Basic Provider Usage
Boxes
Vagrant boxes are all provider-specific. A box for VirtualBox is incompatible with the VMware Fusion provider, or any other provider. A box must be installed for each provider, and can share the same name as other boxes as long as the providers differ. So you can have both a VirtualBox and VMware Fusion "bionic64" box.
Installing boxes has not changed at all:
Vagrant now automatically detects what provider a box is for. This is visible when listing boxes. Vagrant puts the provider in parentheses next to the name, as can be seen below.
Vagrant Up
Once a provider is installed, you can use it by calling vagrant up
with the --provider
flag. This will force Vagrant to use that specific
provider. No other configuration is necessary!
In normal day-to-day usage, the --provider
flag is not necessary
since Vagrant can usually pick the right provider for you. More details
on how it does this is below.
If you specified a --provider
flag, you only need to do this for the
up
command. Once a machine is up and running, Vagrant is able to
see what provider is backing a running machine, so commands such as
destroy
, suspend
, etc. do not need to be told what provider to use.
Vagrant currently restricts you to bringing up one provider per machine. If you have a multi-machine environment, you can bring up one machine backed by VirtualBox and another backed by VMware Fusion, for example, but you cannot back the same machine with both VirtualBox and VMware Fusion. This is a limitation that will be removed in a future version of Vagrant.
Default Provider
As mentioned earlier, you typically do not need to specify --provider
ever. Vagrant is smart enough about being able to detect the provider
you want for a given environment.
Vagrant attempts to find the default provider in the following order:
The
--provider
flag on avagrant up
is chosen above all else, if it is present.If the
VAGRANT_DEFAULT_PROVIDER
environmental variable is set, it takes next priority and will be the provider chosen.Vagrant will go through all of the
config.vm.provider
calls in the Vagrantfile and try each in order. It will choose the first provider that is usable. For example, if you configure Hyper-V, it will never be chosen on Mac this way. It must be both configured and usable.Vagrant will go through all installed provider plugins (including the ones that come with Vagrant), and find the first plugin that reports it is usable. There is a priority system here: systems that are known better have a higher priority than systems that are worse. For example, if you have the VMware provider installed, it will always take priority over VirtualBox.
If Vagrant still has not found any usable providers, it will error.
Using this method, there are very few cases that Vagrant does not find the correct provider for you. This also allows each Vagrantfile to define what providers the development environment is made for by ordering provider configurations.
A trick is to use config.vm.provider
with no configuration at the top of
your Vagrantfile to define the order of providers you prefer to support: