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path: root/build-root/vagrant/README.moved
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2016-04-25Break boostrap.sh into piecesEd Warnicke1-5/+0
In order to make it easier for folks who have existing Centos or Ubuntu boxes to utilize the same 'Getting started' scripting that is used in Vagrant, as well as enable us to use that scripting in CI, broke up bootstrap.sh into update.sh - Things like apt-get update build.sh - Install any dependencies and build vpp clearinterfaces.sh - Clean off any non-default gateway interfaces. Used by vagrant. run.sh - Start vpp as a service on the box. A user (or CI) just wanting to get going and build on an existing Ubuntu or Centos image (ie, not via vagrant) can simply run build.sh Change-Id: I8f19342f163cad07c6c05def943a5fb8e394b879 Signed-off-by: Ed Warnicke <eaw@cisco.com>
2016-02-03Switched vagrant for ~/git/vpp to /vppEd Warnicke1-0/+5
build-root/vagrant/Vagrantfile was always mounting the vpp into /vpp Now rather than cloning it and building, we just use it as mounted. In order to let folks know what happened, a README.moved is copied into the ~/git/vpp so folks know what happened. In addition to make it easier for folks to do commits from withing the vagrant, we install git-review, and copy in the users .gitconfig and .gnupg directory. A couple of notes about this. VMWare goes much much faster in all cases. Virtualbox is a bit slower in the very first run (without ccache). One of the benefits of using the mounted /vpp though is that after your first vagrant up, you always have access to the .ccache, as it lives outside the vagrant, and so in steady state everything is faster. Change-Id: I2cd2c28181b3d7e664240dfe2249b5be3f1b9241 Signed-off-by: Ed Warnicke <eaw@cisco.com>