sgdisk --zap-all /dev/nvme0n1 and then retry. ...I want all my VMs to go through my firewall VM. I know I need to bridge all of them but when I check the network on the host it shows the pve IP I chose during install.
...I want all my VMs to go through my firewall VM. I know I need to bridge all of them but when I check the network on the host it shows the pve IP I chose during install.
1. Can I disable the physical connection of the motherboard NIC that hosts vmbr0 and make it internal only?
2. How do I pass through the firewall VM not only all my VMs but also the pve host itself?

So, remove the "slave port" property from the one bridge you want to make internal, add a fixed IP (or change it to dhcp) from the FW VM provided IP range and set the gateway of that internal bridge to the FW VM's internal IP.
This and many other attempts did not work for one of my HDDs.You may want to zap it (destroys all data left on it!) as root using the console:sgdisk --zap-all /dev/nvme0n1and then retry.
Yes, depending on what you want to do afterwards with that there's more required.This and many other attempts did not work for one of my HDDs.
This did the job:
dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/sd<X> bs=4M status=progress
Best regards, Peter
# WARNING: dangerous, triple check before executing
 sgdisk --zap-all /dev/DEVICE
 zpool labelclear -f /dev/DEVICE
 dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/DEVICE bs=1M count=200 conv=fdatasync status=progresspew pew pew lasers!! love it - thank you for that zapWas this NVMe part of another system before?
You may want to zap it (destroys all data left on it!) as root using the console:sgdisk --zap-all /dev/nvme0n1and then retry.
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