Vagrant
Configuration
Vagrant Triggers has a few options to define trigger behavior.
Execution Order
The trigger config block takes two different operations that determine when a trigger should fire:
These define how the trigger behaves and when it should fire off during the Vagrant life cycle. A simple example of a before operation could look like:
config.trigger.before :up do |t|
t.info = "Bringing up your Vagrant guest machine!"
end
Triggers can also be used with commands, actions, or hooks. By default triggers will be defined to run before or after a Vagrant guest. For more detailed examples of how to use triggers, check out the usage section.
Trigger Options
The trigger class takes various options.
action
(symbol, array) - Expected to be a single symbol value, an array of symbols, or a splat of symbols. The first argument that comes after either before or after when defining a new trigger. Can be any valid Vagrant command. It also accepts a special value:all
which will make the trigger fire for every action. An action can be ignored with theignore
setting if desired. These are the valid action commands for triggers:ignore
(symbol, array) - Symbol or array of symbols corresponding to the action that a trigger should not fire on.info
(string) - A message that will be printed at the beginning of a trigger.name
(string) - The name of the trigger. If set, the name will be displayed when firing the trigger.on_error
(symbol) - Defines how the trigger should behave if it encounters an error. By default this will be:halt
, but can be configured to ignore failures and continue on with:continue
.only_on
(string, regex, array) - Limit the trigger to these guests. Values can be a string or regex that matches a guest name.ruby
(block) - A block of Ruby code to be executed on the host. The block accepts two arguments that can be used with your Ruby code:env
andmachine
. These options correspond to the Vagrant environment used (note: these are not your shell's environment variables), and the Vagrant guest machine that the trigger is firing on. This option can only be aProc
type, which must be explicitly called out when using the hash syntax for a trigger.ubuntu.trigger.after :up do |trigger| trigger.info = "More information" trigger.ruby do |env,machine| greetings = "hello there #{machine.id}!" puts greetings end end
run_remote
(hash) - A collection of settings to run a inline or remote script with on the guest. These settings correspond to the shell provisioner.run
(hash) - A collection of settings to run a inline or remote script on the host. These settings correspond to the shell provisioner. However, at the moment the only settingsrun
takes advantage of are:Note: The
run
option withinline
is not entirely like a shell provisioner that runs bash. It executes binaries on your machine rather than a bash script. For example: If you wish you use bash to pipe some text to a file in yourrun
option withinline
, wrap your inline script withbash -c "<script goes here>"
.:config.trigger.after :up do |trigger| trigger.info = "More information" trigger.run = {inline: "bash -c 'echo \"hey there!!\" > file.txt'"} end
warn
(string) - A warning message that will be printed at the beginning of a trigger.exit_codes
(integer, array) - A set of acceptable exit codes to continue on. Defaults to0
if option is absent. For now only valid with therun
option.abort
(integer,boolean) - An option that will exit the running Vagrant process once the trigger fires. If set totrue
, Vagrant will use exit code 1. Otherwise, an integer can be provided and Vagrant will it as its exit code when aborting.
Trigger Types
Optionally, it is possible to define a trigger that executes around Vagrant commands, hooks, and actions.
A trigger can be one of three types:
type
(symbol) - Optional
These types determine when and where a defined trigger will execute.
config.trigger.after :destroy, type: :command do |t|
t.warn = "Destroy command completed"
end
Quick Note
Triggers without the type option will run before or after a Vagrant guest.
Older Vagrant versions will unfortunately not be able to properly parse the new
:type
option. If you are worried about older clients failing to parse your Vagrantfile,
you can guard the new trigger based on the version of Vagrant:
if Vagrant.version?(">= 2.3.0")
config.trigger.before :status, type: :command do |t|
t.info = "before action!!!!!!!"
end
end
Commands
Command typed triggers can be defined for any valid Vagrant command. They will always run before or after the command.
The difference between this and the default behavior is that these triggers are not attached to any specific guest, and will always run before or after the given command. A simple example might be running a trigger before the up command to give a simple message to the user:
config.trigger.before :up, type: :command do |t|
t.info = "Before command!"
end
For a more detailed example, please check out the examples page for more.
Hooks
Advanced topic! This is an advanced topic for use only if you want to execute triggers around Vagrant hooks. If you are just getting started with Vagrant and triggers, you may safely skip this section.
Hook typed triggers can be defined for any valid Vagrant action hook that is defined.
A simple example would be running a trigger on a given hook called action_hook_name
.
config.trigger.after :action_hook_name, type: :hook do |t|
t.info = "After action hook!"
end
For a more detailed example, please check out the examples page for more.
Actions
Advanced topic! This is an advanced topic for use only if you want to execute triggers around Vagrant actions. If you are just getting started with Vagrant and triggers, you may safely skip this section.
Action typed triggers can be defined for any valid Vagrant action class. Actions
in this case refer to the Vagrant class #Action
, which is used internally to
Vagrant and in every Vagrant plugin.
config.trigger.before :"Action::Class::Name", type: :action do |t|
t.info = "Before action class!"
end
For a more detailed example, please check out the examples page for more.