Difference between revisions of "Drupal VM"
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==Installed modules== | ==Installed modules== | ||
* admin_menu | * admin_menu | ||
− | * freelinking | + | * advanced help hint |
+ | * ctools | ||
+ | * entity | ||
+ | * entity reference | ||
+ | * freelinking | ||
+ | * organic groups | ||
* pathauto | * pathauto | ||
* tagclouds | * tagclouds | ||
* token | * token | ||
* wikitools | * wikitools | ||
+ | |||
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Revision as of 16:38, 7 March 2017
Contents
Introduction
Vagrant is a tool for managing development environments in a virtual machine with a focus on automation. We will be using Vagrant to install a Drupal 7 VM and using Ansible to provision the VM (run scripts and do other cool things).
Purpose
The purpose of this page is to document progress of installing a Drupal VM using Vagrant and Ansible. I have been following geerlingguy's drupal-vm guide:
Other helpful links:
Installation Procedures
- Refer to the Quick Start Guide.
- Install Ansible on the host machine (thorin) for faster provisioning in the vm
Drupal VM Basic Information
- Drupalvm is running in a VirtualBox VM under thorin (128.111.101.138). It can be accessed by going to [1] on thorin.
- Default login:
admin:admin
- Running Drupal 7.x.
Installed modules
- admin_menu
- advanced help hint
- ctools
- entity
- entity reference
- freelinking
- organic groups
- pathauto
- tagclouds
- token
- wikitools