--- layout: docs page_title: vagrant up - Command-Line Interface description: |- The "vagrant up" command is used to create, configuration, and provision a guest machine according to your Vagrantfile. --- # Up **Command: `vagrant up [name|id]`** This command creates and configures guest machines according to your [Vagrantfile](/vagrant/docs/vagrantfile/). This is the single most important command in Vagrant, since it is how any Vagrant machine is created. ## Options - `name` - Name of machine defined in [Vagrantfile](/vagrant/docs/vagrantfile/). Using `name` to specify the Vagrant machine to act on must be done from within a Vagrant project (directory where the Vagrantfile exists). - `id` - Machine id found with `vagrant global-status`. Using `id` allows you to call `vagrant up id` from any directory. - `--[no-]destroy-on-error` - Destroy the newly created machine if a fatal, unexpected error occurs. This will only happen on the first `vagrant up`. By default this is set. - `--[no-]install-provider` - If the requested provider is not installed, Vagrant will attempt to automatically install it if it can. By default this is enabled. - `--[no-]parallel` - Bring multiple machines up in parallel if the provider supports it. Please consult the provider documentation to see if this feature is supported. - `--provider x` - Bring the machine up with the given [provider](/vagrant/docs/providers/). By default this is "virtualbox". - `--[no-]provision` - Force, or prevent, the provisioners to run. - `--provision-with x,y,z` - This will only run the given provisioners. For example, if you have a `:shell` and `:chef_solo` provisioner and run `vagrant provision --provision-with shell`, only the shell provisioner will be run.