This prevents any unexpected connection related error from breaking
the wait loop while windows reboots. If an underlying problem unrelated
to the guest is causing exceptions, the exception will still be raised
to the user, simply after the loop has exceeded the defined maximum
wait time.
Fixes#11238
This change allows the vagrant user to see the systemd process in the
event that the hidepid mount option is enabled.
Also adds sudo: true to other tests that use `systemd?`
Since the root file system is marked as read-only, attempting to
link the shared directory to `/vagrant` will fail. If the guest
path is on the root file system and APFS is used, create the
link as a firmlink instead.
This ensures that rsync can be installed on an Alpine Linux machine where the
apk cache may not be current.
Display a warning if the vagrant-alpine plugin is installed, since Alpine guest
support has been merged into Vagrant core.
getent queries the system resolver for the hostname - but it's not
the resolver we're interested in. In fact, the hostname-to-be-set
may already exist in DNS (becuase DNS really is a nifty thing and
can do a lot of things which are not that possible with /etc/hosts
alone), in which case getent will "not fail" and vagrant will believe
the hostname had already been set.
Instead, query hostnamectl for the "static" hostname - that's the
one we will be setting, so we're ok IFF hostnamectl returns exactly
what we would be setting.
- nfs.service got recently removed in openSUSE Tumbleweed and calling service
restart nfs errors out on Tumbleweed. nfs.service has been an alias to
nfs-client.target for a very long time and can thus be safely substituted.
- all actively supported versions of openSUSE & SLE are using systemd now
=> no reason not to use systemctl
The workaround for the broken repository should be safe to be removed,
since the last affected Alpine version (<=3.3) EOL'd in November of 2017.
The remaining important commands can be split out into seperate calls
of sudo(), which removes the need for manual exit-code checking
(since it aborts by itself when a command fails) and makes the code
easier to handle in general.
According to ifconfig(8), to list only Ethernet interfaces, excluding
all other interface types, including the loopback interface, the command
to use should be:
ifconfig -l ether
Related to: #8760
This is a follow-up of #10717 to use the same naming convention as on
Linux guests, in order to reduce the diffs.
Also adds the missing capability to `unmount_virtualbox_shared_folder`
on FreeBSD guests.
Since the virtualbox guest additions seem to only be available for
freeBSD, move the shared folder functionality over to freebsd guests
rather than all BSD guests.