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=Introduction=
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Proxmox VE installs the complete operating system and management tools in 3 to 5 minutes (depends on the used hardware).
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{{#pvedocs:pve-installation-plain.html}}
[[Category:Reference Documentation]]
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Proxmox VE is based on Debian. This is why the install disk images (ISO files)
provided by Proxmox include a complete Debian system as well as all necessary
Proxmox VE packages.
See the support table in the FAQ for the
relationship between Proxmox VE releases and Debian releases.
The installer will guide you through the setup, allowing you to partition the
local disk(s), apply basic system configurations (for example, timezone,
language, network) and install all required packages. This process should not
take more than a few minutes. Installing with the provided ISO is the
recommended method for new and existing users.
Alternatively, Proxmox VE can be installed on top of an existing Debian system. This
option is only recommended for advanced users because detailed knowledge about
Proxmox VE is required.
Using the Proxmox VE Installer
The installer ISO image includes the following:
Complete operating system (Debian Linux, 64-bit)
The Proxmox VE installer, which partitions the local disk(s) with ext4, XFS,
  BTRFS (technology preview), or ZFS and installs the operating system
Proxmox VE Linux kernel with KVM and LXC support
Complete toolset for administering virtual machines, containers, the host
  system, clusters and all necessary resources
Web-based management interface
All existing data on the selected drives will be removed during the
installation process. The installer does not add boot menu entries for other
operating systems.
Please insert the prepared installation media
(for example, USB flash drive or CD-ROM) and boot from it.
Make sure that booting from the installation medium (for example, USB) is
enabled in your server&#8217;s firmware settings. Secure boot needs to be disabled
when booting an installer prior to Proxmox VE version 8.1.
After choosing the correct entry (for example, Boot from USB) the Proxmox VE menu
will be displayed, and one of the following options can be selected:
Install Proxmox VE (Graphical)
Starts the normal installation.
It&#8217;s possible to use the installation wizard with a keyboard only. Buttons
can be clicked by pressing the ALT key combined with the underlined character
from the respective button. For example, ALT + N to press a Next button.
Install Proxmox VE (Terminal UI)
Starts the terminal-mode installation wizard. It provides the same overall
installation experience as the graphical installer, but has generally better
compatibility with very old and very new hardware.
Install Proxmox VE (Terminal UI, Serial Console)
Starts the terminal-mode installation wizard, additionally setting up the Linux
kernel to use the (first) serial port of the machine for in- and output. This
can be used if the machine is completely headless and only has a serial console
available.
Both modes use the same code base for the actual installation process to
benefit from more than a decade of bug fixes and ensure feature parity.
The Terminal UI option can be used in case the graphical installer does
not work correctly, due to e.g. driver issues. See also
adding the nomodeset kernel parameter.
Advanced Options: Install Proxmox VE (Graphical, Debug Mode)
Starts the installation in debug mode. A console will be opened at several
installation steps. This helps to debug the situation if something goes wrong.
To exit a debug console, press CTRL-D. This option can be used to boot a live
system with all basic tools available. You can use it, for example, to
repair a degraded ZFS rpool or fix the
bootloader for an existing Proxmox VE setup.
Advanced Options: Install Proxmox VE (Terminal UI, Debug Mode)
Same as the graphical debug mode, but preparing the system to run the
terminal-based installer instead.
Advanced Options: Install Proxmox VE (Serial Console Debug Mode)
Same the terminal-based debug mode, but additionally sets up the Linux kernel to
use the (first) serial port of the machine for in- and output.
Advanced Options: Install Proxmox VE (Automated)
Starts the installer in unattended mode, even if the ISO has not been
appropriately prepared for an automated installation. This option can be used to
gather hardware details or might be useful to debug an automated installation
setup. See Unattended Installation for more
information.
Advanced Options: Rescue Boot
With this option you can boot an existing installation. It searches all attached
hard disks. If it finds an existing installation, it boots directly into that
disk using the Linux kernel from the ISO. This can be useful if there are
problems with the bootloader (GRUB/systemd-boot) or the BIOS/UEFI is unable to
read the boot block from the disk.
Advanced Options: Test Memory (memtest86+)
Runs memtest86+. This is useful to check if the memory is functional and free
of errors. Secure Boot must be turned off in the UEFI firmware setup utility to
run this option.
You normally select Install Proxmox VE (Graphical) to start the installation.
The first step is to read our EULA (End User License Agreement). Following this,
you can select the target hard disk(s) for the installation.
By default, the whole server is used and all existing data is removed.
Make sure there is no important data on the server before proceeding with the
installation.
The Options button lets you select the target file system, which
defaults to ext4. The installer uses LVM if you select
ext4 or xfs as a file system, and offers additional options to
restrict LVM space (see below).
Proxmox VE can also be installed on ZFS. As ZFS offers several software RAID levels,
this is an option for systems that don&#8217;t have a hardware RAID controller. The
target disks must be selected in the Options dialog. More ZFS specific
settings can be changed under Advanced Options.
ZFS on top of any hardware RAID is not supported and can result in data
loss.
The next page asks for basic configuration options like your location, time
zone, and keyboard layout. The location is used to select a nearby download
server, in order to increase the speed of updates. The installer is usually able
to auto-detect these settings, so you only need to change them in rare
situations when auto-detection fails, or when you want to use a keyboard layout
not commonly used in your country.
Next the password of the superuser (root) and an email address needs to be
specified. The password must consist of at least 5 characters. It&#8217;s highly
recommended to use a stronger password. Some guidelines are:
Use a minimum password length of at least 12 characters.
Include lowercase and uppercase alphabetic characters, numbers, and symbols.
Avoid character repetition, keyboard patterns, common dictionary words,
  letter or number sequences, usernames, relative or pet names, romantic links
  (current or past), and biographical information (for example ID numbers,
  ancestors' names or dates).
The email address is used to send notifications to the system administrator.
For example:
Information about available package updates.
Error messages from periodic cron jobs.
All those notification mails will be sent to the specified email address.
The last step is the network configuration. Network interfaces that are UP
show a filled circle in front of their name in the drop down menu. Please note
that during installation you can either specify an IPv4 or IPv6 address, but not
both. To configure a dual stack node, add additional IP addresses after the
installation.
The next step shows a summary of the previously selected options. Please
re-check every setting and use the Previous button if a setting needs to be
changed.
After clicking Install, the installer will begin to format the disks and copy
packages to the target disk(s). Please wait until this step has finished; then
remove the installation medium and restart your system.
Copying the packages usually takes several minutes, mostly depending on the
speed of the installation medium and the target disk performance.
When copying and setting up the packages has finished, you can reboot the
server. This will be done automatically after a few seconds by default.
Installation Failure
If the installation failed, check out specific errors on the second TTY
(CTRL + ALT + F2) and ensure that the systems meets the
minimum requirements.
If the installation is still not working, look at the
how to get help chapter.
Accessing the Management Interface Post-Installation
After a successful installation and reboot of the system you can use the Proxmox VE
web interface for further configuration.
Point your browser to the IP address given during the installation and port
  8006, for example: https://youripaddress:8006
Log in using the root (realm PAM) username and the password chosen during
  installation.
Upload your subscription key to gain access to the Enterprise repository.
  Otherwise, you will need to set up one of the public, less tested package
  repositories to get updates for security fixes, bug fixes, and new features.
Check the IP configuration and hostname.
Check the timezone.
Check your Firewall settings.
Advanced LVM Configuration Options
The installer creates a Volume Group (VG) called pve, and additional Logical
Volumes (LVs) called root, data, and swap, if ext4 or xfs is used. To
control the size of these volumes use:
hdsize
Defines the total hard disk size to be used. This way you can reserve free space
on the hard disk for further partitioning (for example for an additional PV and
VG on the same hard disk that can be used for LVM storage).
swapsize
Defines the size of the swap volume. The default is the size of the installed
memory, minimum 4 GB and maximum 8 GB. The resulting value cannot be greater
than hdsize/8.
If set to 0, no swap volume will be created.
maxroot
Defines the maximum size of the root volume, which stores the operation
system. The maximum limit of the root volume size is hdsize/4.
maxvz
Defines the maximum size of the data volume. The actual size of the data
volume is:
datasize = hdsize - rootsize - swapsize - minfree
Where datasize cannot be bigger than maxvz.
In case of LVM thin, the data pool will only be created if datasize is
bigger than 4GB.
If set to 0, no data volume will be created and the storage
configuration will be adapted accordingly.
minfree
Defines the amount of free space that should be left in the LVM volume group
pve. With more than 128GB storage available, the default is 16GB, otherwise
hdsize/8 will be used.
LVM requires free space in the VG for snapshot creation (not required for
lvmthin snapshots).
Advanced ZFS Configuration Options
The installer creates the ZFS pool rpool, if ZFS is used. No swap space is
created but you can reserve some unpartitioned space on the install disks for
swap. You can also create a swap zvol after the installation, although this can
lead to problems (see ZFS swap notes).
ashift
Defines the ashift value for the created pool. The ashift needs to be set at
least to the sector-size of the underlying disks (2 to the power of ashift is
the sector-size), or any disk which might be put in the pool (for example the
replacement of a defective disk).
compress
Defines whether compression is enabled for rpool.
checksum
Defines which checksumming algorithm should be used for rpool.
copies
Defines the copies parameter for rpool. Check the zfs(8) manpage for the
semantics, and why this does not replace redundancy on disk-level.
ARC max size
Defines the maximum size the ARC can grow to and thus limits the amount of
memory ZFS will use. See also the section on
how to limit ZFS memory usage for more
details.
hdsize
Defines the total hard disk size to be used. This is useful to save free space
on the hard disk(s) for further partitioning (for example to create a
swap-partition). hdsize is only honored for bootable disks, that is only the
first disk or mirror for RAID0, RAID1 or RAID10, and all disks in RAID-Z[123].
Advanced BTRFS Configuration Options
No swap space is created when BTRFS is used but you can reserve some
unpartitioned space on the install disks for swap. You can either create a
separate partition, BTRFS subvolume or a swapfile using the btrfs filesystem
mkswapfile command.
compress
Defines whether compression is enabled for the BTRFS subvolume. Different
compression algorithms are supported: on (equivalent to zlib), zlib, lzo
and zstd. Defaults to off.
hdsize
Defines the total hard disk size to be used. This is useful to save free space
on the hard disk(s) for further partitioning (for example, to create a
swap partition).
ZFS Performance Tips
ZFS works best with a lot of memory. If you intend to use ZFS make sure to have
enough RAM available for it. A good calculation is 4GB plus 1GB RAM for each TB
RAW disk space.
ZFS can use a dedicated drive as write cache, called the ZFS Intent Log (ZIL).
Use a fast drive (SSD) for it. It can be added after installation with the
following command:
# zpool add &lt;pool-name&gt; log &lt;/dev/path_to_fast_ssd&gt;
Adding the nomodeset Kernel Parameter
Problems may arise on very old or very new hardware due to graphics drivers. If
the installation hangs during boot, you can try adding the nomodeset
parameter. This prevents the Linux kernel from loading any graphics drivers and
forces it to continue using the BIOS/UEFI-provided framebuffer.
On the Proxmox VE bootloader menu, navigate to Install Proxmox VE (Terminal UI) and
press e to edit the entry. Using the arrow keys, navigate to the line starting
with linux, move the cursor to the end of that line and add the
parameter nomodeset, separated by a space from the pre-existing last
parameter.
Then press Ctrl-X or F10 to boot the configuration.
Unattended Installation
It is possible to install Proxmox VE automatically in an unattended manner. This
enables you to fully automate the setup process on bare-metal. Once the
installation is complete and the host has booted up, automation tools like
Ansible can be used to further configure the installation.
The necessary options for the installer must be provided in an answer file. This
file allows the use of filter rules to determine which disks and network cards
should be used.
To use the automated installation, it is first necessary to prepare an
installation ISO.
Visit our wiki for more
details and information on the unattended installation.
Video Tutorials
See the list of all official tutorials on our
Proxmox VE YouTube Channel
See Also
Prepare Installation Media
Install Proxmox VE on Debian 12 Bookworm
System Requirements
Package Repositories
Host System Administration
Network Configuration
Installation: Tips and Tricks
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Including the following:


* Complete operating system (Debian Lenny 64)
[[Category:HOWTO]] [[Category:Installation]]
* Partition the hard drive with [[LVM2]]
* [[Linux Kernel|Proxmox VE Kernel]] with OpenVZ and KVM support
* Backup/Restore tools
* Web based management interface
 
Please note, the complete server is used and all existing data is removed.
 
===Video tutorials===
List of all tutorials: [[:Category:Video Tutorials|Video Tutorials]]
====Proxmox VE installation====
*[[Proxmox VE installation (Video)]]
====Screen cast video demo of container installation====
* English [http://www.fridu.org/download/video/flv/intro-openvz-en.html]
* French  [http://www.fridu.org/download/video/flv/intro-openvz-fr.html]
 
Note: These external videos are based on a beta version of Proxmox VE
 
=System requirements=
 
For production servers, high quality server equipment is needed. Keep in mind, if you run 10 Virtual Servers on one machine and you got a hardware failure, 10 services are lost. Proxmox VE supports clustering, means that multiple Proxmox VE installations can centrally managed via the included cluster functionality.
 
Proxmox VE uses local storage (DAS), there is no need for expensive SAN equipment.
 
==Minimum requirements for evaluation:==
* CPU: 64bit (Intel EMT64 or AMD64), Intel VT/AMD-V capable CPU/Mainboard (for KVM Full Virtualization support)
* Minimum 1 GB RAM
* Hard drive
* One NIC
 
==Recommended system requirements:==
* CPU: 64bit (Intel EMT64 or AMD64), Multi core CPU recommended, Intel VT/AMD-V capable CPU/Mainboard (for KVM Full Virtualization support)
* 4 GB is good, more is better
* Hardware RAID with batteries protected write cache (BBU)
* Fast hard drives, best results with 15k rpm SAS, Raid10
* Two NIC
 
==Certified hardware==
 
Basically you can use all hardware supporting Debian Lenny 64 bit. If you are unsure, just pick one of these:
 
* HP DL380G5
* IBM x3650
 
=Steps to get your Proxmox VE up and running=
 
==Install Proxmox VE server==
* Download ISO image and burn it on a CD (see [[Downloads]])
* Boot from CD and start the automatic installer on your dedicated hardware
* Follow the instructions on the screen
 
[[Proxmox VE installation (Video)]]
 
==Proxmox VE web interface==
Configuration is done via web interface, just point your browser to the given IP address during installation (<nowiki>https://youripaddress</nowiki>). Please make sure that your browser has sun-java6-plugin installed (GCJ for firefox does not work yet) as this is used for console view. Proxmox VE is tested for IE6/IE7/IE8, firefox 2.x and 3.x
 
'''Default login is "root" and the root password is set during the installation process.
 
===Configure basic system setting===
Please review the following settings, see "Configuration/System":
* Network
* DNS
* Time settings
* Options: language (for the management web interface)
* Options: set the keyboard layout (needed by VNC clients)
 
===Get Appliance Templates===
====Download====
Just go to "VM Manager/Appliance Templates" and download pre-built Virtual Appliances directly to your server. This list is maintained by the Proxmox team and more and more Appliances will be available. This is the easiest way and a good place to start.
 
====Upload from your desktop====
If you already got Virtually Appliances you can upload them via the upload button. To install a virtual machine from an ISO image (using KVM full virtualization) just upload the ISO file via the upload button (limited to 2 GB).
 
====Directly to file system====
 
Templates and ISO images are stored on the Proxmox VE server (see /var/lib/vz/template/cache for openvz templates and /var/lib/vz/template/iso for ISO images). You can also transfer templates and ISO images via secure copy (scp) to these directories. If you work on a windows desktop, you can use a graphical scp client like [http://winscp.net winscp].
 
=Create Virtual Machines=
==Container (OpenVZ) Virtual Machines - Default==
[[Image:Screen-create-container-mailgateway.png|thumb|Create Virtual Machine]]
[[Image:Screen-create-container-mailgateway-log.png|thumb|Create Virtual Machine - log]]
[[Image:Screen-virtual-machine-detail1.png|thumb|Running Virtual Machine]]
 
Go to "VM Manager/Virtual Machines - Create":
 
'''Configuration:'''
* Type: select "Container (OpenVZ)"
* Template: select "proxmox-mailgateway" (or whatever you want)
* Hostname: give a unique server name
* Memory (MB): default 512 MB
* Swap (MB): default 512 MB (in version 1.x the swap memory setting is added to the RAM memory due to lacking Kernel support: in future version this will change)
* Password: set the root password
* VMID: just use the given ID or overwrite the suggested one
* Cluster Node: If you have several Proxmox VE servers, select the node where you want to create the new virtual machine
* Start at boot: tick this if you want the Virtual Machine started on reboot of the Proxmox VE server
* Disk space (GB): default value 8 GB - please note you can change this later without reboot or modifications within the Virtual Appliance (very cool).
 
'''Network:'''
 
* Network Type: default Virtual Network (venet) - in only some case you need Bridged Ethernet(veth) here (see [http://wiki.openvz.org/Main_Page OpenVZ wiki] for details
* IP Address: give a unique IP (if you select Brigded Ethernet, the IP configuration has to be done in the Virtual Machine)
* DNS Domain: e.g. yourdomain.com
* First/Second DNS Servers: enter DNS servers
 
Now review your settings and create your first Virtual Machine. After you clicked "Create", all settings are applied - wait for completion (this process can take between a view seconds and up to a minute, depends on the used template and your hardware). Now, go to "VM Manager/Virtual Machines - List" to see the newly created Virtual Machine.
 
===Video Tutorials===
*[[Proxmox Mail Gateway on Proxmox VE (Video)]]
 
==Fully virtualized Machines (KVM)==
 
Go to "VM Manager/Virtual Machines - Create":
 
'''Configuration:'''
* Type: select "Fully virtualized (KVM)"
* Installation Media: select "cdrom device" (from the Proxmox VE server, or a previously uploaded ISO image)
* Name: give a unique name
* Disk space (GB): specify the size of the disk - will not preallocated - give enough as changing later is not possible without command line interactions and guest specific issues
* Memory (MB): specify memory as you would give on physical hardware (SWAP is handled within the guest)
* VMID: just use the given ID or overwrite the suggested one
* Cluster Node: If you have several Proxmox VE servers, select the node where you want to create the new virtual machine
* Start at boot: tick this if you want the Virtual Machine started on reboot of the Proxmox VE server
* Disk type: select IDE for windows guests, (optional SCSI or VIRTIO for Linux guests)
* Guest Type: select what you need (32 and 64 bit guests are possible)
 
 
'''Network:'''
 
* Network Type: Bridged Ethernet(tap)
* Bridge: select one (default only one is configured)
* Network Card: select the emulated hardware - rtl8139 is default (if you have VIRTIO drivers in your guest, use VIRTIO) 
 
Now review your settings and create your first Virtual Machine. After you clicked "Create", all settings are applied - wait for completion. Now, go to "VM Manager/Virtual Machines - List" to see the newly created Virtual Machine.
 
===Video Tutorials===
*[[Windows 2003 Server on KVM (Video)]]
*[[Hardware setup for KVM guests (Video)]]
 
==Managing Virtual Machines==
Go to "VM Manager/Virtual Machines" to see a list of your Virtual Machines.
 
Basic tasks can be done by clicking on the red arrow - drop down menu:
* start, restart, shutdown, stop
* migrate: migrate a Virtual Machine to another physical host (you need at least two Proxmox VE servers - see [[Proxmox VE Cluster]]
* console: using the VNC console for container virtualization automatically logs in via root. For managing KVM Virtual Machine, the console shows the screen of the full virtualized machine)
 
For a '''detailed view''' and '''configuration changes''' just click on a Virtual Machine row in the list of VMs.
 
"Logs" on a container Virtual Machine:
* Boot/Init: shows the Boot/Init logs generated during start or stop
* Command: see the current/last executed task
* Syslog: see the real time syslog of the Virtual Machine
[[Category: HOWTO]][[Category: Installation]]
 
==Networking and Firewall==
 
A detail guide on how to virtualize your VPS network infrastructure.
[http://www.fridu.org/fulup-posts/40-hosting-a-sysadmin/52-openvz-virtualization#architecture]

Latest revision as of 12:09, 28 November 2024

Proxmox VE is based on Debian. This is why the install disk images (ISO files) provided by Proxmox include a complete Debian system as well as all necessary Proxmox VE packages.

Tip See the support table in the FAQ for the relationship between Proxmox VE releases and Debian releases.

The installer will guide you through the setup, allowing you to partition the local disk(s), apply basic system configurations (for example, timezone, language, network) and install all required packages. This process should not take more than a few minutes. Installing with the provided ISO is the recommended method for new and existing users.

Alternatively, Proxmox VE can be installed on top of an existing Debian system. This option is only recommended for advanced users because detailed knowledge about Proxmox VE is required.

Using the Proxmox VE Installer

The installer ISO image includes the following:

  • Complete operating system (Debian Linux, 64-bit)

  • The Proxmox VE installer, which partitions the local disk(s) with ext4, XFS, BTRFS (technology preview), or ZFS and installs the operating system

  • Proxmox VE Linux kernel with KVM and LXC support

  • Complete toolset for administering virtual machines, containers, the host system, clusters and all necessary resources

  • Web-based management interface

Note All existing data on the selected drives will be removed during the installation process. The installer does not add boot menu entries for other operating systems.

Please insert the prepared installation media (for example, USB flash drive or CD-ROM) and boot from it.

Tip Make sure that booting from the installation medium (for example, USB) is enabled in your server’s firmware settings. Secure boot needs to be disabled when booting an installer prior to Proxmox VE version 8.1.
screenshot/pve-grub-menu.png

After choosing the correct entry (for example, Boot from USB) the Proxmox VE menu will be displayed, and one of the following options can be selected:

Install Proxmox VE (Graphical)

Starts the normal installation.

Tip It’s possible to use the installation wizard with a keyboard only. Buttons can be clicked by pressing the ALT key combined with the underlined character from the respective button. For example, ALT + N to press a Next button.
Install Proxmox VE (Terminal UI)

Starts the terminal-mode installation wizard. It provides the same overall installation experience as the graphical installer, but has generally better compatibility with very old and very new hardware.

Install Proxmox VE (Terminal UI, Serial Console)

Starts the terminal-mode installation wizard, additionally setting up the Linux kernel to use the (first) serial port of the machine for in- and output. This can be used if the machine is completely headless and only has a serial console available.

screenshot/pve-tui-installer.png

Both modes use the same code base for the actual installation process to benefit from more than a decade of bug fixes and ensure feature parity.

Tip The Terminal UI option can be used in case the graphical installer does not work correctly, due to e.g. driver issues. See also adding the nomodeset kernel parameter.
Advanced Options: Install Proxmox VE (Graphical, Debug Mode)

Starts the installation in debug mode. A console will be opened at several installation steps. This helps to debug the situation if something goes wrong. To exit a debug console, press CTRL-D. This option can be used to boot a live system with all basic tools available. You can use it, for example, to repair a degraded ZFS rpool or fix the bootloader for an existing Proxmox VE setup.

Advanced Options: Install Proxmox VE (Terminal UI, Debug Mode)

Same as the graphical debug mode, but preparing the system to run the terminal-based installer instead.

Advanced Options: Install Proxmox VE (Serial Console Debug Mode)

Same the terminal-based debug mode, but additionally sets up the Linux kernel to use the (first) serial port of the machine for in- and output.

Advanced Options: Install Proxmox VE (Automated)

Starts the installer in unattended mode, even if the ISO has not been appropriately prepared for an automated installation. This option can be used to gather hardware details or might be useful to debug an automated installation setup. See Unattended Installation for more information.

Advanced Options: Rescue Boot

With this option you can boot an existing installation. It searches all attached hard disks. If it finds an existing installation, it boots directly into that disk using the Linux kernel from the ISO. This can be useful if there are problems with the bootloader (GRUB/systemd-boot) or the BIOS/UEFI is unable to read the boot block from the disk.

Advanced Options: Test Memory (memtest86+)

Runs memtest86+. This is useful to check if the memory is functional and free of errors. Secure Boot must be turned off in the UEFI firmware setup utility to run this option.

You normally select Install Proxmox VE (Graphical) to start the installation.

screenshot/pve-select-target-disk.png

The first step is to read our EULA (End User License Agreement). Following this, you can select the target hard disk(s) for the installation.

Caution By default, the whole server is used and all existing data is removed. Make sure there is no important data on the server before proceeding with the installation.

The Options button lets you select the target file system, which defaults to ext4. The installer uses LVM if you select ext4 or xfs as a file system, and offers additional options to restrict LVM space (see below).

Proxmox VE can also be installed on ZFS. As ZFS offers several software RAID levels, this is an option for systems that don’t have a hardware RAID controller. The target disks must be selected in the Options dialog. More ZFS specific settings can be changed under Advanced Options.

Warning ZFS on top of any hardware RAID is not supported and can result in data loss.
screenshot/pve-select-location.png

The next page asks for basic configuration options like your location, time zone, and keyboard layout. The location is used to select a nearby download server, in order to increase the speed of updates. The installer is usually able to auto-detect these settings, so you only need to change them in rare situations when auto-detection fails, or when you want to use a keyboard layout not commonly used in your country.

screenshot/pve-set-password.png

Next the password of the superuser (root) and an email address needs to be specified. The password must consist of at least 5 characters. It’s highly recommended to use a stronger password. Some guidelines are:

  • Use a minimum password length of at least 12 characters.

  • Include lowercase and uppercase alphabetic characters, numbers, and symbols.

  • Avoid character repetition, keyboard patterns, common dictionary words, letter or number sequences, usernames, relative or pet names, romantic links (current or past), and biographical information (for example ID numbers, ancestors' names or dates).

The email address is used to send notifications to the system administrator. For example:

  • Information about available package updates.

  • Error messages from periodic cron jobs.

screenshot/pve-setup-network.png

All those notification mails will be sent to the specified email address.

The last step is the network configuration. Network interfaces that are UP show a filled circle in front of their name in the drop down menu. Please note that during installation you can either specify an IPv4 or IPv6 address, but not both. To configure a dual stack node, add additional IP addresses after the installation.

screenshot/pve-installation.png

The next step shows a summary of the previously selected options. Please re-check every setting and use the Previous button if a setting needs to be changed.

After clicking Install, the installer will begin to format the disks and copy packages to the target disk(s). Please wait until this step has finished; then remove the installation medium and restart your system.

screenshot/pve-install-summary.png

Copying the packages usually takes several minutes, mostly depending on the speed of the installation medium and the target disk performance.

When copying and setting up the packages has finished, you can reboot the server. This will be done automatically after a few seconds by default.

Installation Failure

If the installation failed, check out specific errors on the second TTY (CTRL + ALT + F2) and ensure that the systems meets the minimum requirements.

If the installation is still not working, look at the how to get help chapter.

Accessing the Management Interface Post-Installation

screenshot/gui-login-window.png

After a successful installation and reboot of the system you can use the Proxmox VE web interface for further configuration.

  1. Point your browser to the IP address given during the installation and port 8006, for example: https://youripaddress:8006

  2. Log in using the root (realm PAM) username and the password chosen during installation.

  3. Upload your subscription key to gain access to the Enterprise repository. Otherwise, you will need to set up one of the public, less tested package repositories to get updates for security fixes, bug fixes, and new features.

  4. Check the IP configuration and hostname.

  5. Check the timezone.

  6. Check your Firewall settings.

Advanced LVM Configuration Options

The installer creates a Volume Group (VG) called pve, and additional Logical Volumes (LVs) called root, data, and swap, if ext4 or xfs is used. To control the size of these volumes use:

hdsize

Defines the total hard disk size to be used. This way you can reserve free space on the hard disk for further partitioning (for example for an additional PV and VG on the same hard disk that can be used for LVM storage).

swapsize

Defines the size of the swap volume. The default is the size of the installed memory, minimum 4 GB and maximum 8 GB. The resulting value cannot be greater than hdsize/8.

Note If set to 0, no swap volume will be created.
maxroot

Defines the maximum size of the root volume, which stores the operation system. The maximum limit of the root volume size is hdsize/4.

maxvz

Defines the maximum size of the data volume. The actual size of the data volume is:

datasize = hdsize - rootsize - swapsize - minfree

Where datasize cannot be bigger than maxvz.

Note In case of LVM thin, the data pool will only be created if datasize is bigger than 4GB.
Note If set to 0, no data volume will be created and the storage configuration will be adapted accordingly.
minfree

Defines the amount of free space that should be left in the LVM volume group pve. With more than 128GB storage available, the default is 16GB, otherwise hdsize/8 will be used.

Note LVM requires free space in the VG for snapshot creation (not required for lvmthin snapshots).

Advanced ZFS Configuration Options

The installer creates the ZFS pool rpool, if ZFS is used. No swap space is created but you can reserve some unpartitioned space on the install disks for swap. You can also create a swap zvol after the installation, although this can lead to problems (see ZFS swap notes).

ashift

Defines the ashift value for the created pool. The ashift needs to be set at least to the sector-size of the underlying disks (2 to the power of ashift is the sector-size), or any disk which might be put in the pool (for example the replacement of a defective disk).

compress

Defines whether compression is enabled for rpool.

checksum

Defines which checksumming algorithm should be used for rpool.

copies

Defines the copies parameter for rpool. Check the zfs(8) manpage for the semantics, and why this does not replace redundancy on disk-level.

ARC max size

Defines the maximum size the ARC can grow to and thus limits the amount of memory ZFS will use. See also the section on how to limit ZFS memory usage for more details.

hdsize

Defines the total hard disk size to be used. This is useful to save free space on the hard disk(s) for further partitioning (for example to create a swap-partition). hdsize is only honored for bootable disks, that is only the first disk or mirror for RAID0, RAID1 or RAID10, and all disks in RAID-Z[123].

Advanced BTRFS Configuration Options

No swap space is created when BTRFS is used but you can reserve some unpartitioned space on the install disks for swap. You can either create a separate partition, BTRFS subvolume or a swapfile using the btrfs filesystem mkswapfile command.

compress

Defines whether compression is enabled for the BTRFS subvolume. Different compression algorithms are supported: on (equivalent to zlib), zlib, lzo and zstd. Defaults to off.

hdsize

Defines the total hard disk size to be used. This is useful to save free space on the hard disk(s) for further partitioning (for example, to create a swap partition).

ZFS Performance Tips

ZFS works best with a lot of memory. If you intend to use ZFS make sure to have enough RAM available for it. A good calculation is 4GB plus 1GB RAM for each TB RAW disk space.

ZFS can use a dedicated drive as write cache, called the ZFS Intent Log (ZIL). Use a fast drive (SSD) for it. It can be added after installation with the following command:

# zpool add <pool-name> log </dev/path_to_fast_ssd>

Adding the nomodeset Kernel Parameter

Problems may arise on very old or very new hardware due to graphics drivers. If the installation hangs during boot, you can try adding the nomodeset parameter. This prevents the Linux kernel from loading any graphics drivers and forces it to continue using the BIOS/UEFI-provided framebuffer.

On the Proxmox VE bootloader menu, navigate to Install Proxmox VE (Terminal UI) and press e to edit the entry. Using the arrow keys, navigate to the line starting with linux, move the cursor to the end of that line and add the parameter nomodeset, separated by a space from the pre-existing last parameter.

Then press Ctrl-X or F10 to boot the configuration.

Unattended Installation

It is possible to install Proxmox VE automatically in an unattended manner. This enables you to fully automate the setup process on bare-metal. Once the installation is complete and the host has booted up, automation tools like Ansible can be used to further configure the installation.

The necessary options for the installer must be provided in an answer file. This file allows the use of filter rules to determine which disks and network cards should be used.

To use the automated installation, it is first necessary to prepare an installation ISO. Visit our wiki for more details and information on the unattended installation.

Video Tutorials

See the list of all official tutorials on our Proxmox VE YouTube Channel