[SOLVED] Debian 11 Gnome Desktop & PVE 7 - Local Key Errors

patrick3

Member
Oct 4, 2016
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Title says it.

I'm most of the way through setting up a new PVE 7 system on top of a default Debian 11 install. Basically using this guide with some tweaks.
https://pve.proxmox.com/wiki/Install_Proxmox_VE_on_Debian_Stretch

I used this PVE 7 repo:
Code:
deb [arch=amd64] http://download.proxmox.com/debian/pve bullseye pve-no-subscription

I found the key for PVE 7 here:
Code:
http://download.proxmox.com/debian/proxmox-release-bullseye.gpg

Initial apt update and installation of PVE 7 went smooth until the very last second when it is said:
Code:
Processing triggers for rsyslog (8.2102.0-2) ...
Processing triggers for man-db (2.9.4-2) ...
Processing triggers for proxmox-backup-file-restore (2.0.4-1) ...
Updating file-restore initramfs...
12755 blocks
Errors were encountered while processing:
 pve-manager
 proxmox-ve
E: Sub-process /usr/bin/dpkg returned an error code (1)

And the resulting error (repeats a few times):
Code:
Jul 19 16:30:42 devicehostname pveproxy[31731]: /etc/pve/local/pve-ssl.key: failed to load local private key (key_file or key) at /usr/share/perl5/PVE/APIServer/AnyEvent.pm line 1891.

pve-manager is kicking out the error, and proxmox-ve just can't complete until pve-manager is resolved first.

the dir /etc/pve/ exists, but is empty. it doesn't even have the /local subdir nor the pve-ssl.key file in question.


No other issues that I'm aware of....yet.

I understand this is a non-traditional install, but is there any suggestion to fix this other than just purging and trying again?
 
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Just purged it and tried installing again as actual root user instead of sudo. Same issues at the same spots.

Here's a note of interest:
Code:
Setting up lxc-pve (4.0.9-2) ...
apparmor_parser: Unable to replace "/usr/bin/lxc-start".  Profile doesn't conform to protocol
apparmor_parser: Unable to replace "lxc-container-default".  Profile doesn't conform to protocol


Here's the other trouble areas that all seem to have the same error as the first post:
Code:
Setting up pve-firewall (4.2-2) ...
Job for pve-firewall.service failed because the control process exited with error code.

Setting up pve-ha-manager (3.3-1) ...
watchdog-mux.service is a disabled or a static unit, not starting it.
Job for pve-ha-lrm.service failed because the control process exited with error code.

Job for pve-ha-crm.service failed because the control process exited with error code.

Setting up pve-manager (7.0-10) ...
Job for pvestatd.service failed because the control process exited with error code.

pkg: error processing package pve-manager (--configure):
 installed pve-manager package post-installation script subprocess returned error exit status 1
dpkg: dependency problems prevent configuration of proxmox-ve:
 proxmox-ve depends on pve-manager; however:
  Package pve-manager is not configured yet.

dpkg: error processing package proxmox-ve (--configure):
 dependency problems - leaving unconfigured


Thanks in advance!
 
Wow. Flashback here. This is so eerily similar to the issue I had trying to run PVE as a container (empty /etc/pve/ dir), but this time it's not. This was a full-blown install of Deb11 and then trying to install PVE7 on top of it.

Due to this issue (which I'm not convinced apparmor alone is responsible for it) I decided to go about it the opposite way and installed PVE7 first and make sure it was 100% happy, then used tasksel to add the desktop/gnome quick and easy.

All seems well and happy!


Note for anyone thinking about doing the same:

INSTALL PVE FIRST!!!
Add the desktop and software of your choice SECOND!!!

1.)
After tasksel sets up the desktop, add your regular desktop user with a adduser, and make them a sudoer with usermod -aG sudo username-you-created. The root user cannot login to the desktop so you need another user. Make sure you do this FIRST before setting the desktop as the boot-up default.

2.) test the desktop out with systemctl start gdm3 or kdm / lightdm / slim or whatever display manager you installed.

3.) make the desktop the default bootup method with systemctl set-default graphical.target

Other than those minor tips, it was really simple and straightforward. Marking as SOLVED.
 
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INSTALL PVE FIRST!!!
Add the desktop and software of your choice SECOND!!!
Thanks for doing the legwork. I've been meaning to try/evaluate proxmox ve at home but don't have sufficient extra hardware at the moment. I also realize that this isn't a standard configuration but wondered if someone had tried it. What is your scenario? I.e. are there scenarios other than poor man's lab? ;)
 
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