vagrant-linode
is a provider plugin for Vagrant that supports the
management of Linode linodes
(instances).
Current features include:
- create and destroy linodes
- power on and off linodes
- rebuild a linode
- provision a linode with the shell or other provisioners
- setup a SSH public key for authentication
- create a new user account during linode creation
- setup hostname during creation
The provider has been tested with Vagrant 1.6.3+ using Ubuntu 14.04 LTS and Debian 7.5+ guest operating systems.
Installation of the provider couldn't be easier:
vagrant plugin install vagrant-linode
Once the provider has been installed, you will need to configure your project
to use it. The most basic Vagrantfile
to create a linode on Linode
is shown below (with most of the available options included but commented out):
Vagrant.configure('2') do |config|
config.vm.provider :linode do |provider, override|
override.ssh.private_key_path = '~/.ssh/id_rsa'
override.vm.box = 'linode/ubuntu1404'
provider.api_key = 'API_KEY'
provider.distribution = 'Ubuntu 18.04 LTS'
provider.datacenter = 'newark'
provider.plan = 'Linode 2GB' # This will work
# provider.plan = 'Linode 2048' # This will still work
# provider.plan = 'Linode 2' # This may work, but may be ambiguous
# provider.planid = <int>
# provider.paymentterm = <*1*,12,24>
# provider.datacenterid = <int>
# provider.image = <string>
# provider.imageid = <int>
# provider.kernel = <string>
# provider.kernelid = <int>
# provider.private_networking = <boolean>
# provider.stackscript = <string> # Not Supported Yet
# provider.stackscriptid = <int> # Not Supported Yet
# provider.distributionid = <int>
end
end
Please note the following:
- You must specify the
override.ssh.private_key_path
to enable authentication with the linode. The provider will create a new Linode SSH key using your public key which is assumed to be theprivate_key_path
with a .pub extension. - You must specify your Linode Personal Access Token. This may be found on the control panel within the my profile > API Keys section.
Supported Configuration Attributes
The following attributes are available to further configure the provider:
provider.distribution
- A string representing the distribution to use when creating a new linode (e.g.Debian 8.1
). The available options may be found on Linode's Supported Distributions page. It defaults toUbuntu 14.04 LTS
.provider.datacenter
- A string representing the datacenter to create the new linode in. It defaults todallas
.provider.plan
- A string representing the size to use when creating a new linode (e.g.Linode 4096
). It defaults toLinode 2048
.provider.private_networking
- A boolean flag indicating whether to enable a private network interface. It defaults tofalse
.provider.ssh_key_name
- A string representing the name to use when creating a Linode SSH key for linode authentication. It defaults toVagrant
.provider.setup
- A boolean flag indicating whether to setup a new user account and modify sudo to disable tty requirement. It defaults totrue
. If you are using a tool like packer to create reusable snapshots with user accounts already provisioned, set tofalse
.provider.label
- A string representing the Linode label to assign when creating a new linodeprovider.group
- A string representing the Linode's Display group to assign when creating a new linode
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
.
Each Linode Tier has been assigned a Plan Identification Number. Current (April 2019) Plan-ID table follows:
Plan ID | Plan Name |
---|---|
1 | Nanode 1GB |
2 | Linode 2GB |
3 | Linode 4GB |
4 | Linode 8GB |
5 | Linode 16GB |
6 | Linode 32GB |
7 | Linode 64GB |
8 | Linode 96GB |
9 | Linode 128GB |
10 | Linode 192GB |
11 | Linode 24GB |
12 | Linode 48GB |
13 | Linode 90GB |
14 | Linode 150GB |
15 | Linode 300GB |
16 | Dedicated 4GB |
17 | Dedicated 8GB |
18 | Dedicated 16GB |
19 | Dedicated 32GB |
20 | Dedicated 64GB |
21 | Dedicated 96GB |
This can be obtained through vagrant with:
vagrant linode plans <machine_name>
Or using curl:
curl -X POST "https://api.linode.com/?api_action=avail.linodeplans" \
--data-ascii api_key="$LINODE_API_KEY" \
2>/dev/null | jq '.DATA [] | .PLANID,.LABEL'
More detail: Linode API - Plans
Each region has been specified with a Data Center ID. Current (Feb 2017) Datacenter-ID table is:
DatacenterID | Datacenter | Location |
---|---|---|
4 | atlanta | Atlanta, GA, USA |
2 | dallas | Dallas, TX, USA |
3 | fremont | Fremont, CA, USA |
7 | london | London, England, UK |
6 | newark | Newark, NJ, USA |
8 | tokyo | Tokyo, JP |
9 | singapore | Singapore, SGP |
10 | frankfurt | Frankfurt, DE |
11 | shinagawa1 | Tokyo 2, JP |
You can find latest datacenter ID number using Vagrant subcommands:
vagrant linode datacenters
Or directly through the API:
curl -X POST "https://api.linode.com/?api_action=avail.datacenters" \
--data-ascii api_key="$LINODE_API_KEY" \
2>/dev/null | jq '.DATA [] | .DATACENTERID,.ABBR,.LOCATION'
More detail: Linode API - Datacenters
The kernel can be specified using the kernelid provider parameter, or with kernel which will use a partial text match.
curl -X POST "https://api.linode.com/?api_action=avail.kernels" \
--data-ascii api_key="$LINODE_API_KEY" \
2>/dev/null | jq '.DATA [] | .KERNELID,.LABEL'
More detail: Linode API - Kernels
provider.volumes - Volume Handling
The plugin can create and attach additional volumes when creating Linodes. vagrant rebuild
calls will rebuild the VM only and reattach the volume afterwards without losing the contents.
config.vm.provider :linode do |linode|
linode.plan = "Linode 2048"
linode.volumes = [
{label: "extra_volume", size: 1},
]
end
NOTES:
- The volume needs to be formatted and mounted inside the VM either manually or by a StackScript, etc.
- The plugin doesn't do any volume metadata management. If a volume is renamed the next
vagrant up
call will create a new one. - Running
vagrant destroy
will NOT destroy the volumes.
The sync provider, NFS, has been disabled to make rsync easier to use. To enable NFS,
run Vagrant with an environment variable LINODE_NFS_FUNCTIONAL=1
. This will require
a bit more configuration between the Linode and the Vagrant host.
After creating your project's Vagrantfile
with the required configuration
attributes described above, you may create a new linode with the following
command:
$ vagrant up --provider=linode
This command will create a new linode, setup your SSH key for authentication, create a new user account, and run the provisioners you have configured.
The environment variable VAGRANT_DEFAULT_PROVIDER
can be set to linode
to avoid sending --provider=linode
on each vagrant up
.
Supported Commands
The provider supports the following Vagrant sub-commands:
vagrant destroy
- Destroys the linode instance.vagrant ssh
- Logs into the linode instance using the configured user account.vagrant halt
- Powers off the linode instance.vagrant provision
- Runs the configured provisioners and rsyncs any specifiedconfig.vm.synced_folder
. (see https://docs.vagrantup.com/v2/synced-folders/rsync.html)vagrant reload
- Reboots the linode instance.vagrant rebuild
- Destroys the linode instance and recreates it with the same IP address which was previously assigned.vagrant status
- Outputs the status (active, off, not created) for the linode instance.vagrant linode
- Offers Linode resource listing options for datacenters, distributions, images, networks, plans, and servers
Linode Guides and Tutorials - Using Vagrant to Manage Linode Environments Puphpet - Online Vagrantfile Generator
To contribute, clone the repository, and use Bundler to install dependencies:
$ bundle
To run the provider's tests, first install vagrant as shown here and then use rake:
$ 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.
vi lib/vagrant-linode/version.rb
vi CHANGELOG.md
git commit -m 'version 0.1.2' lib/vagrant-linode/version.rb CHANGELOG.md
git tag -s v0.1.2
git push --tags origin master
gem build vagrant-linode.gemspec
gem push vagrant-linode-0.1.2.gem