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Vagrant Drupal Development (A minor fork of: https://drupal.org/project/vdd)
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Vagrant Drupal Development ========================== Vagrant Drupal Development (VDD) is fully configured and ready to use development environment built on Linux (Ubuntu 12) with Vagrant, VirbualBox and Chef Solo provisioner. VDD is virtualized environment, so your base system will not be changed and remain clean after installation. You can create and delete as much environments as you wish without any consequences. Note: VDD works great with 6, 7 and 8 versions of Drupal. The main goal of the project is to provide easy to use fully functional and highly customizable Linux based environment for Drupal development. Setup is very simple, fast and can be performed on Windows, Linux or Mac platforms. It's simple to clone ready environment to your Laptop or home computer and then keep it synchronized. If you don't familiar with Vagrant, please read about it. Documentation is very simple to read and understand. http://docs.vagrantup.com/v2/ To start VDD you don't need to write your Vagrantfile. All configurations can be done inside simple JSON configuration file. Out of the box features ======================= * Configured Linux, Apache, MySQL and PHP stack * Drush with site aliases * PhpMyAdmin * Xdebug TODO: * Webgrind * Xhprof * Mailing system * Other development tools and useful software Getting Started =============== VDD uses Chef Solo provisioner. It means that your environment is built from the source code. All you need is to get base system, the latest code and build your environment. 1. Install VirtualBox https://www.virtualbox.org/wiki/Downloads 2. Install Vagrant http://docs.vagrantup.com/v2/installation/index.html 3. Prepare Vagrant box Boxes are the skeleton from which Vagrant machines are constructed. They are portable files which can be used by others on any platform that runs Vagrant to bring up a working environment. Run next command to download and prepare Ubuntu 12 box: $ vagrant box add precise32 http://files.vagrantup.com/precise32.box 4. Prepare VDD source code Download and unpack VDD source code and place it inside your home directory. 5. Adjust configuration (optional) You can edit config.json file to adjust your settings. If you use VDD first time it's recommended to leave config.json as is. Sample config.json is just fine. 6. Build your environment To build your environment execute next command inside your VDD copy: $ vagrant up Vagrant will start to build your environment. You'll see green status messages while Chef is configuring the system. 7. Visit 192.168.44.44 address If you didn't change default IP address in config.json file you'll see VDD's main page. Main page has links to configured sites, development tools and list of frequently asked questions. 8. SSH into your virtual machine Run next command inside your VDD copy's directory: $ vagrant ssh Now you have ready to use virtual development server. By default 2 sites (similar to virtual hosts) are configured: Drupal 7 and Drupal 8. You always can add new ones in config.json file. Basic Usage =========== Inside your VDD copy's directory you can find 'data' directory. It's synchronized with virtual machine. You should place your application's files inside sub folders with the name of your project. You can edit your application's files on the host machine using your favorite editor or connect to virtual machine by SSH. VDD will never delete data from data directory, but you should backup it. Vagrant's basic commands (should be executed inside VDD directory): * $ vagrant ssh SSH into virtual machine. * $ vagrant up Start virtual machine. * $ vagrant halt Halt virtual machine. * $ vagrant destroy Destroy you virtual machine. Source code and content of data directory will remain unchangeable. VirtualBox machine instance will be destroyed only. You can build your machine again with 'vagrant up' command. The command is useful if you want to save disk space. * $ vagrant provision Reconfigure virtual machine after source code change. * $ vagrant reload Reload virtual machine. Useful when you need to change network or synced folder settings. Official Vagrant site has beautiful documentation. http://docs.vagrantup.com/v2/ Customizations ============== You should understand that every time you start virtual machine Vagrant will fire Chef provisioner. If you want to customize your VDD copy you should do it right way. Templates override If you want to change some configuration files, for example, php.ini you should override default VDD's template. All templates a located in cookbooks/vdd/vdd/templates/default All you need is to copy template file into cookbooks/core/vdd/templates/ubuntu directory and edit it. Writing custom role If you want to make serious modifications you should write your custom role and add it in config.json file. Please, see vdd_example.json file inside roles directory. config.json description ======================= config.json is the main configuration file. Data from config.json is used to configure virtual machine. After editing file make sure that your JSON syntax is valid. http://jsonlint.com/ can help to check it. * ip (string, required) Static IP address of virtual machine. It is up to the users to make sure that the static IP doesn't collide with any other machines on the same network. While you can choose any IP you'd like, you should use an IP from the reserved private address space. * memory (string, required) RAM available to virtual machine. Minimum value is 1024. * synced_folder (object of strings, required) Synced folder configuration. * host_path (string, required) A path to a directory on the host machine. If the path is relative, it is relative to VDD root. * guest_path (string, required) Must be an absolute path of where to share the folder within the guest machine. * use_nfs (boolean, required) In some cases the default shared folder implementations (such as VirtualBox shared folders) have high performance penalties. If you're seeing less than ideal performance with synced folders, NFS can offer a solution. http://docs.vagrantup.com/v2/synced-folders/nfs. * php (object of strings, required) PHP configuration. * version (string or false, required) Desired PHP version. Please, see http://www.php.net/releases for proper version numbers. If you would like to use standard Ubuntu package you should set number to "false". Example: "version": false. * mysql (object of strings, required) MySQL configuration. * server_root_password (string, required) MySQL server root password. * sites (object ob objects, required) List of sites (similar to virtual hosts) to configure. At least one site is required. * Key (string, required) Machine name of a site. Name should fit expression '[^a-z0-9_]+'. Will be used for creating subdirectory for site, Drush alias name, database name, etc. * account_name (string, required) Drupal administrator user name. * account_pass (string, required) Drupal administrator password. * account_mail (string, required) Drupal administrator email. * site_name (string, required) Drupal site name. * site_mail (string, required) Drupal site email. * xdebug (object of strings, optional) Xdebug configuration. * remote_host (string, required) Selects the host where the debug client is running. * git (object of strings, optional) Git configuration. * custom_roles (array, required) List of custom roles. Key is required, but can be empty array ([]). If you find a problem, incorrect comment, obsolete or improper code or such, please let us know by creating a new issue at http://drupal.org/project/issues/vdd
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