fix up word wrapping

pull/5033/head
Tim Gerla 11 years ago
parent 7adf33ed41
commit 1cd71b7899

@ -9,18 +9,24 @@ Using Vagrant and Ansible
Introduction Introduction
```````````` ````````````
Vagrant is a tool to manage virtual machine environments, and allows you to configure and use reproducable work environments on top of various virtualization and cloud platforms. It also has integration with Ansible as a provisioner for these virtual machines, and the two tools work together well. Vagrant is a tool to manage virtual machine environments, and allows you to
configure and use reproducable work environments on top of various
virtualization and cloud platforms. It also has integration with Ansible as a
provisioner for these virtual machines, and the two tools work together well.
This guide will describe how to use Vagrant and Ansible together. This guide will describe how to use Vagrant and Ansible together.
If you're not familar with Vagrant, you should visit `the documentation <http://docs.vagrantup.com/v2/>`_. If you're not familar with Vagrant, you should visit `the documentation
<http://docs.vagrantup.com/v2/>`_.
.. _vagrant_setup: .. _vagrant_setup:
Vagrant Setup Vagrant Setup
````````````` `````````````
The first step once you've installed Vagrant is to create a Vagrantfile and customize it to suit your needs. This is covered in detail in the Vagrant documentation, but here is a quick example: The first step once you've installed Vagrant is to create a Vagrantfile and
customize it to suit your needs. This is covered in detail in the Vagrant
documentation, but here is a quick example:
.. code-block:: bash .. code-block:: bash
@ -28,7 +34,9 @@ The first step once you've installed Vagrant is to create a Vagrantfile and cust
$ cd vagrant-test $ cd vagrant-test
$ vagrant init precise32 http://files.vagrantup.com/precise32.box $ vagrant init precise32 http://files.vagrantup.com/precise32.box
This will create a file called Vagrantfile that you can edit to suit your needs. The default Vagrantfile has a lot of comments. Here is a simplified example that includes a section to use the Ansible provisioner: This will create a file called Vagrantfile that you can edit to suit your
needs. The default Vagrantfile has a lot of comments. Here is a simplified
example that includes a section to use the Ansible provisioner:
.. code-block:: ruby .. code-block:: ruby
@ -46,7 +54,11 @@ This will create a file called Vagrantfile that you can edit to suit your needs.
end end
end end
The Vagrantfile has a lot of options, but these are the most important ones. Notice the "config.vm.provision" section that refers to an Ansible playbook called "playbook.yml" in the same directory as the Vagrantfile. Vagrant runs the provisioner once the virtual machine has booted and is ready for SSH access. The Vagrantfile has a lot of options, but these are the most important ones.
Notice the "config.vm.provision" section that refers to an Ansible playbook
called "playbook.yml" in the same directory as the Vagrantfile. Vagrant runs
the provisioner once the virtual machine has booted and is ready for SSH
access.
.. code-block:: bash .. code-block:: bash
@ -54,16 +66,26 @@ The Vagrantfile has a lot of options, but these are the most important ones. Not
This will start the VM and run the provisioning playbook. This will start the VM and run the provisioning playbook.
There are a lot of Ansible options you can configure in your Vagrantfile. Visit the `Ansible Provisioner documentation <http://docs.vagrantup.com/v2/provisioning/ansible.html>`_ for more information. There are a lot of Ansible options you can configure in your Vagrantfile.
Visit the `Ansible Provisioner documentation
<http://docs.vagrantup.com/v2/provisioning/ansible.html>`_ for more
information.
.. _running_ansible: .. _running_ansible:
Running Ansible Manually Running Ansible Manually
```````````````````````` ````````````````````````
You can re-run the Ansible playbook for your Vagrant machine by running "vagrant provision", but sometimes you may want to run Ansible manually against the machines. This is pretty easy to do. You can re-run the Ansible playbook for your Vagrant machine by running
"vagrant provision", but sometimes you may want to run Ansible manually
against the machines. This is pretty easy to do.
Vagrant automatically creates an inventory file for each Vagrant machine in the same directory called "vagrant_ansible_inventory_machinename". It configures the inventory file according to the SSH tunnel that Vagrant automatically creates, and executes "ansible-playbook" with the correct username and SSH key options to allow access. A typical automatically-created inventory file may look something like this: Vagrant automatically creates an inventory file for each Vagrant machine in
the same directory called "vagrant_ansible_inventory_machinename". It
configures the inventory file according to the SSH tunnel that Vagrant
automatically creates, and executes "ansible-playbook" with the correct
username and SSH key options to allow access. A typical automatically-created
inventory file may look something like this:
.. code-block:: none .. code-block:: none
@ -71,7 +93,10 @@ Vagrant automatically creates an inventory file for each Vagrant machine in the
machine ansible_ssh_host=127.0.0.1 ansible_ssh_port=2222 machine ansible_ssh_host=127.0.0.1 ansible_ssh_port=2222
If you want to run Ansible manually, you will want to make sure to pass "ansible" or "ansible-playbook" the correct arguments for the username (usually "vagrant") and the SSH key (usually "~/.vagrant.d/insecure_private_key"), and the autogenerated inventory file. If you want to run Ansible manually, you will want to make sure to pass
"ansible" or "ansible-playbook" the correct arguments for the username
(usually "vagrant") and the SSH key (usually
"~/.vagrant.d/insecure_private_key"), and the autogenerated inventory file.
Here is an example: Here is an example:

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