Book Image

Proxmox Cookbook

By : Wasim Ahmed, Ravi K Jangid
Book Image

Proxmox Cookbook

By: Wasim Ahmed, Ravi K Jangid

Overview of this book

Proxmox VE's intuitive interface, high availability, and unique central management system puts it on par with the world’s best virtualization platforms. Its simplicity and high quality of service is what makes it the foremost choice for most system administrators. Starting with a step-by-step installation of Proxmox nodes along with an illustrated tour of Proxmox graphical user interface where you will spend most of your time managing a cluster, this book will get you up and running with the mechanisms of Proxmox VE. Various entities such as Cluster, Storage, and Firewall are also covered in an easy to understand format. You will then explore various backup solutions and restore mechanisms, thus learning to keep your applications and servers safe. Next, you will see how to upgrade a Proxmox node with a new release and apply update patches through GUI or CLI. Monitoring resources and virtual machines is required on an enterprise level, to maintain performance and uptime; to achieve this, we learn how to monitor host machine resources and troubleshoot common issues in the setup. Finally, we will walk through some advanced configurations for VM followed by a list of commands used for Proxmox and Ceph cluster through CLI. With this focused and detailed guide you will learn to work your way around with Proxmox VE quickly and add to your skillset.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Proxmox Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Connecting the NFS storage


Originally developed by Sun Microsystems, Network File System (NFS) is probably one of the most popular file sharing protocols to this day. Currently at version 4, an NFS share allows storage of all Proxmox file types, such as disk images, ISO templates, OpenVZ containers, and more. Almost all virtual or physical network environments around the globe implement some form NFS storage.

In this section, we are going to see how to connect an NFS share with a Proxmox cluster.

Getting ready

In order to connect an NFS share, the share must first be created on the shared storage system. Follow the documentation of the storage you are using to create a NFS share. For our example, we created a share named pmx-nfs on the FreeNAS shared storage.

There are four versions of NFS to date. Version mismatches between NFS servers and client nodes can cause connectivity issues. By default, Proxmox uses a version 3 NFS client. If you're unsure of which version is being used for a NFS share...