anglepoised

Vagrant shell provisioning and usernames

I’ve been spending a lot of time with the excellent Vagrant recently but was getting mildly annoyed by starting in /home/vagrant when SSHing to a box, then having to cd /vagrant to get to the shared directory each time.

I thought I’d be clever and fix this minor annoyance by adding the following line to my shell provision script:

echo 'cd /vagrant' >> ~/.bashrc

A bit of a lazy fix (as is using shell provisioning instead of Puppet or Chef) but I thought it’d get the job done and save me a few seconds.

It didn’t work, though: when I ran vagrant up and ssh’d in, I couldn’t find my edit in ~/.bashrc. When I tried manually adding the line in an ssh session it worked perfectly, though. Huh?

I realised after an embarrassingly long time that maybe Vagrant used a different username when provisioning. Sure enough, adding a quick whoami to the provision script showed root, rather than the expected vagrant. Specifying the full path in the original line worked:

echo 'cd /vagrant' >> /home/vagrant/.bashrc

So, this is basically a reminder to myself that (a) Vagrant shell provisioning scripts run as root rather than vagrant and (b) one should never make presumptions about usernames.