Skip to content

nsballmann/vagrant-libvirt

 
 

Repository files navigation

Vagrant Libvirt Provider

Vagrant Libvirt Logo

Join the chat at https://gitter.im/vagrant-libvirt/vagrant-libvirt Build Status Coverage Status Gem Version

This is a Vagrant plugin that adds a Libvirt provider to Vagrant, allowing Vagrant to control and provision machines via Libvirt toolkit.

Note: Actual version is still a development one. Feedback is welcome and can help a lot :-)

Vagrant-libvirt Documentation is published at https://vagrant-libvirt.github.io/vagrant-libvirt/

Index

Installing

Installation typically involves a number of distribution package dependencies to ensure that Libvirt is available. Recommend that you follow the installation guide.

Running

Once installed, use vagrant-libvirt through vagrant.

Locate a vagrant box containing the distribution you want to use at Vagrant Cloud and initialize.

vagrant init fedora/32-cloud-base

Then run following command:

vagrant up --provider=libvirt

Vagrant needs to know that we want to use Libvirt and not default VirtualBox. That's why there is --provider=libvirt option specified. Other way to tell Vagrant to use Libvirt provider is to setup environment variable

export VAGRANT_DEFAULT_PROVIDER=libvirt

Afterwards to enter the VM simply use:

vagrant ssh

If you can't find a box that works as you need, have a look at our documentation on creating boxes on how to take existing ones, customize them and repackage.

Development

To work on the vagrant-libvirt plugin, clone this repository out, and use Bundler to get the dependencies:

git clone https://github.com/vagrant-libvirt/vagrant-libvirt.git
cd vagrant-libvirt
bundle install

Once you have the dependencies, verify the unit tests pass with rspec:

export VAGRANT_HOME=$(mktemp -d)
bundle exec rspec --fail-fast --color --format documentation

If those pass, you're ready to start developing the plugin.

Setting VAGRANT_HOME is to avoid issues with conflicting with other plugins/gems or data already present under ~/.vagrant.d.

Additionally if you wish to test against a specific version of vagrant you can control the version using the following before running the tests:

export VAGRANT_VERSION=v2.2.14
bundle update && bundle exec rspec --fail-fast --color --format documentation

Note rvm is used by the maintainers to help provide an environment to test against multiple ruby versions that align with the ones used by vagrant for their embedded ruby depending on the release. You can see what version is used by looking at the current unit tests workflow. By default if you have rvm installed and enabled it this project looks to use ruby 2.6.6 and configures a separate gemset, both of which will be switched to each time you enter the project directory.

You can test the plugin without installing it into your Vagrant environment by just creating a Vagrantfile in the top level of this directory (it is gitignored) that uses it. You can add the following line to your Vagrantfile while in development to ensure vagrant checks that the plugin is installed:

Vagrant.configure("2") do |config|
  config.vagrant.plugins = "vagrant-libvirt"
end

Or add the following to the top of the file to ensure that any required plugins are installed globally:

REQUIRED_PLUGINS = %w(vagrant-libvirt)
exit unless REQUIRED_PLUGINS.all? do |plugin|
  Vagrant.has_plugin?(plugin) || (
    puts "The #{plugin} plugin is required. Please install it with:"
    puts "$ vagrant plugin install #{plugin}"
    false
  )
end

Now you can use bundler to execute Vagrant:

$ bundle exec vagrant up --provider=libvirt

IMPORTANT NOTE: bundle is crucial. You need to use bundled Vagrant.

Contributing

contributions welcome

  1. Fork it
  2. Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
  3. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature')
  4. Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
  5. Create new Pull Request

For future work take a look at open issues.

About

Vagrant provider for libvirt.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Ruby 94.0%
  • HTML 2.9%
  • Shell 2.7%
  • Dockerfile 0.4%