Hello all,
I am an enthusiast and newbie when it comes to Proxmox and really virtualization in general. I recently bought an HPE Proliant dl380p gen8 with dual Xeon E5-2660 processors, 128 GB ram, P420i RAID controller (which I've set to HBA mode), 4x 4TB HDDs, and a 128 GB SSD. After updating drivers, firmware, BIOS, and enabling all virtualization features, I found that I could not even boot the latest Proxmox image. I then tried Proxmox 5.4 and got the same result. After a little trial and error, I found I could boot and install Proxmox after changing the 'MPS (multi-processing specification) Table Mode' to 'Disabled' rather than 'Full Table APIC'. Unfortunately, but perhaps not surprisingly, Proxmox recognized only one CPU and one core. I also tried installing Proxmox on top of a standard Debian image which still only recognized one CPU and one core.
After another long stretch of trial and error, I successfully installed Proxmox 4.4 on top of Debian 8 (w/ Full Table APIC enabled in BIOS) which recognized both processors and all 32 cores (w/ hyper-threading). Strangely, the standalone Proxmox 4.4 image would not boot. Honestly, sticking with Proxmox 4.4 is more than adequate for my needs, however, this problem is still bugging me, especially after reading about others who are successfully running more recent Proxmox releases on the same hardware.
Any feedback would be gratefully appreciated! I suspect this has more to do with Debian itself rather than Proxmox and is probably something painfully obvious. If so, I apologize! I just recently began my journey into the server, VM, home-lab world and am fascinated by the power and flexibility of Proxmox!
Best,
mkaicher
I am an enthusiast and newbie when it comes to Proxmox and really virtualization in general. I recently bought an HPE Proliant dl380p gen8 with dual Xeon E5-2660 processors, 128 GB ram, P420i RAID controller (which I've set to HBA mode), 4x 4TB HDDs, and a 128 GB SSD. After updating drivers, firmware, BIOS, and enabling all virtualization features, I found that I could not even boot the latest Proxmox image. I then tried Proxmox 5.4 and got the same result. After a little trial and error, I found I could boot and install Proxmox after changing the 'MPS (multi-processing specification) Table Mode' to 'Disabled' rather than 'Full Table APIC'. Unfortunately, but perhaps not surprisingly, Proxmox recognized only one CPU and one core. I also tried installing Proxmox on top of a standard Debian image which still only recognized one CPU and one core.
After another long stretch of trial and error, I successfully installed Proxmox 4.4 on top of Debian 8 (w/ Full Table APIC enabled in BIOS) which recognized both processors and all 32 cores (w/ hyper-threading). Strangely, the standalone Proxmox 4.4 image would not boot. Honestly, sticking with Proxmox 4.4 is more than adequate for my needs, however, this problem is still bugging me, especially after reading about others who are successfully running more recent Proxmox releases on the same hardware.
Any feedback would be gratefully appreciated! I suspect this has more to do with Debian itself rather than Proxmox and is probably something painfully obvious. If so, I apologize! I just recently began my journey into the server, VM, home-lab world and am fascinated by the power and flexibility of Proxmox!
Best,
mkaicher