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Vagrant environment setup tutorial
This section guides first-time contributors through installing the Zulip development environment on Windows, macOS, and Ubuntu.
The recommended method for installing the Zulip development environment is to use Vagrant with VirtualBox on Windows and macOS, and Vagrant with LXC on Ubuntu. This method creates a virtual machine (for Windows and macOS) or a Linux container (for Ubuntu) inside which the Zulip server and all related services will run.
Contents:
- Requirements
- Step 1: Install Prerequisites
- Step 2: Get Zulip code
- Step 3: Start the development environment
- Step 4: Developing
- Troubleshooting & Common Errors
- Specifying a proxy
If you encounter errors installing the Zulip development environment, check
Troubleshooting & Common Errors. If that
doesn't help, please visit the provision
stream in the Zulip developers'
chat for real-time help, or
send a note to the Zulip-devel Google
group or file an
issue.
When reporting your issue, please include the following information:
- host operating system
- installation method (Vagrant or direct)
- whether or not you are using a proxy
- a copy of Zulip's
vagrant
provisioning logs, available in/var/log/provision.log
on your virtual machine
Requirements
Installing the Zulip development environment requires downloading several hundred megabytes of dependencies. You will need an active internet connection throughout the entire installation processes. (See Specifying a proxy if you need a proxy to access the internet.)
- All: 2GB available RAM, Active broadband internet connection.
- macOS: macOS (10.11 El Capitan or 10.12 Sierra recommended), Git, VirtualBox, Vagrant.
- Ubuntu: 14.04 64-bit or 16.04 64-bit, Git, Vagrant, lxc.
- Windows: Windows 64-bit (Win 10 recommended), hardware virtualization enabled (VT-X or AMD-V), administrator access, Git for Windows (which installs Git BASH), VirtualBox, Vagrant.
Don't see your system listed above? See Advanced setup for details about installing for other Linux and UNIX platforms.
Step 1: Install Prerequisites
Jump to:
macOS
- Install Vagrant (1.8.4-1.8.6, do not use 1.8.7).
- Install VirtualBox (>= 5.1.8)
(For a non-free option, but better performance, you can also use VMWare Fusion with the VMWare Fusion Vagrant plugin.)
Now you are ready for Step 2: Get Zulip Code.
Ubuntu
The setup for Ubuntu 14.04 Trusty and Ubuntu 16.04 Xenial are the same.
If you're in a hurry, you can copy and paste the following into your terminal after which you can jump to Step 2: Get Zulip Code:
sudo apt-get -y purge vagrant && \
wget https://releases.hashicorp.com/vagrant/1.8.6/vagrant_1.8.6_x86_64.deb && \
sudo dpkg -i vagrant*.deb && \
sudo apt-get -y install build-essential git ruby lxc lxc-templates cgroup-lite redir && \
vagrant plugin install vagrant-lxc && \
vagrant lxc sudoers
For a step-by-step explanation, read on.
1. Install Vagrant
For both 14.04 Trusty and 16.04 Xenial, you'll need a more recent version of Vagrant than what's available in the official Ubuntu repositories.
First uninstall any vagrant package you may have installed from the Ubuntu repository:
christie@ubuntu-desktop:~
$ sudo apt-get purge vagrant
Now download and install the .deb package for Vagrant 1.8.6:
christie@ubuntu-desktop:~
$ wget https://releases.hashicorp.com/vagrant/1.8.6/vagrant_1.8.6_x86_64.deb
christie@ubuntu-desktop:~
$ sudo dpkg -i vagrant*.deb
2. Install remaining dependencies
Now install git and lxc-related packages:
christie@ubuntu-desktop:~
$ sudo apt-get install build-essential git ruby lxc lxc-templates cgroup-lite redir
3. Install the vagrant lxc plugin:
christie@ubuntu-desktop:~
$ vagrant plugin install vagrant-lxc
Installing the 'vagrant-lxc' plugin. This can take a few minutes...
Installed the plugin 'vagrant-lxc (1.2.1)'!
If you encounter an error when trying to install the vagrant-lxc plugin, see this.
4. Configure sudo to be passwordless
Finally, configure sudo to be passwordless when using Vagrant LXC:
christie@ubuntu-desktop:~
$ vagrant lxc sudoers
[sudo] password for christie:
If you encounter an error running vagrant lxc sudoers
, see
this.
Now you are ready for Step 2: Get Zulip Code.
Windows 10
- Install Git for Windows, which installs Git BASH.
- Install VirtualBox (version >= 5.1.6).
- Install Vagrant (version 1.8.4-1.8.6, do not use 1.8.7).
(Note: While Git BASH is recommended, you may also use Cygwin. If you do, make sure to install default required packages along with git, curl, openssh, and rsync binaries.)
After installing, you must run Git BASH as an administrator.
Also, you must have hardware virtualization enabled (VT-X or AMD-V) in your computer's BIOS.
Enable native symlinks
The Zulip code includes symbolic links (symlinks). By default, native Windows symlinks are not enabled in either Git BASH or Cygwin, so you need to do a bit of configuration. You must do this before you clone the Zulip code.
In Git for BASH:
Open Git BASH as an administrator and run:
$ git config --global core.symlinks true
Now confirm the setting:
$ git config core.symlinks
true
If you see true
, you are ready for Step 2: Get Zulip
Code.
Otherwise, if the above command prints false
or nothing at all, then symlinks
have not been enabled.
In Cygwin:
Open a Cygwin window as an administrator and do this:
christie@win10 ~
$ echo 'export "CYGWIN=$CYGWIN winsymlinks:native"' >> ~/.bash_profile
Next, close that Cygwin window and open another. If you echo
$CYGWIN you
should see:
christie@win10 ~
$ echo $CYGWIN
winsymlinks:native
Now you are ready for Step 2: Get Zulip Code.
Step 2: Get Zulip Code
If you haven't already created an ssh key and added it to your GitHub account, you should do that now by following these instructions.
- In your browser, visit https://github.com/zulip/zulip
and click the
fork
button. You will need to be logged in to GitHub to do this. - Open Terminal (macOS/Ubuntu) or Git BASH (Windows; must run as an Administrator)
- In Terminal/Git BASH, clone your fork:
git clone git@github.com:YOURUSERNAME/zulip.git
This will create a 'zulip' directory and download the Zulip code into it.
Don't forget to replace YOURUSERNAME with your git username. You will see something like:
christie@win10 ~
$ git clone git@github.com:YOURUSERNAME/zulip.git
Cloning into 'zulip'...
remote: Counting objects: 73571, done.
remote: Compressing objects: 100% (2/2), done.
remote: Total 73571 (delta 1), reused 0 (delta 0), pack-reused 73569
Receiving objects: 100% (73571/73571), 105.30 MiB | 6.46 MiB/s, done.
Resolving deltas: 100% (51448/51448), done.
Checking connectivity... done.
Checking out files: 100% (1912/1912), done.`
Now you are ready for Step 3: Start the development environment.
Step 3: Start the development environment
Change into the zulip directory and tell vagrant to start the Zulip
development environment with vagrant up
.
christie@win10 ~
$ cd zulip
christie@win10 ~/zulip
$ vagrant up
The first time you run this command it will take some time because vagrant does the following:
- downloads the base Ubuntu 14.04 virtual machine image (for macOS and Windows) or container (for Ubuntu)
- configures this virtual machine/container for use with Zulip,
- creates a shared directory mapping your clone of the Zulip code inside the
virtual machine/container at
~/zulip
- runs the
tools/provision
script inside the virtual machine/container, which downloads all required dependencies, sets up the python environment for the Zulip development server, and initializes a default test database. We call this process "provisioning".
You will need an active internet connection during the entire
process. (See Specifying a proxy if you need a
proxy to access the internet.) vagrant up
can fail while
provisioning if your Internet connection is unreliable. To retry, you
can use vagrant provision
(vagrant up
will just boot the guest
without provisioning after the first time). Other common issues are
documented in the
Troubleshooting & Common Errors
section. If that doesn't help, please visit
the provision
stream in the Zulip developers' chat
for real-time help.
On Windows, you will see The system cannot find the path specified.
message
several times. This is expected behavior and is not an error.
Once vagrant up
has completed, connect to the development
environment with vagrant ssh
:
christie@win10 ~/zulip
$ vagrant ssh
You should see something like this on Windows and macOS:
Welcome to Ubuntu 14.04.4 LTS (GNU/Linux 3.13.0-85-generic x86_64)
* Documentation: https://help.ubuntu.com/
System information as of Wed May 4 21:45:43 UTC 2016
System load: 0.61 Processes: 88
Usage of /: 3.5% of 39.34GB Users logged in: 0
Memory usage: 7% IP address for eth0: 10.0.2.15
Swap usage: 0%
Graph this data and manage this system at:
https://landscape.canonical.com/
Get cloud support with Ubuntu Advantage Cloud Guest:
http://www.ubuntu.com/business/services/cloud
0 packages can be updated.
0 updates are security updates.
Or something as brief as this in the case of Ubuntu:
Welcome to Ubuntu 14.04.1 LTS (GNU/Linux 4.4.0-21-generic x86_64)
* Documentation: https://help.ubuntu.com/
Congrats, you're now inside the Zulip development environment!
You can confirm this by looking at the command prompt, which starts with
(zulip-venv)
.
Next, start the Zulip server:
(zulip-venv)vagrant@vagrant-ubuntu-trusty-64:~
$ cd zulip
(zulip-venv)vagrant@vagrant-ubuntu-trusty-64:~/zulip
$ ./tools/run-dev.py
You will see several lines of output starting with something like:
2016-05-04 22:20:33,895 INFO: process_fts_updates starting
Recompiling templates
2016-05-04 18:20:34,804 INFO: Not in recovery; listening for FTS updates
done
Validating Django models.py...
System check identified no issues (0 silenced).
Django version 1.8
Tornado server is running at http://localhost:9993/
Quit the server with CTRL-C.
2016-05-04 18:20:40,716 INFO Tornado loaded 0 event queues in 0.001s
2016-05-04 18:20:40,722 INFO Tornado 95.5% busy over the past 0.0 seconds
Performing system checks...
And ending with something similar to:
http://localhost:9994/webpack-dev-server/
webpack result is served from http://localhost:9991/webpack/
content is served from /srv/zulip
webpack: bundle is now VALID.
2016-05-06 21:43:29,553 INFO Tornado 31.6% busy over the past 10.6 seconds
2016-05-06 21:43:35,007 INFO Tornado 23.9% busy over the past 16.0 seconds
Now the Zulip server should be running and accessible. Verify this by navigating to http://localhost:9991/ in your browser on your main machine.
You should see something like this:
The Zulip server will continue to run and send output to the terminal window. When you navigate to Zulip in your browser, check your terminal and you should see something like:
2016-05-04 18:21:57,547 INFO 127.0.0.1 GET 302 582ms (+start: 417ms) / (unauth via ?)
[04/May/2016 18:21:57]"GET / HTTP/1.0" 302 0
2016-05-04 18:21:57,568 INFO 127.0.0.1 GET 301 4ms /login (unauth via ?)
[04/May/2016 18:21:57]"GET /login HTTP/1.0" 301 0
2016-05-04 18:21:57,819 INFO 127.0.0.1 GET 200 209ms (db: 7ms/2q) /login/ (unauth via ?)
Now you're ready for Step 4: Developing.
Step 4: Developing
Where to edit files
You'll work by editing files on your host machine, in the directory where you cloned Zulip. Use your favorite editor (Sublime, Atom, Vim, Emacs, Notepad++, etc.).
When you save changes they will be synced automatically to the Zulip development environment on the virtual machine/container.
Each component of the Zulip development server will automatically restart itself or reload data appropriately when you make changes. So, to see your changes, all you usually have to do is reload your browser. More details on how this works are available below.
Don't forget to read through the code style guidelines for details about how to configure your editor for Zulip. For example, indentation should be set to 4 spaces rather than tabs.
Understanding run-dev.py debugging output
It's good to have the terminal running run-dev.py
up as you work since error
messages including tracebacks along with every backend request will be printed
there.
See Logging for further details on the run-dev.py console output.
Committing and pushing changes with git
When you're ready to commit or push changes via git, you will do this by running git commands in Terminal (macOS/Ubuntu) or Git BASH (Windows) in the directory where you cloned Zulip on your main machine.
If you're new to working with Git/GitHub, check out our Git & GitHub Guide.
Maintaining the development environment
If after rebasing onto a new version of the Zulip server, you receive
new errors while starting the Zulip server or running tests, this is
probably not because Zulip's master branch is broken. Instead, this
is likely because we've recently merged changes to the development
environment provisioning process that you need to apply to your
development environment. To update your environment, you'll need to
re-provision your vagrant machine using vagrant provision
(this just
runs tools/provision
from your Zulip checkout inside the Vagrant
guest); this should complete in about a minute.
After provisioning, you'll want to (re)start the Zulip development server.
If you run into any trouble, the provision stream on chat.zulip.org is a great place to ask for help.
Rebuilding the development environment
If you ever want to recreate your development environment again from
scratch (e.g. to test as change you've made to the provisioning
process, or because you think something is broken), you can do so
using vagrant destroy
and then vagrant up
. This will usually be
much faster than the original vagrant up
since the base image is
already cached on your machine (it takes about 5 minutes to run with a
fast Internet connection).
Any additional programs (e.g. Zsh, emacs, etc.) or configuration that
you may have installed in the development environment will be lost
when you recreate it. To address this, you can create a script called
tools/custom_provision
in your Zulip Git checkout; and place any
extra setup commands there. Vagrant will run tools/custom_provision
every time you run vagrant provision
(or create a Vagrant guest via
vagrant up
).
Shutting down the development environment for use later
To shut down but preserve the development environment so you can use
it again later use vagrant halt
or vagrant suspend
.
You can do this from the same Terminal/Git BASH window that is running
run-dev.py by pressing ^C to halt the server and then typing exit
. Or you
can halt vagrant from another Terminal/Git BASH window.
From the window where run-dev.py is running:
2016-05-04 18:33:13,330 INFO 127.0.0.1 GET 200 92ms /register/ (unauth via ?)
^C
KeyboardInterrupt
(zulip-venv)vagrant@vagrant-ubuntu-trusty-64:~/zulip$ exit
logout
Connection to 127.0.0.1 closed.
christie@win10 ~/zulip
Now you can suspend the development environment:
christie@win10 ~/zulip
$ vagrant suspend
==> default: Saving VM state and suspending execution...
If vagrant suspend
doesn't work, try vagrant halt
:
christie@win10 ~/zulip
$ vagrant halt
==> default: Attempting graceful shutdown of VM...
Check out the Vagrant documentation to learn more about suspend and halt.
Resuming the development environment
When you're ready to work on Zulip again, run vagrant up
. You will also need
to connect to the virtual machine with vagrant ssh
and re-start the Zulip
server:
christie@win10 ~/zulip
$ vagrant up
$ vagrant ssh
(zulip-venv)vagrant@vagrant-ubuntu-trusty-64:~
$ cd zulip
(zulip-venv)vagrant@vagrant-ubuntu-trusty-64:~/zulip
$ ./tools/run-dev.py
Next Steps
Next, read the following to learn more about developing for Zulip:
Troubleshooting & Common Errors
Below you'll find a list of common errors and their solutions.
If these solutions aren't working for you or you encounter an issue not documented below, there are a few ways to get further help:
- visit the
provision
stream in the Zulip developers' chat for real-time help, - send a note to the Zulip-devel Google group, or
- file an issue.
When reporting your issue, please include the following information:
- host operating system
- installation method (Vagrant or direct)
- whether or not you are using a proxy
- a copy of Zulip's
vagrant
provisioning logs, available in/var/log/provision.log
on your virtual machine
The box 'ubuntu/trusty64' could not be found
If you see the following error when you run vagrant up
:
The box 'ubuntu/trusty64' could not be found or
could not be accessed in the remote catalog. If this is a private
box on HashiCorp's Atlas, please verify you're logged in via
`vagrant login`. Also, please double-check the name. The expanded
URL and error message are shown below:
URL: ["https://atlas.hashicorp.com/ubuntu/trusty64"]
Then the version of curl
that ships with Vagrant is not working on your
machine. You are most likely to encounter this error on Windows/Cygwin and
macOS.
On macOS this error is most likely to occur with Vagrant version 1.8.7 and is a known issue.
The solution is to downgrade Vagrant to version 1.8.6 (available
here), or to use your system's
version of curl
instead of the one that ships with Vagrant:
sudo ln -nsf /usr/bin/curl /opt/vagrant/embedded/bin/curl
On Windows/Cygwin, the fix is simple: replace it with the version from Cygwin.
First, determine the location of Cygwin's curl with which curl
:
christie@win10 ~/zulip
$ which curl
/usr/bin/curl
Now determine the location of Vagrant with which vagrant
:
christie@win10 ~/zulip
$ which vagrant
/cygdrive/c/HashiCorp/Vagrant/bin/vagrant
The path up until /bin/vagrant
is what you need to know. In the example above it's /cygdrive/c/HashiCorp/Vagrant
.
Finally, copy Cygwin's curl to Vagrant embedded/bin
directory:
christie@win10 ~/zulip
$ cp /usr/bin/curl.exe /cygdrive/c/HashiCorp/Vagrant/embedded/bin/
Now re-run vagrant up
and vagrant should be able to fetch the required
box file.
os.symlink error
If you receive the following error while running vagrant up
:
==> default: Traceback (most recent call last):
==> default: File "./emoji_dump.py", line 75, in <module>
==> default:
==> default: os.symlink('unicode/{}.png'.format(code_point), 'out/{}.png'.format(name))
==> default: OSError
==> default: :
==> default: [Errno 71] Protocol error
Then Vagrant was not able to create a symbolic link.
First, if you are using Windows, make sure you have run Git BASH (or Cygwin) as an administrator. By default, only administrators can create symbolic links on Windows.
Second, VirtualBox does not enable symbolic links by default. Vagrant starting with version 1.6.0 enables symbolic links for VirtualBox shared folder.
You can check to see that this is enabled for your virtual machine with
vboxmanage
command.
Get the name of your virtual machine by running vboxmanage list vms
and
then print out the custom settings for this virtual machine with
vboxmanage getextradata YOURVMNAME enumerate
:
christie@win10 ~/zulip
$ vboxmanage list vms
"zulip_default_1462498139595_55484" {5a65199d-8afa-4265-b2f6-6b1f162f157d}
christie@win10 ~/zulip
$ vboxmanage getextradata zulip_default_1462498139595_55484 enumerate
Key: VBoxInternal2/SharedFoldersEnableSymlinksCreate/srv_zulip, Value: 1
Key: supported, Value: false
If you see "command not found" when you try to run VBoxManage, you need to
add the VirtualBox directory to your path. On Windows this is mostly likely
C:\Program Files\Oracle\VirtualBox\
.
If vboxmanage enumerate
prints nothing, or shows a value of 0 for
VBoxInternal2/SharedFoldersEnableSymlinksCreate/srv_zulip, then enable
symbolic links by running this command in Terminal/Git BASH/Cygwin:
vboxmanage setextradata YOURVMNAME VBoxInternal2/SharedFoldersEnableSymlinksCreate/srv_zulip 1
The virtual machine needs to be shut down when you run this command.
Connection timeout on vagrant up
If you see the following error after running vagrant up
:
default: SSH address: 127.0.0.1:2222
default: SSH username: vagrant
default: SSH auth method: private key
default: Error: Connection timeout. Retrying...
default: Error: Connection timeout. Retrying...
default: Error: Connection timeout. Retrying...
A likely cause is that hardware virtualization is not enabled for your computer. This must be done via your computer's BIOS settings. Look for a setting called VT-x (Intel) or (AMD-V).
If this is already enabled in your BIOS, double-check that you are running a 64-bit operating system.
For further information about troubleshooting vagrant timeout errors see this post.
Vagrant up fails with subprocess.CalledProcessError
The vagrant up
command basically does the following:
- Downloads an Ubuntu image and starts it using a Vagrant provider.
- Uses
vagrant ssh
to connect to that Ubuntu guest, and then runstools/provision
, which has a lot of subcommands that are executed via Python'ssubprocess
module. These errors mean that one of those subcommands failed.
To debug such errors, you can log in to the Vagrant guest machine by
running vagrant ssh
, which should present you with a standard shell
prompt. You can debug interactively by using e.g. cd zulip && ./tools/provision
, and then running the individual subcommands
that failed. Once you've resolved the problem, you can rerun
tools/provision
to proceed; the provisioning system is designed
to recover well from failures.
The zulip provisioning system is generally highly reliable; the most common cause of issues here is a poor network connection (or one where you need a proxy to access the Internet and haven't configured the development environment to use it.
Once you've provisioned successfully, you'll get output like this:
Zulip development environment setup succeeded!
(zulip-venv) vagrant@vagrant-base-trusty-amd64:~/zulip$
If the (zulip-venv)
part is missing, this is because your
installation failed the first time before the Zulip virtualenv was
created. You can fix this by just closing the shell and running
vagrant ssh
again, or using source /srv/zulip-venv/bin/activate
.
Finally, if you encounter any issues that weren't caused by your Internet connection, please report them! We try hard to keep Zulip development environment provisioning free of bugs.
pip install
fails during vagrant up
on Ubuntu
Likely causes are:
- Networking issues
- Insufficient RAM. Check whether you've allotted at least two gigabytes of RAM, which is the minimum Zulip requires. If not, go to your VM settings and increase the RAM, then restart the VM.
npm install errors
The tools/provision
script may encounter an error related to npm install
that looks something like:
==> default: + npm install
==> default: Traceback (most recent call last):
==> default: File "/srv/zulip/tools/provision", line 195, in <module>
==> default:
==> default: sys.exit(main())
==> default: File "/srv/zulip/tools/provision", line 191, in main
==> default:
==> default: run(["npm", "install"])
==> default: File "/srv/zulip/scripts/lib/zulip_tools.py", line 78, in run
==> default:
==> default: raise subprocess.CalledProcessError(rc, args)
==> default: subprocess
==> default: .
==> default: CalledProcessError
==> default: :
==> default: Command '['npm', 'install']' returned non-zero exit status 34
The SSH command responded with a non-zero exit status. Vagrant
assumes that this means the command failed. The output for this command
should be in the log above. Please read the output to determine what
went wrong.
Usually this error is not fatal. Try connecting to the development environment and re-trying the command from withing the virtual machine:
christie@win10 ~/zulip
$ vagrant ssh
(zulip-venv)vagrant@vagrant-ubuntu-trusty-64:~
$ cd zulip
(zulip-venv)vagrant@vagrant-ubuntu-trusty-64:~/zulip
$ npm install
npm WARN optional Skipping failed optional dependency /chokidar/fsevents:
npm WARN notsup Not compatible with your operating system or architecture: fsevents@1.0.12
These are just warnings so it is okay to proceed and start the Zulip server.
vagrant-lxc errors
Permissions errors
When building the development environment using Vagrant and the LXC provider,
if you encounter permissions errors, you may need to chown -R 1000:$(whoami) /path/to/zulip
on the host before running vagrant up
in order to ensure that
the synced directory has the correct owner during provision. This issue will
arise if you run id username
on the host where username
is the user running
Vagrant and the output is anything but 1000. This seems to be caused by
Vagrant behavior; for more information, see the vagrant-lxc FAQ entry about
shared folder permissions.
NoMethodError
If you see the following error when you try to install the vagrant-lxc plugin:
/usr/lib/ruby/2.3.0/rubygems/specification.rb:946:in `all=': undefined method `group_by' for nil:NilClass (NoMethodError)
from /usr/lib/ruby/vendor_ruby/vagrant/bundler.rb:275:in `with_isolated_gem'
from /usr/lib/ruby/vendor_ruby/vagrant/bundler.rb:231:in `internal_install'
from /usr/lib/ruby/vendor_ruby/vagrant/bundler.rb:102:in `install'
from /usr/lib/ruby/vendor_ruby/vagrant/plugin/manager.rb:62:in `block in install_plugin'
from /usr/lib/ruby/vendor_ruby/vagrant/plugin/manager.rb:72:in `install_plugin'
from /usr/share/vagrant/plugins/commands/plugin/action/install_gem.rb:37:in `call'
from /usr/lib/ruby/vendor_ruby/vagrant/action/warden.rb:34:in `call'
from /usr/lib/ruby/vendor_ruby/vagrant/action/builder.rb:116:in `call'
from /usr/lib/ruby/vendor_ruby/vagrant/action/runner.rb:66:in `block in run'
from /usr/lib/ruby/vendor_ruby/vagrant/util/busy.rb:19:in `busy'
from /usr/lib/ruby/vendor_ruby/vagrant/action/runner.rb:66:in `run'
from /usr/share/vagrant/plugins/commands/plugin/command/base.rb:14:in `action'
from /usr/share/vagrant/plugins/commands/plugin/command/install.rb:32:in `block in execute'
from /usr/share/vagrant/plugins/commands/plugin/command/install.rb:31:in `each'
from /usr/share/vagrant/plugins/commands/plugin/command/install.rb:31:in `execute'
from /usr/share/vagrant/plugins/commands/plugin/command/root.rb:56:in `execute'
from /usr/lib/ruby/vendor_ruby/vagrant/cli.rb:42:in `execute'
from /usr/lib/ruby/vendor_ruby/vagrant/environment.rb:268:in `cli'
from /usr/bin/vagrant:173:in `<main>'
And you have vagrant version 1.8.1, then you need to patch vagrant manually. See this post for an explanation of the issue, which should be fixed when Vagrant 1.8.2 is released.
In the meantime, read this post for how to create and apply the patch.
It will look something like this:
christie@xenial:~
$ sudo patch --directory /usr/lib/ruby/vendor_ruby/vagrant < vagrant-plugin.patch
patching file bundler.rb
Permissions errors when running the test suite in LXC
See "Possible testing issues".
Specifying a proxy
If you need to use a proxy server to access the Internet, you will
need to specify the proxy settings before running Vagrant up
.
First, install the Vagrant plugin vagrant-proxyconf
:
vagrant plugin install vagrant-proxyconf.
Then create ~/.zulip-vagrant-config
and add the following lines to
it (with the appropriate values in it for your proxy):
HTTP_PROXY http://proxy_host:port
HTTPS_PROXY http://proxy_host:port
NO_PROXY localhost,127.0.0.1,.example.com
Now run vagrant up
in your terminal to install the development
server. If you ran vagrant up
before and failed, you'll need to run
vagrant destroy
first to clean up the failed installation.
You can also change the port on the host machine that Vagrant uses by
adding to your ~/.zulip-vagrant-config
file. E.g. if you set:
HOST_PORT 9971
(and halt and restart the Vagrant guest), then you would visit http://localhost:9971/ to connect to your development server.
If you'd like to be able to connect to your development environment from other machines than the VM host, you can manually set the host IP address in the '~/.zulip-vagrant-config' file as well. For example, if you set:
HOST_IP_ADDR 0.0.0.0
(and restart the Vagrant guest), your host IP would be 0.0.0.0, a special value for the IP address that means any IP address can connect to your development server.