Thanks, Torben, First impressions, below...
Thanks for the links, Jamie On Thu, Oct 9, 2014 at 1:14 AM, Torben Knerr <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi Jamie, > > sounds familiar. > > You might also be interested in: > > https://github.com/fgrehm/vagrant-lxc which is conceptually more similar > to your original approach with nested VMs > For someone (me) who is fairly new to Vagrant, and extremely new to Docker, vagrant-lxc seems so similar to the Docker provider that I don't understand why both exist. http://fabiorehm.com/blog/2013/04/28/lxc-provider-for-vagrant/ didn't help me understand. > https://github.com/tknerr/bills-kitchen which shows another approach on > how you can bundle development environment for Windows users (in this case > for Vagrant / Chef development ;-)) > This might be super-obvious to others, but I couldn't exactly tell what your project is for. (FYI, I've only used shell provisioners, as I planned to save the learning curve of the advanced provisioners for a later date. Baby steps.) I think your readme might benefit from one or two use-cases: "Here's problem A, and here's how BK solves it..." > HTH, > > Torben > Am 08.10.2014 20:34 schrieb "Jamie Jackson" <[email protected]>: > >> Thanks a lot for the response, Alvaro, >> >> Let me throw a couple things at you: >> >> I normally do all my work in a Linux VirtualBox guest within my >> (company-supplied) Windows host. I'd prefer to have a Linux host, but it is >> what it is. >> >> I needed to create a consistent development environment to share with my >> team, and I found Vagrant. >> >> When I started with Vagrant a short time ago, I started out trying to run >> Vagrant commands within my guest, but quickly found that VirtualBox doesn't >> support nested VMs, so that was a brick wall. Then I resorted to running >> the Vagrant commands on the Windows host. That worked: I was able to spin >> up and provision a box on-the-fly, create a host-only network, and connect >> to the development site via a static host-only IP and a hosts entry. >> However, I was still sad that I had to do my Vagrant development on Windows. >> >> Then, I discovered Docker, and I realized that it might be possible to >> work within my preferred Linux VM by using the Docker provider in there (to >> get around the nested VM problem). So, that's what I'm working through at >> the moment. >> >> You mentioned potentially forcing the use of a proxy VM, but due to the >> reasons I mentioned, it's not preferable. I'd like to come up with a >> solution that will work both from my Linux VM, and my other teammates' >> Windows & Mac boxes. (In other words the ideal scenario would be to have >> Vagrant automatically use Docker right in my Linux environment, but >> automatically use a proxy on the Windows and Mac boxes.) >> >> So, combining the things you mentioned with my requirements: >> >> Must I do port forwarding/mapping (or whatever it's called) to map the >> container's port 443 to some other port on the host (which happens to be a >> VM itself)? If I have to do that, what's the technical reason for that? Is >> it just because Docker won't do static IPs, and therefore a hosts entry >> would get invalidated every time I brought up the container? >> >> I hope I made sense and haven't bored everyone to death. >> >> Thanks, >> Jamie >> >> On Friday, October 3, 2014 6:31:23 PM UTC-4, Alvaro Miranda Aguilera >> wrote: >>> >>> Hello >>> >>> you need to glue 2 things. >>> >>> glue1, >>> >>> you can force to always use a proxy linux box, in that case your linux >>> box will be the same as win or mac >>> >>> by default, a new vm will be fired up, and a docker container will run >>> inside. >>> the simple approach is just 1 vagrantfile for the docker, here you do >>> vagrant up and vagrant does the magic >>> >>> now, you can get a bit more in control of this, a have 2 vagrantfiles, >>> one for the base host where docker will run, and one for the docker it self >>> >>> in the documentation, have a look around here: >>> >>> https://docs.vagrantup.com/v2/docker/basics.html >>> >>> Read about the host VM >>> >>> basically you define a vagrantfile that will be used for this host: >>> >>> config.vm.provider "docker" do |d| >>> d.vagrant_vagrantfile = "../path/to/Vagrantfile" >>> end >>> >>> Here, let me say it again, with this you get more control on your base >>> box, so you would be able to specify the base box, provider, and scripts to >>> provision. >>> >>> glue2. >>> >>> In the docker file you can expose ports, so you can run a web server >>> expose 80 on the docker to 80 on the host (vm) >>> >>> then on the vagrantfile of that box, you can expost that 80 to the real >>> host as say 8080 >>> >>> Docker 80 -> vm 80 -> real pc 8080 >>> >>> make any sense? >>> >>> The docker way to do it is you expose ports to the base host. >>> >>> >>> On Fri, Oct 3, 2014 at 5:29 PM, Jamie Jackson <[email protected]> >>> wrote: >>> >>>> Hi Folks, >>>> >>>> I'm pretty new to Vagrant, but I managed to create a VirtualBox VM with >>>> an app stack and an auto-populated Maria DB, which I'll be able to share >>>> with other developers on the team just by giving them a directory with a >>>> Vagrantfile and included shell provisioner scripts. >>>> >>>> Just today, I started playing with switching the provider over to >>>> Docker. That's had some snags along the way, but I think most of it is >>>> worked out. However, one thing I'm used to with the VirtualBox provider is >>>> being able to specify a static IP for the VM for host-only communication: >>>> >>>> >>>> config.vm.network :private_network, ip: "192.168.56.10" >>>> >>>> >>>> Then, I can simply have a permanent host entry of: >>>> >>>> 192.168.56.10 local.mysite.com >>>> >>>> >>>> I haven't figured out how to do the same with the Docker provider. [It >>>> assigns the IP dynamically, and it seems to change for some (maybe all) >>>> vagrant ups.] >>>> >>>> How do I accomplish this sort of thing with the Docker provider? For >>>> what it's worth, I'm developing the Vagrant project on Linux, but it will >>>> be also used by teammates on Macs and Windows. >>>> >>>> Thanks, >>>> Jamie >>>> >>>> -- >>>> 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 [email protected]. >>>> 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 [email protected]. >> 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 [email protected]. > > For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout. > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Vagrant" group. 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