Unless you want to pay a company a decent amount of money to attempt and recover your data, you need to start from scratch.
Take this as a lesson learned and backup your data. All it takes is to click a few buttons to have scheduled backups. If you're not backing up your data than you aren't...
I was just looking around at Fail2ban for Proxmox. Thanks a lot for your contribution.
You should be able to create/request an account on the wiki and update it yourself.
Debian is focused on stability, so they freeze a software version early, and apply stability and security updates. So when a Debian "stable" version is released, so the software is usually behind or "old". There is dotdeb.org which maintains newer versions of software, but there is no...
What type of HDD are we talking about? You will probably see issues with I/O throughput. You can never have too much RAM. What model Xeons are you looking at, that makes a big difference.
Any reason for sticking with outdated software and applications? Aside from money constraints? Are people...
First run your domain and port (domain.com:8006) http://www.sslshopper.com/ssl-checker.html
Replace the files with the original files you should have backed up.
Do you have clusters? Did you update the nodes/* files?
I've had no issues on a previous server using LZO (snapshot) method to backup VM/CT's. On a new server it doesn't work.
I commonly get this error with regards to the remote NFS server
pvestatd[4596]: WARNING: command 'df -P -B 1 /mnt/pve/Bq1' failed: got timeout
This comes up over and over...
PEM is a format, I've seen them in .pem and .crt
https://support.ssl.com/index.php?/Knowledgebase/Article/View/19
I also have a Comodo SSL cert and the files are in PEM format.
The ca.crt and bundle.crt you received are most likely in PEM format.
If you see
in readable form than it's PEM
I don't think you understand what LVM is. Using KVM for guests doesn't mean your host node shouldn't be using LVM.
http://pve.proxmox.com/wiki/VZDump
http://tldp.org/HOWTO/LVM-HOWTO/whatisvolman.html
If you aren't using LVM on your host node, and trying to backup guests via snapshot, it isn't...
Right, but back-to-back compressions can raise the load. I can't tell from the stats what the issue could be. Have you tried changing the compression/mode?
I'm using NFS for backup and never noticed such a problem, not saying it doesn't happen for me but I never noticed it as I have backups set to run when most are a sleep.
What are your server specifications, CPU, HDD, etc.
What compression are you using?
What mode?
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