfile for your specific OS and VM software. |
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| Box configuration |
| _________________ |
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| Looking at the :ref:`vppVagrantfile`, we can see that the default OS is Ubuntu 16.04 (since the variable *distro* equals *ubuntu1604* if there is no VPP_VAGRANT_DISTRO variable set - thus the **else** case is executed.) |
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| .. code-block:: ruby |
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| # -*- mode: ruby -*- |
| # vi: set ft=ruby : |
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| Vagrant.configure(2) do |config| |
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| # Pick the right distro and bootstrap, default is ubuntu1604 |
| distro = ( ENV['VPP_VAGRANT_DISTRO'] || "ubuntu1604") |
| if distro == 'centos7' |
| config.vm.box = "centos/7" |
| config.vm.box_version = "1708.01" |
| config.ssh.insert_key = false |
| else |
| config.vm.box = "puppetlabs/ubuntu-16.04-64-nocm" |
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| As mentioned in the previous page, you can specify which OS and VM provider you want for your Vagrant box from the `Vagrant boxes page <https://app.vagrantup.com/boxes/search>`_, and setting your ENV variable appropriately in *env.sh*. |
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| Next in the Vagrantfile, you see some *config.vm.provision* commands. As paraphrased from `Basic usage of Provisioners <https://www.vagrantup.com/docs/provisioning/basic_usage.html>`_, by default these are only run *once* - during the first boot of the box. |
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| .. code-block:: ruby |
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| config.vm.provision :shell, :path => File.join(File.dirname(__FILE__),"update.sh") |
| config.vm.provision :shell, :path => File.join(File.dirname(__FILE__),"build.sh"), :args => "/vpp vagrant" |
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| The two lines above set the VM to run two scripts during its first bootup: an update script *update.sh* that does basic updating and installation of some useful tools, as well as *build.sh* that builds (but does **not** install) VPP in the VM. You can view these scripts on your own for more detail on the commands used. |
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| Looking further in the :ref:`vppVagrantfile`, you can see more Ruby variables being set to ENV's or to a default value: |
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| .. code-block:: ruby |
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| # Define some physical ports for your VMs to be used by DPDK |
| nics = (ENV['VPP_VAGRANT_NICS'] || "2").to_i(10) |
| for i in 1..nics |
| config.vm.network "private_network", type: "dhcp" |
| end |
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| # use http proxy if available |
| if ENV['http_proxy'] && Vagrant.has_plugin?("vagrant-proxyconf") |
| config.proxy.http = ENV['http_proxy'] |
| config.proxy.https = ENV['https_proxy'] |
| config.proxy.no_proxy = "localhost,127.0.0.1" |
| end |
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| vmcpu=(ENV['VPP_VAGRANT_VMCPU'] || 2) |
| vmram=(ENV['VPP_VAGRANT_VMRAM'] || 4096) |
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| You can see how the box or VM is configured, such as the amount of NICs (defaults to 3 NICs: 1 x NAT - host access and 2 x VPP DPDK enabled), CPUs (defaults to 2), and RAM (defaults to 4096 MB). |
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| Box bootup |
| __________ |
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| Once you're satisfied with your *Vagrantfile*, boot the box with: |
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| .. code-block:: shell |
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| $ vagrant up |
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| Doing this above command will take quite some time, since you are installing a VM and building VPP. Take a break and get some scooby snacks while you wait. |
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| To confirm it is up, show the status and information of Vagrant boxes with: |
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| .. code-block:: console |
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| $ vagrant global-status |
| id name provider state directory |
| ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| d90a17b default virtualbox poweroff /home/centos/andrew-vpp/vppsb/vpp-userdemo |
| 77b085e default virtualbox poweroff /home/centos/andrew-vpp/vppsb2/vpp-userdemo |
| c1c8952 default virtualbox poweroff /home/centos/andrew-vpp/testingVPPSB/extras/vagrant |
| c199140 default virtualbox running /home/centos/andrew-vpp/vppsb3/vpp-userdemo |
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| You will have only one machine running, but I have multiple as shown above. |
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| .. note:: |
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| To poweroff your VM, type: |
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| .. code-block:: shell |
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| $ vagrant halt <id> |
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| To resume your VM, type: |
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| .. code-block:: shell |
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| $ vagrant resume <id> |
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| To destroy your VM, type: |
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| .. code-block:: shell |
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| $ vagrant destroy <id> |
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| Note that "destroying" a VM does not erase the box, but rather destroys all resources allocated for that VM. For other Vagrant commands, such as destroying a box, refer to the `Vagrant CLI Page <https://www.vagrantup.com/docs/cli/>`_. |