Book Image

Mastering Proxmox - Third Edition

By : Wasim Ahmed
4 (1)
Book Image

Mastering Proxmox - Third Edition

4 (1)
By: Wasim Ahmed

Overview of this book

Proxmox is an open source server virtualization solution that has enterprise-class features for managing virtual machines, for storage, and to virtualize both Linux and Windows application workloads. You'll begin with a refresher on the advanced installation features and the Proxmox GUI to familiarize yourself with the Proxmox VE hypervisor. Then, you'll move on to explore Proxmox under the hood, focusing on storage systems, such as Ceph, used with Proxmox. Moving on, you'll learn to manage KVM virtual machines, deploy Linux containers fast, and see how networking is handled in Proxmox. You'll also learn how to protect a cluster or a VM with a firewall and explore the new high availability features introduced in Proxmox VE 5.0. Next, you'll dive deeper into the backup/restore strategy and see how to properly update and upgrade a Proxmox node. Later, you'll learn how to monitor a Proxmox cluster and all of its components using Zabbix. Finally, you'll discover how to recover Promox from disaster strikes through some real-world examples. By the end of the book, you'll be an expert at making Proxmox work in production environments with minimal downtime.
Table of Contents (23 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

Exploring LXC virtual machines


Containers are a different form of the virtual machine that is completely dependent on the operating system of the host node. They are kernel-based virtualizations that share the host operating system, thereby reducing the overhead that a KVM virtual machine has. Due to the lower overhead, the virtual machine density per node can be tighter and more containers can be hosted than KVM virtual machines. This comes at a price of less virtual machine isolation. Since containers are dependent on the underlying operating system, there can only be Linux-based containers. No Windows operating system can be containerized. Unlike KVM virtual machines, we cannot clone a container or turn a container into a template. Each container is a virtual instance that runs separately.

LXC is just another type of container technology. OpenVZ is another container technology, which had been used by Proxmox until version 4.0. There are two major differences between the LXC and OpenVZ...