This is a big commit, and I apologize in advance for the future
git-blames all pointing to me. This commit does a few things:
1. Merges the website/docs and website/www repo into a single website repo
to be in line with other HashiCorp projects
2. Updates to use middleman-hashicorp
3. Converts less to scss to be in line with other projects
4. Updates page styles to be in line with other projects
5. Optimizes images
6. Prepare for S3 + Fastly deployment with scripts, etc.
7. Removes blog posts (they have been transferred to hashicorp.com with
redirects in place
8. Updated sitemap generation script for better SEO
9. Fixed many broken links
10. Add description to all fields
2.7 KiB
| layout | page_title | sidebar_current | description |
|---|---|---|---|
| docs | Why Vagrant? | why | Vagrant provides easy to configure, reproducible, and portable work environments built on top of industry-standard technology and controlled by a single consistent workflow to help maximize the productivity and flexibility of you and your team. |
Why Vagrant?
Vagrant provides easy to configure, reproducible, and portable work environments built on top of industry-standard technology and controlled by a single consistent workflow to help maximize the productivity and flexibility of you and your team.
To achieve its magic, Vagrant stands on the shoulders of giants. Machines are provisioned on top of VirtualBox, VMware, AWS, or any other provider. Then, industry-standard provisioning tools such as shell scripts, Chef, or Puppet, can be used to automatically install and configure software on the machine.
How Vagrant Benefits You
If you are a developer, Vagrant will isolate dependencies and their
configuration within a single disposable, consistent environment, without
sacrificing any of the tools you are used to working with (editors, browsers,
debuggers, etc.). Once you or someone else creates a single Vagrantfile, you just need to vagrant up and everything is installed and
configured for you to work. Other members of your team create their
development environments from the same configuration, so whether you are working
on Linux, Mac OS X, or Windows, all your team members are running code in
the same environment, against the same dependencies, all configured the same way.
Say goodbye to "works on my machine" bugs.
If you are an operations engineer, Vagrant gives you a disposable environment and consistent workflow for developing and testing infrastructure management scripts. You can quickly test things like shell scripts, Chef cookbooks, Puppet modules, and more using local virtualization such as VirtualBox or VMware. Then, with the same configuration, you can test these scripts on remote clouds such as AWS or RackSpace with the same workflow. Ditch your custom scripts to recycle EC2 instances, stop juggling SSH prompts to various machines, and start using Vagrant to bring sanity to your life.
If you are a designer, Vagrant will automatically set everything up that is required
for that web app in order for you to focus on doing what you do best:
design. Once a developer configures Vagrant, you do not need to worry about
how to get that app running ever again. No more bothering other developers
to help you fix your environment so you can test designs. Just check out the
code, vagrant up, and start designing.