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A Vagrant provider plugin that supports the management of Digital Ocean droplets (instances).

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Digital Ocean Vagrant Provider

vagrant-digitalocean is a provider plugin for Vagrant that supports the management of Digital Ocean droplets (instances).

NOTE: The Chef provisioner is no longer supported by default (as of 0.2.0). Please use the vagrant-omnibus plugin to install Chef on Vagrant-managed machines. This plugin provides control over the specific version of Chef to install.

Current features include:

  • create and destroy droplets
  • power on and off droplets
  • rebuild a droplet
  • provision a droplet with the shell or Chef provisioners
  • setup a SSH public key for authentication
  • create a new user account during droplet creation

The provider has been tested with Vagrant 1.1.5+ using Ubuntu 12.04 and CentOS 6.3 guest operating systems.

Install

Installation of the provider requires two steps:

  1. Install the provider plugin using the Vagrant command-line interface:

     $ vagrant plugin install vagrant-digitalocean
    

NOTE: If you are using a Mac, and this plugin would not work caused by SSL certificate problem, You may need to specify certificate path explicitly.
You can verify actual certificate path by running:

ruby -ropenssl -e "p OpenSSL::X509::DEFAULT_CERT_FILE"

Then, add the following environment variable to your .bash_profile script and source it:

export SSL_CERT_FILE=/usr/local/etc/openssl/cert.pem

Configure

Once the provider has been installed, you will need to configure your project to use it. The most basic Vagrantfile to create a droplet on Digital Ocean is shown below:

Vagrant.configure('2') do |config|

  config.vm.provider :digital_ocean do |provider, override|
    override.ssh.private_key_path = '~/.ssh/id_rsa'
    override.vm.box = 'digital_ocean'
    override.vm.box_url = "https://github.com/smdahlen/vagrant-digitalocean/raw/master/box/digital_ocean.box"

    provider.token = 'YOUR TOKEN'
    provider.image = 'ubuntu-14-04-x64'
    provider.region = 'nyc2'
    provider.size = '512mb'
  end
end

Please note the following:

  • You must specify the override.ssh.private_key_path to enable authentication with the droplet. The provider will create a new Digital Ocean SSH key using your public key which is assumed to be the private_key_path with a .pub extension.
  • You must specify your Digital Ocean Personal Access Token. This may be found on the control panel within the Apps & API section.

Supported Configuration Attributes

The following attributes are available to further configure the provider:

  • provider.image - A string representing the image to use when creating a new droplet. It defaults to ubuntu-14-04-x64. List available images with the digitalocean-list images command. Like when using the DigitalOcean API directly, it can be an image ID or slug.
  • provider.ipv6 - A boolean flag indicating whether to enable IPv6
  • provider.region - A string representing the region to create the new droplet in. It defaults to nyc2. List available regions with the digitalocean-list regions command.
  • provider.size - A string representing the size to use when creating a new droplet (e.g. 1gb). It defaults to 512mb. List available sizes with the digitalocean-list sizes command.
  • provider.private_networking - A boolean flag indicating whether to enable a private network interface (if the region supports private networking). It defaults to false.
  • provider.backups_enabled - A boolean flag indicating whether to enable backups for the droplet. It defaults to false.
  • provider.ssh_key_name - A string representing the name to use when creating a Digital Ocean SSH key for droplet authentication. It defaults to Vagrant.
  • provider.setup - A boolean flag indicating whether to setup a new user account and modify sudo to disable tty requirement. It defaults to true. If you are using a tool like packer to create reusable snapshots with user accounts already provisioned, set to false.

The provider will create a new user account with the specified SSH key for authorization if config.ssh.username is set and the provider.setup attribute is true.

image, region and size slugs

Images, regions and sizes have to be specified with the slug name. You can find the slug names with the digitalocean-list commands:

vagrant digitalocean-list images $DIGITAL_OCEAN_TOKEN
vagrant digitalocean-list regions $DIGITAL_OCEAN_TOKEN
vagrant digitalocean-list sizes $DIGITAL_OCEAN_TOKEN

Run

After creating your project's Vagrantfile with the required configuration attributes described above, you may create a new droplet with the following command:

$ vagrant up --provider=digital_ocean

This command will create a new droplet, setup your SSH key for authentication, create a new user account, and run the provisioners you have configured.

Supported Commands

The provider supports the following Vagrant sub-commands:

  • vagrant destroy - Destroys the droplet instance.
  • vagrant ssh - Logs into the droplet instance using the configured user account.
  • vagrant halt - Powers off the droplet instance.
  • vagrant provision - Runs the configured provisioners and rsyncs any specified config.vm.synced_folder.
  • vagrant reload - Reboots the droplet instance.
  • vagrant rebuild - Destroys the droplet instance and recreates it with the same IP address which was previously assigned.
  • vagrant status - Outputs the status (active, off, not created) for the droplet instance.

Contribute

To contribute, clone the repository, and use Bundler to install dependencies:

$ bundle

To run the provider's tests:

$ bundle exec rake test

You can now make modifications. Running vagrant within the Bundler environment will ensure that plugins installed in your Vagrant environment are not loaded.

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A Vagrant provider plugin that supports the management of Digital Ocean droplets (instances).

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