Book Image

Mastering Proxmox - Second Edition

By : Wasim Ahmed
Book Image

Mastering Proxmox - Second Edition

By: Wasim Ahmed

Overview of this book

Proxmox is an open source server virtualization solution that has enterprise-class features to manage virtual machines, to be used for storage, and to virtualize both Linux and Windows application workloads. You begin with refresher on the advanced installation features and the Proxmox GUI to familiarize yourself with the Proxmox VE hypervisor. You then move on to explore Proxmox under the hood, focusing on the storage systems used with Proxmox. Moving on, you will learn to manage KVM Virtual Machines and Linux Containers and see how networking is handled in Proxmox. You will then learn how to protect a cluster or a VM with a firewall and explore the new HA features introduced in Proxmox VE 4 along with the brand new HA simulator. Next, you will dive deeper into the backup/restore strategy followed by learning how to properly update and upgrade a Proxmox node. Later, you will learn how to monitor a Proxmox cluster and all of its components using Zabbix. By the end of the book, you will become an expert at making Proxmox environments work in production environments with minimum downtime.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
Mastering Proxmox - Second Edition
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Sizing CPU and memory


A question often asked when it comes to creating virtual environment is how much CPU or memory will be needed in each node and how much to allocate per virtual machine. This is one of those questions that are very open ended because their answer varies greatly from environment to environment. However, there are a few pointers that need to be kept in mind to avoid over-allocation or under-allocation.

It is a fact that we will and often do run out of memory much sooner than CPU for a given Proxmox or any other host node. From the usage of each VM on the Proxmox nodes, we can determine the RAM and CPU requirement on that node. In this section, we are going to go over the factors that will help us to decide on CPU and memory needs.

Single socket versus multi-socket

A multi-socket node will always have better performance than a single socket regardless of the number of cores per CPU. They work much efficiently distributing VM work load. This is true for both Intel and AMD architectures...