I am running Proxmox on a private network without internet access. As such, how do I define the email server (which resides on another server on the network) and how to change the actual email address PVE sends to?
Very standard VM install (accepted default volumes, etc)
I'm trying to SCP some files directly to a guest filesystem as it is on a private network and I have no other way to do it as it is a Windows VM with no access outside of the private network it is on
I'm running 8.0.4 at the moment.
systemctl status cron reports nothing
ps aux |grep cron reports
root 887 0.0 0.0 6608 2560 ? Ss Jan28 0:04 /usr/sbin/cron -f
so I know cron is running. But I think I see the problem! My cronjob is set to run Sundays at 0100. Looks like...
I get that. As I said, I ran journalctl -u cron and it reported nothing. I also grep'd the entire /var/log directory for cron (recursive) and nothing found either.
So where is the log of cronjobs that have run? I know it ran but don't know why it failed
Where can I find it for the host? I can't seem to locate it in the "usual places" (/var/log).
I'm trying to track down a possible failed cronjob but I don't know if it failed because I can't find a log!
Forum search doesn't give any results about this.
Is there a way to change the ID of a VM? For example, VM 102 change to 100 (100 is not currently being used)
Lenovo M93 Tiny
Intel i5-4570T
Proxmox 8.0.4
I was hoping to be able to pass through the HD audio hardware to a guest running Debian 10 so it can send audio files from the guest to the host's speaker. I have no need for hardware sound anywhere but the Debian guest so this seemed like a way to...
I will check my hardware support IOMMU (it should as it's an Intel i5 processor) and I don't need to share USB with any other VM (nor the host). I'll see if this is a workable solution. Thanks for the idea.
One question I'm not clear on in the docs. Do I need to enable IOMMU in the host or VM?
After listening more carefully (and running usbtop in order to monitor the stream), I find that "dropouts" isn't exactly accurate in that no packets are being lost but only delayed. So a word of the sound file may stop mid-syllable only to continue where it paused, anywhere from a hundred...
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