# Vagrant Libvirt Provider This is a [Vagrant](http://www.vagrantup.com) 1.1+ plugin that adds an [Libvirt](http://libvirt.org) provider to Vagrant, allowing Vagrant to control and provision machines via Libvirt toolkit. **Note:** Actual version (0.0.4) is still a development one. Feedback is welcome and can help a lot :-) ## Features (Version 0.0.4) * Vagrant `up`, `destroy`, `suspend`, `resume`, `halt`, `ssh` and `provision` commands. * Upload box image (qcow2 format) to Libvirt storage pool. * Create volume as COW diff image for domains. * Create and boot Libvirt domains. * SSH into domains. * Provision domains with any built-in Vagrant provisioner. * Minimal synced folder support via `rsync`. ## Future work * More boxes should be available. * Take a look at [open issues](https://github.com/pradels/vagrant-libvirt/issues?state=open). ## Installation Install using standard [Vagrant 1.1+](http://downloads.vagrantup.com) plugin installation methods. After installing, `vagrant up` and specify the `libvirt` provider. An example is shown below. ``` $ vagrant plugin install vagrant-libvirt ``` ### Possible problems with plugin installation In case of problems with building nokogiri and ruby-libvirt gem, install missing development libraries for libxslt, libxml2 and libvirt. In Ubuntu, Debian, ... ``` $ sudo apt-get install libxslt-dev libxml2-dev libvirt-dev ``` In RedHat, Centos, Fedora, ... ``` # yum install libxslt-devel libxml2-devel libvirt-devel ``` ## Vagrant Project Preparation After installing the plugin (instructions above), the quickest way to get started is to add Libvirt box and specify all the details manually within a `config.vm.provider` block. So first, add Libvirt box using any name you want. This is just an example of Libvirt CentOS 6.4 box available: ``` $ vagrant box add centos64 http://kwok.cz/centos64.box ``` And then make a Vagrantfile that looks like the following, filling in your information where necessary. ```ruby Vagrant.configure("2") do |config| config.vm.define :test_vm do |test_vm| test_vm.vm.box = "centos64" end config.vm.provider :libvirt do |libvirt| libvirt.driver = "qemu" libvirt.host = "example.com" libvirt.connect_via_ssh = true libvirt.username = "root" libvirt.storage_pool_name = "default" libvirt.nested = true end end ``` ### Libvirt Configuration Options This provider exposes quite a few provider-specific configuration options: * `driver` - A hypervisor name to access. For now only qemu is supported. * `host` - The name of the server, where libvirtd is running. * `connect_via_ssh` - If use ssh tunnel to connect to Libvirt. * `username` - Username and password to access Libvirt. * `password` - Password to access Libvirt. * `storage_pool_name` - Libvirt storage pool name, where box image and instance snapshots will be stored. ### Domain Specific Options * `memory` - Amount of memory in MBytes. Defaults to 512 if not set. * `cpus` - Number of virtual cpus. Defaults to 1 if not set. * `nested` - [Enable nested virtualization.Default: false] (https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/master/Documentation/virtual/kvm/nested-vmx.txt) Specific domain settings can be set for each domain separately in multi-VM environment. Example below shows a part of Vagrantfile, where specific options are set for dbserver domain. ```ruby Vagrant.configure("2") do |config| config.vm.define :dbserver do |dbserver| dbserver.vm.box = "centos64" dbserver.vm.provider :libvirt do |domain| domain.memory = 2048 domain.cpus = 2 end end ... ``` ## Create Project - Vagrant up In prepared project directory, 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`. ### How Project Is Created Vagrant goes through steps below when creating new project: 1. Connect to Libvirt localy or remotely via SSH. 2. Check if box image is available in Libvirt storage pool. If not, upload it to remote Libvirt storage pool as new volume. 3. Create COW diff image of base box image for new Libvirt domain. 4. Create and start new domain on Libvirt host. 5. Check for DHCP lease from dnsmasq server. 6. Wait till SSH is available. 7. Sync folders via `rsync` and run Vagrant provisioner on new domain if setup in Vagrantfile. ## Networks Networking features in the form of `config.vm.network` are not supported right now. Support for private network is planned to be added in next release of provider. ## Obtaining Domain IP Address Libvirt doesn't provide standard way how to find out an IP address of running domain. But we know, what is MAC address of virtual machine. Libvirt is closely connected with dnsmasq server, which acts also as a DHCP server. Dnsmasq server makes lease information public in `/var/lib/libvirt/dnsmasq` directory, or in `/var/lib/misc/dnsmasq.leases` file on some systems. This is the place, where information like which MAC address has which IP address resides and it's parsed by vagrant-libvirt plugin. ## Synced Folders There is minimal support for synced folders. Upon `vagrant up`, the Libvirt provider will use `rsync` (if available) to uni-directionally sync the folder to the remote machine over SSH. This is good enough for all built-in Vagrant provisioners (shell, chef, and puppet) to work! ## Box Format You can view an example box in the [example_box/directory](https://github.com/pradels/vagrant-libvirt/tree/master/example_box). That directory also contains instructions on how to build a box. The box is a tarball containing: * qcow2 image file named `box.img`. * `metadata.json` file describing box image (provider, virtual_size, format). * `Vagrantfile` that does default settings for the provider-specific configuration for this provider. ## Development To work on the `vagrant-libvirt` plugin, clone this repository out, and use [Bundler](http://gembundler.com) to get the dependencies: ``` $ git clone https://github.com/pradels/vagrant-libvirt.git $ cd vagrant-libvirt $ bundle install ``` Once you have the dependencies, verify the unit tests pass with `rake`: ``` $ bundle exec rake ``` If those pass, you're ready to start developing the plugin. 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. Don't forget to add following line at the beginning of your `Vagrantfile` while in development mode: ```ruby Vagrant.require_plugin "vagrant-libvirt" ``` Now you can use bundler to execute Vagrant: ``` $ bundle exec vagrant up --provider=libvirt ``` ## Contributing 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