Vagrant: Add CentOS 6.4 base box with puppet and VirtualBox Guest Additions preinstalled

refs #4202
This commit is contained in:
Eric Lippmann 2013-05-29 17:34:18 +02:00
parent d5df734c77
commit af2526a446
2 changed files with 80 additions and 0 deletions

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Icinga 2 Web
============
Table of Contents
-----------------
1. [Vagrant - Virtual development environment](#vagrant)
Vagrant
-------
The Icinga 2 Web project ships with a Vagrant virtual machine that integrates
the source code with various services and example data in a controlled
environment. This enables developers and users to test Livestatus, status.dat,
MySQL and PostgreSQL backends as well as the LDAP authentication. All you
have to do is install Vagrant and run:
vagrant up

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# -*- mode: ruby -*-
# vi: set ft=ruby :
Vagrant::Config.run do |config|
# All Vagrant configuration is done here. The most common configuration
# options are documented and commented below. For a complete reference,
# please see the online documentation at vagrantup.com.
# Every Vagrant virtual environment requires a box to build off of.
config.vm.box = "centos-6.4-x64-vbox"
# The url from where the 'config.vm.box' box will be fetched if it
# doesn't already exist on the user's system.
config.vm.box_url = "http://vagrant-boxes.icinga.org/centos-64-x64-vbox4212.box"
# Boot with a GUI so you can see the screen. (Default is headless)
# config.vm.boot_mode = :gui
# Assign this VM to a host-only network IP, allowing you to access it
# via the IP. Host-only networks can talk to the host machine as well as
# any other machines on the same network, but cannot be accessed (through this
# network interface) by any external networks.
# config.vm.network :hostonly, "192.168.33.10"
# Assign this VM to a bridged network, allowing you to connect directly to a
# network using the host's network device. This makes the VM appear as another
# physical device on your network.
# config.vm.network :bridged
# Forward a port from the guest to the host, which allows for outside
# computers to access the VM, whereas host only networking does not.
# config.vm.forward_port 80, 8080
# An example Puppet manifest to provision the message of the day:
#
# # group { "puppet":
# # ensure => "present",
# # }
# #
# # File { owner => 0, group => 0, mode => 0644 }
# #
# # file { '/etc/motd':
# # content => "Welcome to your Vagrant-built virtual machine!
# # Managed by Puppet.\n"
# # }
# Share an additional folder to the guest VM. The first argument is
# an identifier, the second is the path on the guest to mount the
# folder, and the third is the path on the host to the actual folder.
# # config.vm.share_folder "puppet-templates", "/tmp/vagrant-puppet/templates", "templates"
# Enable provisioning with Puppet stand alone. Puppet manifests
# are contained in a directory path relative to this Vagrantfile.
# You will need to create the manifests directory and a manifest in
# the file default.pp in the manifests_path directory.
config.vm.provision :puppet do |puppet|
puppet.module_path = ".vagrant-puppet/modules"
puppet.manifests_path = ".vagrant-puppet/manifests"
# # puppet.options = ["--templatedir", "/tmp/vagrant-puppet/templates"]
puppet.options = "-v -d"
end
end