forked from Fediversity/meta
4.2 KiB
4.2 KiB
Provisioning a Proxmox VM
- Fediversity Proxmox
- Basic terminology
- Preparing the machine configuration
- Upload your ISO
- Creating the VM
- Install and start the VM
- Remove the VM
- Move the VM to another node
- Shutdown the VM
Fediversity Proxmox
- http://192.168.51.81:8006/.
- It is only accessible via Procolix's VPN; see with Kevin.
- You will need identifiers. Also see with Kevin. Select “Promox VE authentication server”.
- Ignore “You do not have a valid subscription” message.
Basic terminology
- Node
- physical host
Preparing the machine configuration
-
It is nicer if the machine is a QEMU guest. On NixOS:
services.qemuGuest.enable = true
- Choose name for your machine.
-
Choose static IPs for your machine. The IPv4 and IPv6 subnets available for Fediversity testing are:
95.215.187.0/24
. Gateway is95.215.187.1
.2a00:51c0:13:1305::/64
. Gateway is2a00:51c0:13:1305::1
.
- I have been using id
XXX
(starting from001
), namefediXXX
,95.215.187.XXX
and2a00:51c0:13:1305::XXX
. - Name servers should be
95.215.185.6
and95.215.185.7
. - Check Netbox to see which addresses are free.
Upload your ISO
- Go to Fediversity proxmox.
- In the left view, expand under the node that you want and click on “local”.
- Select “ISO Images”, then click “Upload”.
- Note: You can also download from URL.
- Note: You should click on “local” and not “local-zfs”.
Creating the VM
- Click “Create VM” at the top right corner.
General
- Node
- which node will host the VM; has to be the same
- VM ID
- Has to be unique, probably best to use the "xxxx" in "vm0xxxx" (yet to be decided)
- Name
- Usually "vm" + 5 digits, e.g. "vm02199"
- Resource pool
- Fediversity
OS
- Use CD/DVD disc image file (iso)
-
- Storage
- local, means storage of the node.
- ISO image
- select the image previously uploaded
No need to touch anything else
System
- BIOS
- OVMF (UEFI)
- EFI Storage
linstor_storage
; this is a storage shared by all of the Proxmox machines.- Pre-Enroll keys
- MUST be unchecked
- Qemu Agent
- check
Disks
- Tick “advanced” at the bottom.
- Disk size (GiB) :: 40 (depending on requirements)
- SSD emulation :: check (only visible if “Advanced” is checked)
- Discard :: check, so that blocks of removed data are cleared
CPU
- Sockets
- 1 (depending on requirements)
- Cores
- 2 (depending on requirements)
- Enable NUMA
- check
Memory
- Memory (MiB)
- choose what you want
- Ballooning Device
- leave checked (only visible if “Advanced” is checked)
Network
- Bridge
vnet1306
. This is the provisioning bridge; we will change it later.- Firewall
- uncheck, we will handle the firewall on the VM itself
Confirm
Install and start the VM
-
Start the VM a first time.
- Select the VM in the left panel. You might have to expand the node on which it is hosted.
- Select “Console” and start the VM.
- Install the VM as you would any other machine.
- /roberth/meta/src/commit/2945877d4f616314521ac90603ca515c1e2a87d5/proxmox/Shutdown%20the%20VM.
-
After the VM has been installed:
- Select the VM again, then go to “Hardware”.
- Double click on the CD/DVD Drive line. Select “Do not use any media” and press OK.
- Double click on Network Device, and change the bridge to
vnet1305
, the public bridge.
- Start the VM again.
Remove the VM
- /roberth/meta/src/commit/2945877d4f616314521ac90603ca515c1e2a87d5/proxmox/Shutdown%20the%20VM.
- On the top right corner, click “More”, then “Remove”.
- Enter the ID of the machine.
- Check “Purge from job configurations”
- Check “Destroy unreferenced disks owned by guest”
- Click “Remove”.
Move the VM to another node
- Make sure there is no ISO plugged in.
- Click on the VM. Click migrate. Choose target node. Go.
- Since the storage is shared, it should go pretty fast (~1 minute).
Shutdown the VM
- Find the VM in the left panel.
- At the top right corner appears a “Shutdown” button with a submenu.
- Clicking “Shutdown” sends a signal to shutdown the machine. This might not work if the machine is not listening for that signal.
- Brutal solution: in the submenu, select “Stop”.
- The checkbox “Overrule active shutdown tasks” means that the machine should be stopped even if a shutdown is currently ongoing. This is particularly important if you have tried to shut the machine down normally just before.