I have a container running Debian 8.2 and I would like to be able to use systemd on it like the rest of my debian systems in order to make it easier to manage. Anyway, I noticed it wasnt installed on the new guest i created, so i installed systemd, rebooted the system and then installed my...
why is proxmox incorrectly putting hostnames as shortname fullname in /etc/hosts? The proper format is:
ip full_hostname short_hostname
not the opposite. Seems to get reset on every reboot, which is even more frustrating.
nevermind, was an issue with a puppet class of mine that was creating the authorized_keys file and it was making it as a full file instead of a symlink to /etc/pve/priv/authorized_keys.
Once I join a server to a cluster, shouldn't it then be able to connectable through SSH by all the other cluster members and vice versa? This is needed in order for migrations to work. I would also assume that it would update the known hosts files so it doesn't make any complaints about that. Is...
pull osd's? You mean physically? Why? I don't have that option.
Also, what do you mean by reinitialize ceph? Just installing the proxmox ceph packages again? Then what? Add it as a monitor again? Some specifics would really be nice instead of a general idea.
Thanks again for the help!
One of my proxmox nodes that is also one of the ceph cluster nodes that has OSD's on it is having major issues with the operating system and I am forced to replace it with a new disk. i do though have access to the old disk, but I do not see a pve-cluster folder in /var/lib. Can I simply get...
I am using ceph for my storage for the VM's and another NFS server for templates/isos, etc, but the proxmox hosts OS's are currently being booted through iscsi. To improve stability and easier maintenance, I would like to have the proxmox host os images only be readable. Is this at all possible...
All of my KVM linux guests use ext4 at this time and my storage is ceph rbd. I am not using LVM within the guests at this time. Now I know proxmox only handles the resizing of the disk, but how do you recommend handling the resizing of the file systems on the guests. Again, LVM is not involved...
so does timesyncd use ntp? ntp always seems a bit overly complex to me. I just want all the servers to have the same time. Right now i just have ntp installed and configured through puppet (before I knew that timesyncd was being used on proxmox) and set to to public ntp servers and a very basic...
I am running proxmox 4 and using KVM, LXC, and Ceph on 8 servers. Is there an up to date list of incoming and outgoing ports I need open on all of these systems for all the services? I haven't found anything.
This site uses cookies to help personalise content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register.
By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.