Sorry for the language mistakes I've made. I'm trying to prevent vagrant asking the password when it mounts shared folders by NFS:
[server] Exporting NFS shared folders...
Preparing to edit /etc/exports. Administrator privileges will be required...
[sudo] password for timur: #!!!
I've red many online resources like github and other author's posts, but nothing work for me...
I tried the instructions was found here. I don't have deep cli working knowledge. So could anybody give correct solution for my problem?
The official Vagrant docs now cover this: https://www.vagrantup.com/docs/synced-folders/nfs.html#root-privilege-requirement
You need to add entries to the
/etc/sudoers
file, and the way to edit that is to type this at the terminal:sudo visudo
Type your password, and you're editing the file. You'll want to paste these lines below (depending on whether you are running Vagrant on OS X or Linux.
If you're not familiar with vim, which it opens in, this page helped. Basically, copy the appropriate block of text below. Then, in visudo, go to the spot you want to paste text into the file (the end of the file is fine), and hit "i" to go into insert mode. CMD+V to paste your text. Then, hit ESC, then type
:w
to save your changes and then:q
to quit.As of version 1.7.3, the sudoers file in OS X should have these entries:
And Linux should have these entries:
Note that these change from one version of Vagrant to another, so the above might be outdated. The important thing is that the docs now cover it.
The exact commands can change between Vagrant versions, so it's impossible to list ones that would always work.
Anyway, the sudoers rules in this gist should be still quite close. Check out /var/log/auth.log if it reveals the actual commands for your Vagrant version and adapt the rules accordingly.
For anyone doing this for OSX (I'm on MacOS Sierra Version 10.12.6) I had a hard time with permissions even after adding those lines. This post really helped:
Basicly its the fact that you dont have permissions set for the that folder yourself. So you need to run:
adding
, nfs_export: false
at the end of theconfig.vm.synced_folder
-lines in the Vagrantfile, solved it for me.If you already have a working nfs-config, and don't need your Vagrant to overwrite it each time you start, then you can just disable the writing to the export-file.
This also solves the collision problem, if you have more then one Vagrant trying to access the same folder, as for example have 2 almost identical Vagrants, one running php 5.6 and one running php 7.2.
TL&DR: Add the following override.vm.synced_folder ".", "/vagrant", disabled: true
Rational: By default the Vagrant tries to detect any NFS / SMB folders. While I can understand why the developers added this feature, for my use-case this is very annoying. The solution is to simply DISABLE NFS folder syncing.
This can be done by overriding the VM synced folder option. I have attached the following config for digital ocean for your consideration, so you can see the entire configuration.