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On 20 June 2014 17:50, Remko Popma <remko.po...@gmail.com> wrote: > I'd like to try this, so I'm looking forward to such a wiki page! > > Ralph, we could add "Vagrant*" to the excludes in the assembly. That would > make sense to me as we're already excluding IDE files like .project etc > there. I do agree that a wiki page would be a better "home" for this file, > again similar to our policy not to commit IDE files. > > Sent from my iPhone > > On 2014/06/21, at 2:29, Matt Sicker <boa...@gmail.com> wrote: > > And for other VMs, well, there'd have to be different configurations. > There's a way to configure multiple VMs in a single Vagrantfile (e.g., for > making a cluster of VMs), so I'll take a look into that as well. > > > On 20 June 2014 12:29, Matt Sicker <boa...@gmail.com> wrote: > >> It's in the root directory (i.e., /vagrant, next to /var, /home, /etc). >> It's easiest to set up in the root of your project because it automatically >> shares that directory in the VM. Otherwise, you need to add more shared >> directories and such. >> >> So yes, if you navigate to /vagrant (not /home/vagrant), you'll see all >> the sources. >> >> I'll write up some wiki docs this weekend to explain more about it. Good >> idea. >> >> >> On 20 June 2014 12:00, Ralph Goers <ralph.go...@dslextreme.com> wrote: >> >>> I should also add that the wiki is the perfect place for this because >>> you can also document how to install vagrant and virtualbox as well as how >>> to start, stop and use the VM. >>> >>> Ralph >>> >>> On Jun 20, 2014, at 9:51 AM, Ralph Goers <ralph.go...@dslextreme.com> >>> wrote: >>> >>> OK, so this builds an ubuntu VM. What if I want a Windows VM, or a >>> CentOS or Redhat VM? I am just having a problem understanding why this >>> file would be in the root of the project. I could understand if we had a >>> tools sub-project or something outside of the project. I just don’t know >>> why this would be in the source that we release. >>> >>> Ralph >>> >>> >>> On Jun 20, 2014, at 7:55 AM, Matt Sicker <boa...@gmail.com> wrote: >>> >>> It's a quick and easy way for any developer to get up and running with a >>> VM for testing. You just run "vagrant up", then "vagrant ssh", then >>> everything from the project is available in the /vagrant directory in the >>> VM. You can compile, run tests, etc. >>> >>> >>> On 20 June 2014 09:23, Ralph Goers <rgo...@apache.org> wrote: >>> >>>> I don't really understand. I use VMware fusion and don't need this >>>> file. Now matter what OS I want. Why does it need to be part of the >>>> project? >>>> >>>> Ralph >>>> >>>> On Jun 20, 2014, at 6:48 AM, Matt Sicker <boa...@gmail.com> wrote: >>>> >>>> I added that. See >>>> http://www.vagrantup.com/ >>>> >>>> It's for creating a Linux VM to test log4j in since we all use Windows >>>> or Mac. >>>> >>>> >>>> On 19 June 2014 22:58, Ralph Goers <ralph.go...@dslextreme.com> wrote: >>>> >>>>> What is the file “Vagrantfile” checked in to the root of trunk for? >>>>> Was it committed by accident? >>>>> >>>>> Ralph >>>>> --------------------------------------------------------------------- >>>>> To unsubscribe, e-mail: log4j-dev-unsubscr...@logging.apache.org >>>>> For additional commands, e-mail: log4j-dev-h...@logging.apache.org >>>>> >>>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> -- >>>> Matt Sicker <boa...@gmail.com> >>>> >>>> >>> >>> >>> -- >>> Matt Sicker <boa...@gmail.com> >>> >>> >>> >>> >> >> >> -- >> Matt Sicker <boa...@gmail.com> >> > > > > -- > Matt Sicker <boa...@gmail.com> > > -- Matt Sicker <boa...@gmail.com>