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248 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: "Create Virtual Machines on a Chromebook with HashiCorp Vagrant" # Title of the blog post.
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date: 2023-02-20 # Date of post creation.
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lastmod: 2023-02-25
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description: "Pairing the powerful Linux Development Environment on modern Chromebooks with HashiCorp Vagrant to create and manage local virtual machines for development and testing" # Description used for search engine.
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featured: true # Sets if post is a featured post, making appear on the home page side bar.
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draft: false # Sets whether to render this page. Draft of true will not be rendered.
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toc: true # Controls if a table of contents should be generated for first-level links automatically.
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usePageBundles: true
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# menu: main
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# featureImage: "file.png" # Sets featured image on blog post.
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# featureImageAlt: 'Description of image' # Alternative text for featured image.
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# featureImageCap: 'This is the featured image.' # Caption (optional).
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thumbnail: "thumbnail.png" # Sets thumbnail image appearing inside card on homepage.
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# shareImage: "share.png" # Designate a separate image for social media sharing.
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codeLineNumbers: false # Override global value for showing of line numbers within code block.
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series: Projects
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tags:
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- linux
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- chromeos
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- homelab
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- infrastructure-as-code
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comment: true # Disable comment if false.
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---
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I've lately been trying to do more with [Salt](https://saltproject.io/) at work, but I'm still very much a novice with that tool. I thought it would be great to have a nice little portable lab environment where I could deploy a few lightweight VMs and practice managing them with Salt - without impacting any systems that are actually being used for anything. Along the way, I figured I'd leverage [HashiCorp Vagrant](https://www.vagrantup.com/) to create and manage the VMs, which would provide a declarative way to define what the VMs should look like. The VM (or even groups of VMs) would be specified in a single file, and I'd bypass all the tedious steps of creating the virtual hardware, attaching the installation media, installing the OS, and performing the initial configuration. Vagrant will help me build up, destroy, and redeploy a development environment in a simple and repeatable way.
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Also, because I'm a bit of a sadist, I wanted to do this all on my new [Framework Chromebook](https://frame.work/laptop-chromebook-12-gen-intel). I might as well put my 32GB of RAM to good use, right?
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It took a bit of fumbling, but this article describes what it took to get a Vagrant-powered VM up and running in the [Linux Development Environment](https://chromeos.dev/en/linux) on my Chromebook (which is currently running ChromeOS v111 beta).
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### Install the prerequisites
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There are are a few packages which need to be installed before we can move on to the Vagrant-specific stuff. It's quite possible that these are already on your system.... but if they *aren't* already present you'll have a bad problem[^problem].
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```shell
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sudo apt update
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sudo apt install \
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build-essential \
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gpg \
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lsb-release \
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wget
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```
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[^problem]: and [will not go to space today](https://xkcd.com/1133/).
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I'll be configuring Vagrant to use [`libvirt`](https://libvirt.org/) to interface with the [Kernel Virtual Machine (KVM)](https://www.linux-kvm.org/page/Main_Page) virtualization solution (rather than something like VirtualBox that would bring more overhead) so I'll need to install some packages for that as well:
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```shell
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sudo apt install virt-manager libvirt-dev
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```
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And to avoid having to `sudo` each time I interact with `libvirt` I'll add myself to that group:
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```shell
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sudo gpasswd -a $USER libvirt ; newgrp libvirt
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```
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And to avoid [this issue](https://github.com/virt-manager/virt-manager/issues/333) I'll make a tweak to the `qemu.conf` file:
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```shell
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echo "remember_owner = 0" | sudo tee -a /etc/libvirt/qemu.conf
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sudo systemctl restart libvirtd
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```
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I'm also going to use `rsync` to share a [synced folder](https://developer.hashicorp.com/vagrant/docs/synced-folders/basic_usage) between the host and the VM guest so I'll need to make sure that's installed too:
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```shell
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sudo apt install rsync
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```
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### Install Vagrant
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With that out of the way, I'm ready to move on to the business of installing Vagrant. I'll start by adding the HashiCorp repository:
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```shell
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wget -O- https://apt.releases.hashicorp.com/gpg | gpg --dearmor | sudo tee /usr/share/keyrings/hashicorp-archive-keyring.gpg
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echo "deb [signed-by=/usr/share/keyrings/hashicorp-archive-keyring.gpg] https://apt.releases.hashicorp.com $(lsb_release -cs) main" | sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/hashicorp.list
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```
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I'll then install the Vagrant package:
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```shell
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sudo apt update
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sudo apt install vagrant
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```
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I also need to install the [`vagrant-libvirt` plugin](https://github.com/vagrant-libvirt/vagrant-libvirt) so that Vagrant will know how to interact with `libvirt`:
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```shell
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vagrant plugin install vagrant-libvirt
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```
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### Create a lightweight VM
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Now I can get to the business of creating my first VM with Vagrant!
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Vagrant VMs are distributed as Boxes, and I can browse some published Boxes at [app.vagrantup.com/boxes/search?provider=libvirt](https://app.vagrantup.com/boxes/search?provider=libvirt) (applying the `provider=libvirt` filter so that I only see Boxes which will run on my chosen virtualization provider). For my first VM, I'll go with something light and simple: [`generic/alpine38`](https://app.vagrantup.com/generic/boxes/alpine38).
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So I'll create a new folder to contain the Vagrant configuration:
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```shell
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mkdir vagrant-alpine
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cd vagrant-alpine
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```
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And since I'm referencing a Vagrant Box which is published on Vagrant Cloud, downloading the config is as simple as:
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```shell
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vagrant init generic/alpine38
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```
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That lets me know that
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```text
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A `Vagrantfile` has been placed in this directory. You are now
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ready to `vagrant up` your first virtual environment! Please read
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the comments in the Vagrantfile as well as documentation on
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`vagrantup.com` for more information on using Vagrant.
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```
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Before I `vagrant up` the joint, I do need to make a quick tweak to the default Vagrantfile, which is what tells Vagrant how to configure the VM. By default, Vagrant will try to create a synced folder using NFS and will throw a nasty error when that (inevitably[^inevitable]) fails. So I'll open up the Vagrantfile to review and edit it:
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```shell
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vim Vagrantfile
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```
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Most of the default Vagrantfile is commented out. Here's the entirey of the configuration *without* the comments:
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```ruby
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Vagrant.configure("2") do |config|
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config.vm.box = "generic/alpine38"
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end
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```
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There's not a lot there, is there? Well I'm just going to add these two lines somewhere between the `Vagrant.configure()` and `end` lines:
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```ruby
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config.nfs.verify_installed = false
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config.vm.synced_folder '.', '/vagrant', type: 'rsync'
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```
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The first line tells Vagrant not to bother checking to see if NFS is installed, and will use `rsync` to share the local directory with the VM guest, where it will be mounted at `/vagrant`.
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So here's the full Vagrantfile (sans-comments[^magic], again):
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```ruby
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Vagrant.configure("2") do |config|
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config.vm.box = "generic/alpine38"
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config.nfs.verify_installed = false
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config.vm.synced_folder '.', '/vagrant', type: 'rsync'
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end
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```
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With that, I'm ready to fire up this VM with `vagrant up`! Vagrant will look inside `Vagrantfile` to see the config, pull down the `generic/alpine38` Box from Vagrant Cloud, boot the VM, configure it so I can SSH in to it, and mount the synced folder:
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```shell
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; vagrant up
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Bringing machine 'default' up with 'libvirt' provider...
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==> default: Box 'generic/alpine38' could not be found. Attempting to find and install...
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default: Box Provider: libvirt
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default: Box Version: >= 0
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==> default: Loading metadata for box 'generic/alpine38'
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default: URL: https://vagrantcloud.com/generic/alpine38
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==> default: Adding box 'generic/alpine38' (v4.2.12) for provider: libvirt
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default: Downloading: https://vagrantcloud.com/generic/boxes/alpine38/versions/4.2.12/providers/libvirt.box
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default: Calculating and comparing box checksum...
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==> default: Successfully added box 'generic/alpine38' (v4.2.12) for 'libvirt'!
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==> default: Uploading base box image as volume into Libvirt storage...
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[...]
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==> default: Waiting for domain to get an IP address...
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==> default: Waiting for machine to boot. This may take a few minutes...
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default: SSH address: 192.168.121.41:22
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default: SSH username: vagrant
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default: SSH auth method: private key
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[...]
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default: Key inserted! Disconnecting and reconnecting using new SSH key...
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==> default: Machine booted and ready!
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==> default: Rsyncing folder: /home/john/projects/vagrant-alpine/ => /vagrant
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```
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And then I can use `vagrant ssh` to log in to the new VM:
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```shell
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; vagrant ssh
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alpine38:~$ cat /etc/os-release
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NAME="Alpine Linux"
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ID=alpine
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VERSION_ID=3.8.5
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PRETTY_NAME="Alpine Linux v3.8"
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HOME_URL="http://alpinelinux.org"
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BUG_REPORT_URL="http://bugs.alpinelinux.org"
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```
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I can also verify that the synced folder came through as expected:
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```shell
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alpine38:~$ ls -l /vagrant
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total 4
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-rw-r--r-- 1 vagrant vagrant 3117 Feb 20 15:51 Vagrantfile
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```
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Once I'm finished poking at this VM, shutting it down is as easy as:
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```shell
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vagrant halt
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```
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And if I want to clean up and remove all traces of the VM, that's just:
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```shell
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vagrant destroy
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```
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[^inevitable]: NFS doesn't work properly from within an LXD container, like the ChromeOS Linux development environment.
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[^magic]: Through the magic of `egrep -v "^\s*(#|$)" $file`.
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### Create a heavy VM, as a treat
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Having proven to myself that Vagrant does work on a Chromebook, let's see how it does with a slightly-heavier VM.... like [Windows 11](https://app.vagrantup.com/oopsme/boxes/windows11-22h2).
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{{% notice info "Space Requirement" %}}
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Windows 11 makes for a pretty hefty VM which will require significant storage space. My Chromebook's Linux environment ran out of storage space the first time I attempted to deploy this guy. Fortunately ChromeOS makes it easy to allocate more space to Linux (**Settings > Advanced > Developers > Linux development environment > Disk size**). You'll probably need at least 30GB free to provision this VM.
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{{% /notice %}}
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Again, I'll create a new folder to hold the Vagrant configuration and do a `vagrant init`:
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```shell
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mkdir vagrant-win11
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cd vagrant-win11
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vagrant init oopsme/windows11-22h2
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```
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And, again, I'll edit the Vagrantfile before starting the VM. This time, though, I'm adding a few configuration options to tell `libvirt` that I'd like more compute resources than the default 1 CPU and 512MB RAM[^ram]:
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```ruby
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Vagrant.configure("2") do |config|
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config.vm.box = "oopsme/windows11-22h2"
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config.vm.provider :libvirt do |libvirt|
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libvirt.cpus = 4
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libvirt.memory = 4096
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end
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end
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```
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[^ram]: Note here that `libvirt.memory` is specified in MB. Windows 11 boots happily with 4096 MB of RAM.... and somewhat less so with just 4 MB. *Ask me how I know...*
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Now it's time to bring it up. This one's going to take A While as it syncs the ~12GB Box first.
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```shell
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vagrant up
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```
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Eventually it should spit out that lovely **Machine booted and ready!** message and I can log in! I *can* do a `vagrant ssh` again to gain a shell in the Windows environment, but I'll probably want to interact with those sweet sweet graphics. That takes a little bit more effort.
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First, I'll use `virsh -c qemu:///system list` to see the running VM(s):
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```shell
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; virsh -c qemu:///system list
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Id Name State
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---------------------------------------
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10 vagrant-win11_default running
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```
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Then I can tell `virt-viewer` that I'd like to attach a session there:
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```shell
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virt-viewer -c qemu:///system -a vagrant-win11_default
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```
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I log in with the default password `vagrant`, and I'm in Windows 11 land!
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![Windows 11 running on a Chromebook!](win-11-vm.png)
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### Next steps
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Well that about does it for a proof-of-concept. My next steps will be exploring [multi-machine Vagrant environments](https://developer.hashicorp.com/vagrant/docs/multi-machine) to create a portable lab environment including machines running several different operating systems so that I can learn how to manage them effectively with Salt. It should be fun!
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