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Vagrant Builds

All of my code and templates for Vagrant builds.

Folder Structure

Before you start make sure you have a resources folder structure as below:

resources
   |
   |_ packages
   |_ licenses

This folder should either be in the root of the repository or created elsewhere and a symbolic link created to it in the root of this repository. This is the way I have it setup.

The folders are for:

  • packages - is used to hold all of the internalized packages (see SetupResources.ps1 in the root of the repository);
  • licenses - holds your Chocolatey license which must be named a particular way (see the shell\DeployChocolateyLicense.ps1 for more information):
    • Professional - prof-chocolatey.license.xml
    • Business - bus-chocolatey.license.xml
    • Architect - arch-chocolatey.license.xml
    • MSP - msp-chocolatey.license.xml

Environment Setup

The machines are all built using a vagrant-config.json file in the respective folder. The Vagrantfile that we use in each folder is a symbolic link to the Vagrantfile.template in the root folder. Make sure you are in the folder you want to create the Vagrantfile in and run, from PowerShell, New-Item -ItemType SymbolicLink -Target ..\Vagrantfile.template -Path Vagrantfile.

Some environments need you to specify the machine to bring up. To find the machine names either look at the vagrant-config.json file or run vagrant status. To bring the machine up either use vagrant up or vagrant up <MACHINENAME>.

vagrant-config.json

This file is where the configuration for the machine is held. See vagrant-config.json.template for help.

Hyper-V

When running Vagrant under Hyper-V you will be prompted for an account with permissions to create shares to use for synced folders. You will be prompted on Vagrant up, at machine reboot / reload. To get around this you can create two environment variables with those details and they will be used instead. These environment variables are fairly self explanatory:

  • VAGRANT_HYPERV_SMB_USERNAME
  • VAGRANT_HYPERV_SMB_PASSWORD

This obviously creates a security risk. To minimise this create the variables in the user scope / context. I have looked into encrypting these with DPAPI but decrypting them again inside the Vagrantfile has caused me problems that I haven't yet been able to address. If you have any solutions please create an issue.

Creating the variables is optional. If you don't create these variables you will prompted for the credentials as normal.