Vagrant Host Manager

vagrant-hostmanager is a Vagrant 1.1+ plugin that manages the /etc/hosts file on guest machines (and optionally the host). Its goal is to enable resolution of multi-machine environments deployed with a cloud provider where IP addresses are not known in advance.

NOTE: Version 1.1 of the plugin prematurely introduced a feature to hook into commands other than vagrant up and vagrant destroy. Version 1.1 broke support for some providers. Version 1.2 reverts this feature until a suitable implementation supporting all providers is available.

Installation

Install the plugin following the typical Vagrant 1.1 procedure:

$ vagrant plugin install vagrant-hostmanager

Usage

To update the /etc/hosts file on each active machine, run the following command:

$ vagrant hostmanager

The plugin hooks into the vagrant up and vagrant destroy commands automatically. When a machine enters or exits the running state , all active machines with the same provider will have their /etc/hosts file updated accordingly. Set the hostmanager.enabled attribute to true in the Vagrantfile to activate this behavior.

To update the host's /etc/hosts file, set the hostmanager.manage_host attribute to true.

A machine's IP address is defined by either the static IP for a private network configuration or by the SSH host configuration. To disable using the private network IP address, set config.hostmanger.ignore_private_ip to true.

A machine's host name is defined by config.vm.hostname. If this is not set, it falls back to the symbol defining the machine in the Vagrantfile.

If the hostmanager.include_offline attribute is set to true, boxes that are up or have a private ip configured will be added to the hosts file.

In addition, the hostmanager.aliases configuration attribute can be used to provide aliases for your host names.

Example configuration:

Vagrant.configure("2") do |config|
  config.hostmanager.enabled = true
  config.hostmanager.manage_host = true
  config.hostmanager.ignore_private_ip = false
  config.hostmanager.include_offline = true
  config.vm.define 'example-box' do |node|
    node.vm.hostname = 'example-box-hostname'
    node.vm.network :private_network, ip: '192.168.42.42'
    node.hostmanager.aliases = %w(example-box.localdomain example-box-alias)
  end
end

As a last option, you can use hostmanager as a provisioner. This allows you to use the provisioning order to ensure that hostmanager runs before or after provisioning. The provisioner will collect hosts from boxes with the same provider as the running box.

Use:

config.vm.provision :hostmanager

Custom IP resolver

You can customize way, how host manager resolves IP address for each machine. This might be handy in case of aws provider, where host name is stored in ssh_info hash of each machine. This causes generation of invalid /etc/hosts file.

Custom IP resolver gives you oportunity to calculate IP address for each machine by yourself, giving You also access to the machine that is updating /etc/hosts. For example:

config.hostmanager.ip_resolver = proc do |vm, resolving_vm|
  if hostname = (vm.ssh_info && vm.ssh_info[:host])
    `host #{hostname}`.split("\n").last[/(\d+\.\d+\.\d+\.\d+)/, 1]
  end
end

Windows support

Hostmanager will detect Windows guests and hosts and use the appropriate path for the hosts file: %WINDIR%\System32\drivers\etc\hosts

By default on a Windows host, the hosts file is not writable without elevated privileges. If hostmanager detects that it cannot overwrite the file, it will attempt to do so with elevated privileges, causing the UAC prompt to appear.

UAC limitations

Due to limitations caused by UAC, cancelling out of the UAC prompt will not cause any visible errors, however the hosts file will not be updated.

Contribute

Contributions are welcome.

  1. Fork it
  2. Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
  3. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature')
  4. Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
  5. Create new Pull Request