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Vagrant Google Compute Engine (GCE) Provider

This is a Vagrant 1.2+ plugin that adds an Google Compute Engine (GCE) provider to Vagrant, allowing Vagrant to control and provision instances in GCE.

NOTE: This plugin requires Vagrant 1.2+.

Features

  • Boot Google Compute Engine instances.
  • SSH into the instances.
  • Provision the instances with any built-in Vagrant provisioner.
  • Minimal synced folder support via rsync.
  • Define zone-specific configurations so Vagrant can manage machines in multiple zones.

Usage

Install using standard Vagrant 1.1+ plugin installation methods. After installing, vagrant up and specify the google provider. For example,

$ vagrant plugin install vagrant-google
...
$ vagrant up --provider=google
...

Of course, prior to this you'll need to obtain a GCE-compatible box file for Vagrant. You may also need to ensure you have a ruby-dev and other utilities such as GNU make installed prior to installing the plugin.

Google Cloud Platform Setup

Prior to using this plugin, you will first need to make sure you have a Google Cloud Platform account, enable Google Compute Engine, and create a Service Account for API Access.

  1. Log in with your Google Account and go to Google Cloud Platform and click on the Try it now button.
  2. Create a new project and remember to record the Project ID
  3. Next, visit the Developers Console make sure to enable the Google Compute Engine service for your project If prompted, review and agree to the terms of service.
  4. While still in the Developers Console, go to API & AUTH, Credentials section and click the Create new Client ID button. In the pop-up dialog, select the Service Account radio button and the click the Create Client ID button.
  5. Make sure to download the P12 private key and save this file in a secure and reliable location. This key file will be used to authorize all API requests to Google Compute Engine.
  6. Still on the same page, find the newly created Service Account text block on the API Access page. Record the Email address (it should end with @developer.gserviceaccount.com) associated with the new Service Account you just created. You will need this email address and the location of the private key file to properly configure this Vagrant plugin.

Quick Start

After installing the plugin (instructions above), the quickest way to get started is to actually use a dummy Google box and specify all the details manually within a config.vm.provider block. So first, add the Google box using any name you want:

$ vagrant box add gce https://github.com/mitchellh/vagrant-google/raw/master/google.box
...

And then make a Vagrantfile that looks like the following, filling in your information where necessary.

Vagrant.configure("2") do |config|
  config.vm.box = "gce"

  config.vm.provider :google do |google, override|
    google.google_project_id = "YOUR_GOOGLE_CLOUD_PROJECT_ID"
    google.google_client_email = "YOUR_SERVICE_ACCOUNT_EMAIL_ADDRESS"
    google.google_json_key_location = "/path/to/your/private-key.json"

    override.ssh.username = "USERNAME"
    override.ssh.private_key_path = "~/.ssh/id_rsa"
    #override.ssh.private_key_path = "~/.ssh/google_compute_engine"
  end

end

And then run vagrant up --provider=google.

This will start a Debian 7 (Wheezy) instance in the us-central1-f zone, with an n1-standard-1 machine, and the "default" network within your project. And assuming your SSH information (see below) was filled in properly within your Vagrantfile, SSH and provisioning will work as well.

Note that normally a lot of this boilerplate is encoded within the box file, but the box file used for the quick start, the "google" box, has no preconfigured defaults.

SSH Support

In order for SSH to work properly to the GCE VM, you will first need to add your public key to the GCE metadata service for the desired VM user account. When a VM first boots, a Google-provided daemon is responsible for talking to the internal GCE metadata service and creates local user accounts and their respective ~/.ssh/authorized_keys entries. Most new GCE users will use the Cloud SDK gcloud compute utility when first getting started with GCE. This utility has built in support for creating SSH key pairs, and uploading the public key to the GCE metadata service. By default, gcloud compute creates a key pair named ~/.ssh/google_compute_engine[.pub].

Note that you can use the more standard ~/.ssh/id_rsa[.pub] files, but you will need to manually add your public key to the GCE metadata service so your VMs will pick up the the key. Note that they public key is typically prefixed with the username, so that the daemon on the VM adds the public key to the correct user account.

Additionally, you will probably need to add the key and username to override settings in your Vagrantfile like so:

config.vm.provider :google do |google, override|

    #...google provider settings are skipped...

    override.ssh.username = "testuser"
    override.ssh.private_key_path = "~/.ssh/id_rsa"

    #...google provider settings are skipped...

end

See the links below for more help with SSH and GCE VMs.

Box Format

Every provider in Vagrant must introduce a custom box format. This provider introduces google boxes. You can view an example box in example_boxes/. That directory also contains instructions on how to build a box.

The box format is basically just the required metadata.json file along with a Vagrantfile that does default settings for the provider-specific configuration for this provider.

Configuration

This provider exposes quite a few provider-specific configuration options:

  • google_client_email - The Client Email address for your Service Account.
  • google_key_location - The location of the P12 private key file matching your Service Account.
  • google_json_key_location - The location of the JSON private key file matching your Service Account.
  • google_project_id - The Project ID for your Google Cloud Platform account.
  • image - The image name to use when booting your instance.
  • instance_ready_timeout - The number of seconds to wait for the instance to become "ready" in GCE. Defaults to 20 seconds.
  • machine_type - The machine type to use. The default is "n1-standard-1".
  • disk_size - The disk size in GB. The default is 10.
  • disk_name - The disk name to use. If the disk exists, it will be reused, otherwise created.
  • metadata - Custom key/value pairs of metadata to add to the instance.
  • name - The name of your instance. The default is "i-yyyyMMddHH". Example 2014/10/01 10:00:00 is "i-2014100101".
  • network - The name of the network to use for the instance. Default is "default".
  • tags - An array of tags to apply to this instance.
  • zone - The zone name where the instance will be created.
  • can_ip_forward - Boolean whether to enable IP Forwarding.
  • external_ip - The external IP address to use.
  • service_accounts or scopes - An array of OAuth2 account scopes for services that the instance will have access to. Those can be both full API scopes and just endpoint aliases (the part after ...auth/), for example: ['bigquery', 'https://www.googleapis.com/auth/compute'].

These can be set like typical provider-specific configuration:

Vagrant.configure("2") do |config|
  # ... other stuff

  config.vm.provider :google do |google|
    google.google_project_id = "YOUR_GOOGLE_CLOUD_PROJECT_ID"
    google.google_client_email = "YOUR_SERVICE_ACCOUNT_EMAIL_ADDRESS"
    google.google_json_key_location = "/path/to/your/private-key.json"
  end
end

In addition to the above top-level configs, you can use the zone_config method to specify zone-specific overrides within your Vagrantfile. Note that the top-level zone config must always be specified to choose which zone you want to actually use, however. This looks like this:

Vagrant.configure("2") do |config|

  config.vm.box = "gce"

  config.vm.provider :google do |google|
    google.google_project_id = "YOUR_GOOGLE_CLOUD_PROJECT_ID"
    google.google_client_email = "YOUR_SERVICE_ACCOUNT_EMAIL_ADDRESS"
    google.google_json_key_location = "/path/to/your/private-key.json"

    # Make sure to set this to trigger the zone_config
    google.zone = "us-central1-f"

    google.zone_config "us-central1-f" do |zone1f|
        zone1f.name = "testing-vagrant"
        zone1f.image = "debian-7-wheezy-v20150127"
        zone1f.machine_type = "n1-standard-4"
        zone1f.zone = "us-central1-f"
        zone1f.metadata = {'custom' => 'metadata', 'testing' => 'foobarbaz'}
        zone1f.scopes = ['bigquery', 'monitoring', 'https://www.googleapis.com/auth/compute']
        zone1f.tags = ['web', 'app1']
    end
  end
end

The zone-specific configurations will override the top-level configurations when that zone is used. They otherwise inherit the top-level configurations, as you would expect.

There are a few example Vagrantfiles located in the vagrantfile_examples/ directory.

Networks

Networking features in the form of config.vm.network are not supported with vagrant-google, currently. If any of these are specified, Vagrant will emit a warning, but will otherwise boot the GCE machine.

Synced Folders

There is minimal support for synced folders. Upon vagrant up, vagrant reload, and vagrant provision, the Google provider will use rsync (if available) to uni-directionally sync the folder to the remote machine over SSH.

This is good enough for all built-in Vagrant provisioners (shell, chef, and puppet) to work!

Development

To work on the vagrant-google plugin, clone this repository out, and use Bundler to get the dependencies:

$ bundle

Once you have the dependencies, verify the unit tests pass with rake:

$ bundle exec rake

If those pass, you're ready to start developing the plugin. You can test the plugin without installing it into your Vagrant environment by just creating a Vagrantfile in the top level of this directory (it is gitignored) that uses it, and uses bundler to execute Vagrant:

$ bundle exec vagrant up --provider=google

Acceptance testing

Work-in-progress: Acceptance tests are based on vagrant-spec library which is currently under active development so they may occasionally break.

Before you start acceptance tests, you'll need to set the authentication variables accordingly.

Next, export your GCP authentication data:

export GOOGLE_CLIENT_EMAIL="[email protected]"
export GOOGLE_PROJECT_ID="your-google-cloud-project-id"
export GOOGLE_JSON_KEY_LOCATION="/full/path/to/your/private-key.json"

export GOOGLE_SSH_USER="testuser"
export GOOGLE_SSH_KEY_LOCATION="/home/testuser/.ssh/id_rsa"

After, you can run acceptance tests by running the run task in acceptance namespace:

$ bundle exec rake acceptance:run

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