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I set up vagrant to run a vm on a host os. What I would like to do is be able to ssh from other machines directly into the vagrant vm (ie, I shouldn't ssh into the host and then vagrant ssh, etc. into the vagrant vm).

Currently, I can ssh not using vagrant ssh from the host os using ssh [email protected] -p 2222. However, if I run the same command (replacing 127.0.0.1 with the host's ip address), I get "ssh connect to host XXXXX port 2222: Connection refused."

I tried adding my own port forwarding rule to vagrant:

config.vm.network :forwarded_port, guest: 22, host: 2222

But that doesn't allow ssh connection from either the host machine or any other machine in the network. Additionally, I spent a while with config.ssh in the vagrant docs. I think that most of those parameters though specify what port the vagrant vm is running ssh on.

I really don't think this should be that difficult. Does anyone know what I might be doing wrong, or what I should do differently to ssh into a vagrant vm from a remote server?

7
  • Is that port open in the firewall? Oct 6, 2013 at 21:48
  • Yes, it is. I can bind and listen to it with an example program I write and receive messages from other machines on it. Oct 9, 2013 at 19:21
  • I was able to make it work by using a port number different than 2222. For instance this works with me: config.vm.network :private_network, ip: "192.168.0.2" config.vm.network :forwarded_port, guest: 22, host: 2022 Nov 27, 2014 at 20:07
  • I had to change VirtualBox to use Bridged instead of Nat. Then I found the internal ip with ifconfig on the guest. After that ssh-copy-id from a remote to vagrant@_ip_from_ifconfig_ after which I could login without a password.
    – dmarr
    Oct 3, 2015 at 6:27
  • @dmarr - could you please provide more details on your answer ? I really can't get what you did to make it work. thanks Apr 3, 2018 at 15:32

4 Answers 4

38

If you don't want to change network to public you can override default port forwarding for ssh by this:

config.vm.network :forwarded_port, guest: 22, host: 2222, host_ip: "0.0.0.0", id: "ssh", auto_correct: true

This will forward guest 22 port to 2222 on your host machine and will be available from any ip, so you can access it outside your local machine.

3
  • 8
    I think this should be the correct answer. Smallest and least disruptive change to do what you want to do.
    – stewart99
    Mar 23, 2015 at 6:18
  • 2
    This solution used to work for me, but when I installed Vagrant 1.9.7 on a new machine, I tried using this solution and it failed. I searched online and found that the solution was to replace 0.0.0.0 with localhost (source) Jul 13, 2017 at 21:53
  • @AdamTaylor - your solution should be marked in the answer, it helped me to make it work. thanks Apr 6, 2018 at 9:42
18

Since v1.2.3 Vagrant port forwarding by default binds with 127.0.0.1 so only local connections are allowed.

You got "Connection refused" because the port forwarding was NOT binding to your network interfaces (e.g. eth0, wlan0). The port 2222 on your host is NOT even open to hosts in the same network (loopback interfaces not accessible to other hosts).

If you want to SSH directly to the Vagrant VM from a remote host (in the same LAN), the best and easiest way is to use Public Network (VirtualBox's Bridged networking mode).

Add the following to your Vagrantfile and do a vagrant reload.

It should bridge through one of the public network interfaces, you should be able to get the IP address after VM is up, vagrant ssh into it and run ifconfig -a or ip addr to get the IP address to ssh to from remote hosts.

Sample Vagrantfile

<!-- language: lang-rb -->

config.vm.network :public_network # 2nd interface bridged mode

or more advanced, you can set default network interface for public network

<!-- language: lang-rb -->

config.vm.network "public_network", :bridge => 'en1: Wi-Fi (AirPort)'

See more => Public Network

3
  • 1
    Thank you for your detailed answer. Couple of questions: 1) This suggests that the guest and host will have different ip addresses, correct? 2) This requires a dhcp server to be pretty permissive about handing out ip addresses, right? If I'm running on ec2 or other cloud providers, can I rely on that? (I'm pretty sure that I can't ...) 3) Why does your answer say that the remote machine must be in the same LAN? Oct 7, 2013 at 18:17
  • I have my config.vm.network already set to public, but but I am still unable to to connect via ssh from an external client. ssh -p 2222 [email protected] results in a Connection refused. Aug 13, 2015 at 3:55
  • I shouldn't have specified the port; sshing works fine without specifying the port. Aug 13, 2015 at 4:40
6

You can also add another rule to Vagrantfile like the following:

config.vm.network :forwarded_port, guest: 1234, host: 22

Connect to Vagrant with the default port (2222) and edit /etc/ssh/sshd_config, then add below Port 22 the port previously configured as 'guest', resulting:

...
Port 22 #Uncomment this line if it's commented
Port 1234
....

Finally, restart the ssh daemon or do vagrant reload (if you edited Vagrantfile while the VM was running you have to reload it) and now you can connect to Vagrant using 'host' port (22 in my case) from outside the host computer.

You can't remove the default port, because Vagrant would hang when starting up.

2

Use vagrant share --ssh

Vagrant now has a service for registering a Vagrant VM for remote SSH access automatically.

See here: https://www.vagrantup.com/docs/share/ssh.html

You call vagrant share --ssh.
This generates an SSH key (encrypted and password-protected), uploads it to a Hashicorp server, and returns a silly global box name (e.g. "rambunctious-deer-3496").
Then everybody who

  • has a Hashicorp Atlas account
  • knows the box name,
  • knows the password for the key, and
  • has Vagrant installed(!)

can perform remote SSH to the box via vagrant connect --ssh BOXNAME.
Vagrant takes care of all the admin stuff behind the scenes (here are some details).

Works as advertised.
I guess this will even work if the Vagrant host (not merely the VM) is behind a NAT.

Limitations:

  • vagrant share sessions expire (currently after 8 hours)
  • expect some latency, because all traffic is (presumably) routed through the Altas server
  • I have seen my remote connections close (for no obvious reason) after I had not used them for maybe 15 minutes.

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