Proxmox VE Kernel

From Proxmox VE
Revision as of 13:30, 18 October 2010 by Martin (talk | contribs) (moved 2.6.35 to pve stable repository, small updates to 2.6.18)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Introduction

Proxmox publishes four kernel branches, each one with minor feature differences. Beginning with 1.6 the 2.6.32 is the default and recommended branch. (Proxmox VE 0.9 beta till Proxmox 1.4 used 2.6.24, Proxmox 1.5 used 2.6.18).

A Proxmox VE cluster master can manage a mixed kernel setup. For example, you can run two nodes with 2.6.18 and two nodes with 2.6.24 and also nodes with 2.6.32 or 2.6.35. Depending on the features, some migrations are only possible between identical kernels. 2.6.18 and 2.6.24 kernel branches are using DRBD 8.3.4, 2.6.32 is using 8.3.7 (DRBD is now integrated in the Kernel), 2.6.35 is using 8.3.8.

For correctly effecting a kernel change, it may be necessary to edit the /etc/fstab file for the /boot mount.

Kernel 2.6.18

  • Stable OpenVZ
  • Stable KVM

How to install 2.6.18

aptitude update
aptitude safe-upgrade
aptitude install proxmox-ve-2.6.18

To make sure that you boot into the new kernel, check /boot/grub/menu.lst. Now reboot and check if the system is running the right kernel.

Kernel 2.6.24

  • OpenVZ
  • KVM

How to install 2.6.24

aptitude update
aptitude safe-upgrade
aptitude install proxmox-ve-2.6.24

To make sure that you boot into the new kernel, check /boot/grub/menu.lst. Now reboot and check if the system is running the right kernel.

Kernel 2.6.32

  • Latest KVM
  • Newest OpenVZ (maintained development branch)
  • Default Kernel branch since Proxmox VE 1.6

How to install 2.6.32

aptitude update
aptitude safe-upgrade
aptitude install proxmox-ve-2.6.32

To make sure that you boot into the new kernel, check /boot/grub/menu.lst. Now reboot and check if the system is running the right kernel.

Kernel 2.6.35

  • Latest KVM (KSM support)
  • No OpenVZ

How to install 2.6.35

aptitude update
aptitude safe-upgrade
aptitude install proxmox-ve-2.6.35

To make sure that you boot into the new kernel, check /boot/grub/menu.lst. Now reboot and check if the system is running the right kernel.