Thanks for replying Alvaro.

The GUI comes up, the problem is that vagrant can't connect via ssh so it 
doesn't think the VM has booted.  When I use the GUI, network settings in 
OSX don't show any interfaces connected.  

I am trying to figure out what steps I need to perform when creating the 
Mavericks VM so that I can have a external network interface and what 
corresponding setting I need to add to my vagrant file, because so far I 
haven't been able to find a working combination.

Thanks,
  Mike

On Monday, March 10, 2014 10:05:31 PM UTC-4, Alvaro Miranda Aguilera wrote:
>
> vagarant will do aport forward 222 to guest 22
>
> so you should be able to do  ssh vagrant@localhost -p 2222
>
> and, you should be able to set gui to true, and use the gui, 
>
>
>
> On Tue, Mar 11, 2014 at 12:59 PM, Michael Moscardini 
> <moscar...@gmail.com<javascript:>
> > wrote:
>
>> Hoping someone can help me out.  Are these the correct steps?
>>
>> I just tried creating a new VM on the host machine, set up with just a 
>> single network interface with NAT and I still can't get SSH to connect 
>> using 10.9.2 Host, Vagrant 1.4.3, Vagrant Fusion Plugin 2.3.4, and 10.9.2 
>> Guest.
>>
>> Are their any guides or directions for setting this stuff up on Mavericks 
>> host/guest?  Were my above steps correct?
>>
>> Thanks,
>>   Mike
>>
>> On Monday, February 24, 2014 4:23:33 PM UTC-5, Mike Moscardini wrote:
>>>
>>> Thanks Mitchell,
>>>
>>> I tried a few things but still can't get it to work.  Maybe my steps are 
>>> incorrect.
>>>
>>> Mac OS 10.9.1 Host
>>> Vagrant 1.4.3
>>> Vagrant Fusion Plugin 2.3.1
>>> Fusion 6.0.2
>>> Mac OS 10.9.1 Guest
>>>
>>> In VMWare fusion, I created two network interfaces for my VM.  The first 
>>> network configuration is just NAT.  The other network interface is a bridge 
>>> to ethernet, with a specific mac address.  I booted up the VM and 
>>> configured the network and confirmed that both network interfaces are 
>>> working.  I shutdown the VM, and then created a box from this.
>>>
>>> I installed the box, and my vagrant file now looks like this:
>>>
>>> Vagrant.configure("2") do |config|
>>>   config.vm.box = "mavericks"
>>>   config.vm.guest = "darwin"
>>>   config.vm.network "public_network", :mac => "<macaddress>"
>>>   config.ssh.host = "<dns name>"
>>>   config.vm.provider "vmware_fusion" do |v|
>>>     v.gui = true
>>>   end
>>>
>>> When the VM boots, neither of my network interfaces are connected and 
>>> vagrant can't detect that the VM is up.  I also get a prompt in the network 
>>> preferences to add some new device interfaces.  Were these the corrects 
>>> steps for creating the network interfaces on the VM?
>>>
>>>  - Mike
>>>
>>> On Friday, January 31, 2014 2:45:04 PM UTC-5, Mitchell Hashimoto wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Michael,
>>>>
>>>> I'm not sure how your old VM worked but the reason the new one isn't 
>>>> working is probably because you need to configure the OS too. I apologize 
>>>> if you know this already, but it is very relevant if you don't: simply 
>>>> adding a network adapter won't cause the OS to magically configure it 
>>>> properly.
>>>>
>>>> In fact, there is a much easier way to do this. Vagrant will 
>>>> automatically make the first network device a NAT, so you can ignore that. 
>>>> To make a static IP, you can use the `config.vm.network "public_network"` 
>>>> option. See here: http://docs.vagrantup.com/v2/networking/public_
>>>> network.html
>>>>
>>>> Best,
>>>> Mitchell
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On Thu, Jan 30, 2014 at 7:41 PM, Michael Moscardini <
>>>> moscar...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> Old Environment:
>>>>>
>>>>> Mac OS 10.8.5 Host
>>>>> Vagrant 1.3.1
>>>>> Vagrant Fusion Plugin 2.0.4
>>>>> Fusion 5.0.3
>>>>> Mac OS 10.8.5 Guest
>>>>>
>>>>> New Environment:
>>>>>
>>>>> Mac OS 10.9.1 Host
>>>>> Vagrant 1.4.3
>>>>> Vagrant Fusion Plugin 2.2.8
>>>>> Fusion 6.0.2
>>>>> Mac OS 10.9.1 Guest
>>>>>
>>>>> I am trying to create an updated mac vagrant environment.  The VM 
>>>>> running on the host acts as a build agent for our CI system.  Because of 
>>>>> this I need the VM to have it's own mac address and IP address to get 
>>>>> onto 
>>>>> our internal network.
>>>>>
>>>>> The old environment Vagrant file looks like this:
>>>>>
>>>>> Vagrant.configure("2") do |config|
>>>>>   config.vm.box = "macbuld10-8-5"
>>>>>   config.vm.guest = "darwin"
>>>>>   config.vm.network "public_network"
>>>>>   config.ssh.host = "<dns name>"
>>>>>   config.vm.provider "vmware_fusion" do |v|
>>>>>     v.gui = true
>>>>>     v.vmx["ethernet0.connection"] = "nat"
>>>>>     v.vmx["ethernet0.linkStatePropagation.enable"] = "TRUE"
>>>>>     v.vmx["ethernet1.linkStatePropagation.enable"] = "TRUE"
>>>>>     v.vmx["ethernet1.addressType"] = "static"
>>>>>     v.vmx["ethernet1.generatedAddress"] = nil
>>>>>     v.vmx["ethernet1.generatedAddressOffset"] = nil
>>>>>     v.vmx["ethernet1.address"] = "00:50:56:2E:48:47"
>>>>>     v.vmx["ethernet1.connectionType"] = "bridged"
>>>>>     v.vmx["memsize"] = "3588"
>>>>>     v.vmx["numvcpus"] = "2" 
>>>>>   end
>>>>>  
>>>>> It's been a while since I set this up, and this was my first attempt 
>>>>> at using vagrant (I am an iOS developer).  I believe the point of this 
>>>>> configuration was to create a two network interfaces.  Ethernet0 uses nat 
>>>>> and this is what the Host uses to connect to over ssh.  The second 
>>>>> interface adds a public IP that the CI server can access.  I did this 
>>>>> because I didn't feel like trying to get port forwarding to work.
>>>>>
>>>>> I tried to use this configuration with the new setup and instead I got 
>>>>> no network at all.  I tried this <https://coderwall.com/p/_meqfg> 
>>>>> configuration 
>>>>> and also got no network.  When I remove all of the vmx stuff, and just 
>>>>> try 
>>>>> to use a private network through config.vm.network, I again get no 
>>>>> network 
>>>>> inside the VM.  I am also unsure why when I modify ethernet0 and 
>>>>> ethernet1 
>>>>> that It would be showing me that my network network interfaces are en2 
>>>>> and 
>>>>> en3.
>>>>>
>>>>> Old VM:
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> <https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-d9foxBqXVec/UuqbZdC9TSI/AAAAAAAAAMk/JHx2aBzUr2I/s1600/oldvm.png>
>>>>> New VM:
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> <https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-H7kw-WFA4MA/UuqbfqTUWXI/AAAAAAAAAMs/67PlkaW_2cU/s1600/newvm.png>
>>>>>
>>>>> And I missing something?  Is there an easier way to do this?
>>>>>
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>>>>
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