this post was submitted on 24 Jul 2023
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Proxmox

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Proxmox VE is a complete, open-source server management platform for enterprise virtualization. It tightly integrates the KVM hypervisor and Linux Containers (LXC), software-defined storage and networking functionality, on a single platform. With the integrated web-based user interface you can manage VMs and containers, high availability for clusters, or the integrated disaster recovery tools with ease.

Proxmox VE Official site

K3S on Proxmox LXC

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After a weekend of testing on a beater computer, I finally transitioned my media server over to ProxMox yesterday. It was a real trial to get the drives mounted to the VM correctly without erasing them, but an hour of googling got me to a working solution. Now that I’ve had a few hours to experience it all working correctly…

This thing is amazing. It gives me such a technology boner just to look at all the info it puts at your fingertips, plus I’m getting much better performance out of some programs after isolating them. Only complaint is the subscription pop up, but I’ll live.

So if you’ve been on the fence about making the switch like I was, I can definitely say you should do it. This is a ridiculously useful tool for any computer enthusiast.

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[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

I've been running Proxmox for about 5 years now. Just stood up my second box, after retiring a very old HP Workstation.

It has been a great learning experience as I'm not really all that knowledgeable about Linux. Proxmox itself is rock solid stable. In all the time I've run it, I have not had a Proxmox caused issue (no, they've been all my fault). When I upgraded my house internet to 300Mbs/300Mbs, which my old Unifi Security Gateway could not support, I started looking for other solutions. Ubiquiti certainly had products that would fit the bill and I nearly pulled the trigger on a Dream Machine Pro, but I took a different route.

Going on Ebay, I bought a 4 port server NIC. Downloaded PFSense and installed it in a Proxmox VM. It was not the easiest thing to do, but Negate actually has a guide to do just that. My house has been running on that VM ever since. When I stood up the new server (actually a Dell Workstation with ECC memory), I just restored the backup of the VM to the new box and everything was back up and running. I do keep my old USG just in case of course. You always keep a backup.

I also run Unifi controller, Plex, SMB server, Homeseer HS4, and a few other things. I've even had a fully registered Windows 10 VM at one time. Also keep a container, or full VM of various things that I'm trying to learn about.