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Welcome to the Development VMs for DevNet technologies project.

The default username/password for the DevNet Dev VMs is "cisco-devnet/CISCO-DEVNET".

This project contains a variety of build scripts and Vagrant files for creating Vagrant boxes. Pre-built OVAs for those boxes are available for download from DevNet as described in this community:

https://communities.cisco.com/community/developer/dev-vm

For details about licencing for software bundled with these Dev VMs, see the README.

If you want to build your own box, read on.

How to Build Vagrant Boxes

Building Vagrant boxes, especially for multiple providers, is a fiddly business. The tech works, as exhibited here, but quite how, why and under which circumstances, required a bit of investigation. For the sake of posterity, and do I don't forget, I have provided notes of how this all came together here.

If you are interested in the details, read on. If you just want to "up" the boxes, then see these instructions for upping the boxes.

Also see these notes about things that go wrong.

What is a Vagrant Box, and who is "vagrant"?

A Vagrant box is a tar ball/zip package of the contents of a VM with a metadata.json file. See http://docs.vagrantup.com/v2/boxes/base.html and http://docs.vagrantup.com/v2/boxes/format.html.

The special part of how Vagrant boxes work is the "vagrant" user. Every Vagrant box has to have such a user, with sudo privileges, as that is the account used to connect via ssh and drive the automated provisioning process defined in the Vagrantfile.

In Linux that is quite straightforward, including the addition of the insecure keypair, the default "vagrant" password and the password-less sudo. In addition, setting the UUID to a number less than 1000 (900 for these VMs) also hides the vagrant user on the login screen, see http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=1344414.

So, creating a Vagrant box is a simple process of:

  1. Obtaining a suitable ISO.
  2. Create a VM from that ISO.
  3. Add the vagrant user to the VM.
  4. Package the box.
  5. Uhm, that's it ...

Why Different Providers?

In this case, where we have two VM flavours for VirtualBox and VMware, the main motivation is that each VM flavour has different helper utillities. VBox Guest additions in the the case of VirtualBox, and VMWare tools in the case of VMware.

Whilst it is possible to create a single VM OVA that has both the VBox Guest Additions and VMware tools installed, and then to use that in either VBox, or one of the VMware options (Fusion, Player, Workstation, ESXi and, potentially, so on), issues do arise.

A VM created in VBox, and then used in VMWare Fusion, starts up, but then displays an error message about the VBox Guest Additions. This is potentially harmless, but would, at the very least, create a degree of confusion.

Alternatively, if one starts with a VM in Fusion, exports to an OVA, and then seeks to import to VBox, one hits this issue with the disk controllers:

https://forums.virtualbox.org/viewtopic.php?f=8&t=61624

I have tried changing the disk driver in the Fusion VM, exporting the result to an OVA and importing into VBox, but that does not seem to work with either the SATA or IDE controller optios in Fusion. C'est la vie, two base boxes it is.

How Does One Create a VBox VM from a VMware VM?

The concept is simple, in that one creates a VBox VM of the given target type, i.e. Ubuntu, without a disk, and then one clones the disk from the VMware VM to use with the VBox VM. Then one uninstalls vmware tools and installs the VBox helper. This explained in detail below.

I used this tutorial as a guide: http://www.dedoimedo.com/computers/virtualbox-clone.html

  1. Create the VBox VM

Create a new VM as illustrated below. There is nothing new or different at this step.

Create a new VM

  1. Clone the HD from the VMware Fusion VM
$ VBoxManage clonehd ~/Documents/Virtual\ Machines.localized/Cisco-DevNet-DevVM-Base-Vagrant-VMware.vmwarevm/Cisco-DevNet-DevVM-Base-Vagrant-VMware-disk1-cl1.vmdk ~/VirtualBox\ VMs/Cisco-DevNet-DevVM-Base-Vagrant-VBox/Cisco-DevNet-DevVM-Base-Vagrant-VBox-disk1-cl1.vmdk 
0%...10%...20%...30%...40%...50%...60%...70%...80%...90%...100%
Clone hard disk created in format 'VMDK'. UUID: 5cc62468-beaa-4160-adef-91859b8a3ea3
  1. Choose the Cloned Disk for the New VM

Rather than create a new disk for the new VM, choose the disk just cloned from the VMware Fusion VM.

Create a new VM

  1. Remove VMware Tools and Install VBox Guest Additions

Start the VBox VM and log in as cisco-devnet. Note that you will be forced to change the password at this first login, so you will need to reset it back to the default later.

Bring up a terminal, then do the following. Note that there is no copy-and-paste from the host to the VM available yet. The password for the vagrant user is "vagrant".

$ su - vagrant
$ cd vmware-tools-distrib/bin
$ sudo ./vmware-uninstall-tools.pl
$ cd
$ sudo rm -rf vmware-tools-distrib/bin

Then install Guest Additions via the Devices Menu.

  1. Reset Password and Logout

The default password for the cisco-devnet user is "CISCO-DEVNET", so that needs to be reset with the passwd command:

Packaging Boxes

Packaging boxes varies depending on the provider.

VirtualBox

The simple case is the VBox (virtualbox) provider, as that is the Vagrant default and so built into the framework. Given the VBox VM created above, one would use the commands below on OSX:

$ vagrant package --base Cisco-DevNet-DevVM-Base-Vagrant-VBox --output
devnet-dev-base-vbox.box

==> Cisco-DevNet-DevVM-Base-Vagrant-VBox: Attempting graceful shutdown of VM...
...
==> Cisco-DevNet-DevVM-Base-Vagrant-VBox: Forcing shutdown of VM...
==> Cisco-DevNet-DevVM-Base-Vagrant-VBox: Exporting VM...
==> Cisco-DevNet-DevVM-Base-Vagrant-VBox: Compressing package to:
.../devnet-dev-base-vbox.box

An alternative approach to packaging, that one can use when one has a running VM 'up'ed from a Vagrant box, which one has modified, is this:

$ vagrant package --output devnet-dev-base-vbox.box
==> default: Attempting graceful shutdown of VM...
==> default: Clearing any previously set forwarded ports...
==> default: Exporting VM...
==> default: Compressing package to: .../git/devnet-dev-vms/devnet-dev-base-vbox/devnet-dev-base-vbox.box

Note that this example is in the git directory as that is where the Vagrantfile is. The box file should not be pushed to git, it should be added locally, or at https://atlas.hashicorp.com, and then deleted.

Having created the box package, one should see something like:

$ ls -la devnet-dev-base-vbox 
-rw-r--r--  1 ...  staff  3793457667  2 Jul 11:26 devnet-dev-base-vbox.box

Then one can add the box locally for testing like this (note the --force that allows one to do this as often as one needs to):

$ vagrant box add --force --name devnet-dev-base-vbox devnet-dev-base-vbox.box
==> box: Adding box 'devnet-dev-base-vbox' (v0) for provider: 
    box: Downloading: file:///.../git/devnet-dev-vms/devnet-dev-base-vbox/devnet-dev-base-vbox.box
==> box: Successfully added box 'devnet-dev-base-vbox' (v0) for 'virtualbox'!

To then use the local box, given a suitable Vagrantfile, one does this:

$ vagrant up --provider virtualbox
Bringing machine 'default' up with 'virtualbox' provider...
==> default: Importing base box 'devnet-dev-base-vbox'...

Or one can do this:

$ vagrant init devnet-dev-base-vbox
$ vagrant up --provider=virtualbox

VMware

The vmware provider(s) have to be purchased before one can use them.

The packaging process for VMware based boxes is entirely manual. The steps here are derived from these instructions.

The files that are strictly required for a VMware machine to function are: nvram, vmsd, vmx, vmxf, and vmdk files, as well as a metadata.json file with these contents:

{
  "provider": "vmware_desktop"
}

Then, for a VMware Fusion VM called "Cisco-DevNet-DevVM-Base-Vagrant-VMware", one can follow these steps, when the VM has been shutdown (file names may differ):

$ cd ~/Documents/Virtual\ Machines.localized/Cisco-DevNet-DevVM-Base-Vagrant-VMware.vmwarevm
$ /Applications/VMware\ Fusion.app/Contents/Library/vmware-vdiskmanager -d Cisco-DevNet-DevVM-Base-Vagrant-VMware-disk1-cl1.vmdk
$ /Applications/VMware\ Fusion.app/Contents/Library/vmware-vdiskmanager -k Cisco-DevNet-DevVM-Base-Vagrant-VMware-disk1-cl1.vmdk
$ rm *.plist
$ rm *.log
$ rm -rf *.lck
$ tar cvzf devnet-dev-base-vmware.box ./*
$ vagrant box add --force --name devnet-dev-base-vmware devnet-dev-base-vmware.box
devnet-dev-base-vmware.box
...

To then use the local box, given a suitable Vagrantfile, one does this:

$ vagrant up --provider=vmware_fusion

Or one can do this:

$ vagrant init devnet-dev-base-vmware
$ vagrant up --provider=vmware_fusion

Adding Boxes to Atlas

The devnet-dev-base-vbox is available at: https://atlas.hashicorp.com/CiscoDevNet/boxes/devnet-dev-base-vbox

The devnet-dev-base-vmware is available at: https://atlas.hashicorp.com/CiscoDevNet/boxes/devnet-dev-base-vmware

In order to get those boxes there, one has to add boxes via the web UI, or use Packer. Note that packer is not being used for these VMs yet.

Note that uploading a box does not release it, so one needs do make sure that one explicitly releases the box, via "Edit" and "Release version".

To test whether that has worked, one needs to delete the local copy of the boxes that one has created so that the box will be downloaded as it won't be found locally, like this (this will, not incidentally, save a lot of disk space also):

$ cd ~/.vagrant.d/boxes/
$ ls
devnet-dev-base-vbox	devnet-dev-base-vmware
$ rm -rf *

Then see the details of how to up the boxes.

Creating the OVA

At https://communities.cisco.com/community/developer/dev-vm these VMs are made available as pre-built OVAs. Those OVAs are created by uping the box with either VBox or VMware Fusion, then shutting the resulting VM down, and then exporting to an OVA via File->Export (to OVF/OVA).

The OVAs have the file name format of:

Cisco-DevNet-DevVM-Base-Vagrant-VBox_DAY_MONTH_YEAR.ova Cisco-DevNet-DevVM-Base-Vagrant-VMware_DAY_MONTH_YEAR.ova

For example:

Cisco-DevNet-DevVM-Base-Vagrant-VBox_7_JULY_2015.ova Cisco-DevNet-DevVM-Base-Vagrant-VMware_7_JULY_2015.ova

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