Yes, it also does not make coffe or predict the winning lottery numbers. It's still an awesome productIn Proxmox VE 9.0.5 I cannot see temps and fan speeds
such a coffee-colored answer from such a "Distinguished Member"Yes, it also does not make coffee or predict the winning lottery numbers. It's still an awesome product![]()
PS: I'm also searching for a decent solution to this thread's topic - and seeing answers like this makes me just dismiss the entire community
That is better than repugnant coffee from a newbie. How dare you insult another member - for absolutely no reason! LnxBil has definitely earned his more than "Distinguished Member" status numerous times. He has helped dozens (if not hundreds) of users over the years on this forum, with his selfless advice & expert knowledge. I fail to see what you get out of just trying to degrade people.such a coffee-colored answer from such a "Distinguished Member"
Very weird (& distasteful IMHO) comment. In which other OS exactly, can you suggest any feature/s & basically get them if you push hard enough or work out the coding for such, or just Google around a bit?And then you wonder why people dislike Linux users so much...
Please do so & unsubscribe. If you can't have the basic decency to treat other members accordingly - you don't belong here.makes me just dismiss the entire community
Nobody asked thisThe trouble is that you can't have a "fits everything" solution.
actually no, there's already an existing table for SMART, why not adding the proper info there too?If you read more of the previous debates on this subject you would also encounter the (imho) most cruical counter-againt against such an feature: On a modern server you can easily end up in a lot of sensors (20 or 40 and more!) which would clutter the PVE UI quite badly.
I know these explanations by heart; I'm a home-user working for a Corp.For homeusers the story is different but they usually don't pay for subscriptions. In a corporate environment however sysadmins usually have a dedicated monitoring software (like Zabbix, Prometheus, Icinga,checkmk, prtg or whatever) for large environment or and don't even need this feature even if they happen to work in a small company who have just one server. Thus it doesn't make much sense to invest development resources in a feature which would mainly benefit homeusers.
Basically he didn't say anything other than: you're on your own and my answer will NOT help you;Setup a monitoring software of your preference is actually the most decent solution since it will always have more features and give more informations than any internal dashboard. LnxBils answer was a bit flippant, but basically correct: ProxmoxVE is a great product but it's not a monitoring tool and can't replace good monitoring you need to have anyhow.
I'm new here but I've studied some of the answers around for the past year and a half; I agree this is not a bad community I was just pointing out the hypocrisy of some so called advanced Linux users - they "worship" the idea of open source but many are soooo closed minded when have to share knowledgeRegarding the entire community: I prefer this forum compared to vlogger clickbait, Reddits /r/proxmox or /r/homelab with their ill-advised recommendations for non-supported (running "helper scripts" from the internet as root, installing docker inside lxcs, adding nfs/cifs shares over wan as network storage to PBS etc pp) as "best practices". In this forum are more people actually envolved in running corporate IT infrastructure, it shows and it's a good thing in my book.
I know, it was just a tongue-in-cheek kind of remark.Regarding distinguished member: That badge just comes from posting a lot, it's not a statement on their quality![]()
Oh no! another distinguished one that feels the need to answer for absolutely no reasonThat is better than repugnant coffee from a newbie. How dare you insult another member - for absolutely no reason!
Doesn't seem to be up to that status with his answer.LnxBil has definitely earned his more than "Distinguished Member" status numerous times.
I'm not degrading anyone, I'm sorry that you're so affected by words that you fail to see what was asked from this topic.He has helped dozens (if not hundreds) of users over the years on this forum, with his selfless advice & expert knowledge. I fail to see what you get out of just trying to degrade people.
Riiiight, because writing stuff like "does not make coffe or predict the winning lottery numbers" is such on pointApart from this; his answer was absolutely on point.
Is this a "superior" user attitude that I'm sensing?I'm not going to discuss this with you - since I don't feel you would actually be interested.
man, you talk like you're vibe-coding, please stop advocating for others; you talk about distasteful comments and then you just ask people asking for solutions to simply google...Very weird (& distasteful IMHO) comment. In which other OS exactly, can you suggest any feature/s & basically get them if you push hard enough or work out the coding for such, or just Google around a bit?
oh no, if I don't what are you going to do? ban me?Please do so & unsubscribe. If you can't have the basic decency to treat other members accordingly - you don't belong here.
actually no, there's already an existing table for SMART, why not adding the proper info there too?
I'm new here but I've studied some of the answers around for the past year and a half; I agree this is not a bad community I was just pointing out the hypocrisy of some so called advanced Linux users - they "worship" the idea of open source but many are soooo closed minded when have to share knowledge
I do agree not everything is SMART enough to be properly shownAnd for the smart table we already have the problem that it's not working for every device due to the way the manufactures use it. For example on two of my used micron server-ssds the wearout indicator reads n/a due to it being some propietary entry. I would expect similiar issues with temperature reading.
well, it's not about dumbing down here; it's finding the decent solution for a quite decent issue - and (for example) I know unRAID is paid but they managed to do it in a very user friendly way and I don't find it dumbed downI'm a big fan of sharing knowledge and empowerment, I'm not a fan of dumbing down things or appeasing the laziness of homeusers.
I know a thing or two about stuff on zee internetz and do agree some things need to be very thoroughly explained.Sadly enough often enough discussions ended heated here since even if given an explaination why typical homelabbing requests ( here is another one: https://forum.proxmox.com/threads/p...this-one-thing-the-memory-usage-graph.149473/ which inspired me to wrote a faq on that subject https://forum.proxmox.com/threads/f...ram-usage-of-the-vms-in-the-dashboard.165943/ )
maybe not reply on all threads if just for snark remarks?I suspect that part of the more veteran community members are getting more flippant over the years.
Maybe not everything is bad; I tend to not be absolute when it comes to technology.Because the sad truth is that even if you explain people why the "best practices" of Reddit homelabbing space are actually bad ideas they don't want to hear it.
I agree; I was a forum moderator for about 10 years and it's energy and time consuming -> doesn't mean we have to reply like this;At some point you end up in not wanting to waste your time anymore with them. Now I'm not going so far in thinking that it's a good idea to be rude but I also lack the energy to do more than referencing earlier debates if some beaten-to-dead-horse reappears.
Firstly- no one wonders this. And apart from that blanket statement I had no idea such a dislike existed. More to the point, it takes two to tango. the original comment wasnt pointed at you and required no reply.such a coffee-colored answer from such a "Distinguished Member"
And then you wonder why people dislike Linux users so much...
the PVE interface isnt/was never meant to replace a environmental monitoring solution. PVE very nicely exports its own data so you can import it to your grafana/prometheus/whatever, which can (and is meant to) monitor things like your temperatures. Such a feature request has been made to the pve devs for inclusion to the pve ui, but they don't feel that it is a very important feature. If you DO feel so strongly about it, write the code and submit it for inclusion.PS: I'm also searching for a decent solution to this thread's topic - and seeing answers like this makes me just dismiss the entire community
Oh well, that's your opinion - just try to go outside your bubble and you'll see... the battle of OSes is quite realFirstly- no one wonders this. And apart from that blanket statement I had no idea such a dislike existed. More to the point, it takes two to tango. the original comment wasnt pointed at you and required no reply.
this answer was probably what I was expecting more than the "coffee" response...the PVE interface isnt/was never meant to replace a environmental monitoring solution. PVE very nicely exports its own data so you can import it to your grafana/prometheus/whatever, which can (and is meant to) monitor things like your temperatures. Such a feature request has been made to the pve devs for inclusion to the pve ui, but they don't feel that it is a very important feature. If you DO feel so strongly about it, write the code and submit it for inclusion.
That appears to use a mod script from here. It in fact, mods the PVE GUI quite substantially.PS: found a good solution btw
It is, yesThat appears to use a mod script from here. It in fact, mods the PVE GUI quite substantially.
That's why I'm using backups and what notBe aware that this has the potential of breaking the PVE, especially on future updates/upgrades.
While I agree with the approach of not condoning altering things manually, a UI change shouldn't "break" the hypervisor as a whole. I'll try to test some kind of fallback for the UI if the scripts are failing.Running any script from the WWW on a hypervisor host system, is something that cannot be condoned.
The trouble is (like reported several time in this forum) that the Proxmox developers can't and won't test whether the modified GUI will still work when they change something in the UI. Thus some change to the UI via a script might (and will sooner or later) lead to a breakage after an update.While I agree with the approach of not condoning altering things manually, a UI change shouldn't "break" the hypervisor as a whole. I'll try to test some kind of fallback for the UI if the scripts are failing.
I don't understand why you're attributing issues caused by modifications to the Proxmox product to Proxmox itself.PS: I'm also searching for a decent solution to this thread's topic - and seeing answers like this makes me just dismiss the entire community
Me toI'm also searching for a decent solution to this thread's topic
On a modern server you can easily end up in a lot of sensors (20 or 40 and more!) which would clutter the PVE UI quite badly.
sysadmins usually have a dedicated monitoring software (like ... ) for large environment or and don't even need this feature
Fair point. It maybe difficult to support the common devices used my most main stream Proxmox subscribers.for the smart table we already have the problem that it's not working for every device due to the way the manufactures use it. For example on two of my used micron server-ssds the wearout indicator reads n/a due to it being some propietary entry. I would expect similiar issues with temperature reading.
a good solution btw - help.rackzar.com/knowledgebase/article/how-to-monitor-cpu-temps-and-fan-speeds-in-proxmox-virtual-environment -> hope this helps others too
Be aware that this has the potential of breaking the PVE, especially on future updates/upgrades.
Running any script from the WWW on a hypervisor host system, is something that cannot be condoned.
So we agree relying on a script from the www to display hardware temperature within Proxmox is not an good solution. Which leaves me still looking for what I believe would be a widely useful capability.Proxmox developers can't and won't test whether the modified GUI will still work when they change something in the UI. Thus some change to the UI via a script might (and will sooner or later) lead to a breakage after an update.
I can't speak for everyone but I prefer my infrastructure (even if it's only my homelab) not to break due to this.
I suggest once again that people evaluate the Pulse monitoring app, which uses the Proxmox api to monitor not only the temps, but the CPU/RAM/Disk/Backups/hosts/docker apps etc. on a single pane of glass, right across your estate. They have made the app secure and really easy to install.So we agree relying on a script from the www to display hardware temperature within Proxmox is not an good solution. Which leaves me still looking for what I believe would be a widely useful capability.
The real challenge I see is how to readily support extension of a solution to a usefully wide enough variety of devices. Perhaps there would need to be user entry of device monitoring settings.

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