I'm using the hashicorp/precise64 box, and using the Docker provisioner. 

I understand that I can issue some print statements (and am doing that). 

When developing dockerfiles, each step is cached so that if there is an 
error, you can essentially fix the error in the Dockerfile and more or less 
resume. Vagrant doesn't do something similar, does it?

I see now that if I just do a `vagrant provision` it starts to do the 
provision steps. So if the provision fails after an initial vagrant up, I 
can just edit the commands to the provisioner, issue a `vagrant provision`, 
and it will restart with the docker provisioner (assuming I don't have any 
other provisioners set up). As long as I make sure the commands the 
provisioner issues can be run multiple times safely, then this works for 
me. This is helpful information. Previously I thought I had to do a vagrant 
destroy && vagrant up to try again (so it would configure the whole VM 
again). 

Thanks,
Kevin

On Wednesday, April 23, 2014 8:18:51 PM UTC-4, Alvaro Miranda Aguilera 
wrote:
>
> Hello, 
>
> Vagrant will automate what you tell Vagrant to automate.
>
> So, what you should think is, what to do fi something change or you go 
> half way trough..
>
> If a end user was using your Vagrantfile, then he should be able to do  
> vagrant destroy, vagrant up and get a working environment.
>
> In your particular case, you want to be able to troubleshoot, then, you 
> can use puts "running this..." before eachs ection so yoiu can follow what 
> is doing..
>
> if you use scripts, make sure, the script can be called more than once and 
> it won't break anything.. so you can do vagrant provision and should skip 
> what did and continue.
>
>
> What OS is the host? the docker is inside a Vagran'ts managed vm?
>
> Are you using docker provisioner os just shell provisioner to call vagrant 
> commands?
>
>
> On Thu, Apr 24, 2014 at 7:22 AM, Kevin Schumacher <
> kevinmichae...@gmail.com <javascript:>> wrote:
>
>> Hi all, 
>>
>> I am very new to vagrant, and have a couple of questions:
>>
>> 1. Is there a way to resume a failed provisioning? 
>> 2. Is there a way to "step through" a vagrantfile? 
>>
>> For background: 
>>
>> I am trying to use Vagrant for quick "one click" setup of a development 
>> infrastructure environment when new people join the team. We have an 
>> unfortunately complicated stack, and have previously been utilizing Docker 
>> and dockerfiles to keep everyone's development environments in sync. 
>>
>> I am hoping to be able to utilize the work put into creating the 
>> dockerfiles with Vagrant, and to be able to have someone new just "vagrant 
>> up" and provision the full stack in Docker containers (this would lower the 
>> barriers to entry -- the new team member would not have to understand 
>> immediately how to set up the stack, install docker, how the various parts 
>> of the stack are related, etc. before being able to contribute some code to 
>> the web app on top of the stack)
>>
>> However, I am finding that troubleshooting failures during provision is 
>> slow and painful. Earlier today I found that a dockerfile no longer worked 
>> because of a remote file which moved, which was causing my provision to 
>> fail. 
>>
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Kevin
>>
>>  -- 
>> You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
>> "Vagrant" group.
>> To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an 
>> email to vagrant-up+...@googlegroups.com <javascript:>.
>> For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.
>>
>
>

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Vagrant" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to vagrant-up+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to