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1Introduction
2============
3
4{pve} is a platform to run virtual machines and containers. It is
5based on Debian Linux, and completely open source. For maximum
6flexibility, we implemented two virtualization technologies -
7Kernel-based Virtual Machine (KVM) and container-based virtualization
8(LXC).
9
10One main design goal was to make administration as easy as
11possible. You can use {pve} on a single node, or assemble a cluster of
12many nodes. All management task can be done using our web-based
13management interface, and even a novice user can setup and install
14{pve} within minutes.
15
16image::images/pve-software-stack.svg["Proxmox Software Stack",align="center"]
17
18
19Central Management
20------------------
21
22While many people start with a single node, {pve} can scale out to a
23large set of clustered nodes. The cluster stack is fully integrated
24and ships with the default installation.
25
98d7e09a 26Unique Multi-master Design::
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28The integrated web-based management interface gives you a clean
29overview of all your KVM guests and Linux containers and even of your
30whole cluster. You can easily manage your VMs and containers, storage
31or cluster from the GUI. There is no need to install a separate,
32complex, and pricy management server.
33
98d7e09a 34Proxmox Cluster File System (pmxcfs)::
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36Proxmox VE uses the unique Proxmox Cluster file system (pmxcfs), a
37database-driven file system for storing configuration files. This
38enables you to store the configuration of thousands of virtual
39machines. By using corosync, these files are replicated in real time
40on all cluster nodes. The file system stores all data inside a
41persistent database on disk, nonetheless, a copy of the data resides
42in RAM which provides a maximum storage size is 30MB - more than
43enough for thousands of VMs.
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45Proxmox VE is the only virtualization platform using this unique
46cluster file system.
47
98d7e09a 48Web-based Management Interface::
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50Proxmox VE is simple to use. Management tasks can be done via the
51included web based managment interface - there is no need to install a
52separate management tool or any additional management node with huge
53databases. The multi-master tool allows you to manage your whole
54cluster from any node of your cluster. The central web-based
55management - based on the JavaScript Framework (ExtJS) - empowers
56you to control all functionalities from the GUI and overview history
57and syslogs of each single node. This includes running backup or
58restore jobs, live-migration or HA triggered activities.
59
98d7e09a 60Command Line::
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62For advanced users who are used to the comfort of the Unix shell or
63Windows Powershell, Proxmox VE provides a command line interface to
64manage all the components of your virtual environment. This command
65line interface has intelligent tab completion and full documentation
66in the form of UNIX man pages.
67
98d7e09a 68REST API::
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70Proxmox VE uses a RESTful API. We choose JSON as primary data format,
71and the whole API is formally defined using JSON Schema. This enables
72fast and easy integration for third party management tools like custom
73hosting environments.
74
98d7e09a 75Role-based Administration::
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77You can define granular access for all objects (like VM´s, storages,
78nodes, etc.) by using the role based user- and permission
79management. This allows you to define privileges and helps you to
80control access to objects. This concept is also known as access
81control lists: Each permission specifies a subject (a user or group)
82and a role (set of privileges) on a specific path.
83
98d7e09a 84Authentication Realms::
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86Proxmox VE supports multiple authentication sources like Microsoft
87Active Directory, LDAP, Linux PAM standard authentication or the
88built-in Proxmox VE authentication server.
89
90
91Flexible Storage
92----------------
93
94The Proxmox VE storage model is very flexible. Virtual machine images
95can either be stored on one or several local storages or on shared
96storage like NFS and on SAN. There are no limits, you may configure as
97many storage definitions as you like. You can use all storage
98technologies available for Debian Linux.
99
100One major benefit of storing VMs on shared storage is the ability to
101live-migrate running machines without any downtime, as all nodes in
102the cluster have direct access to VM disk images.
103
104We currently support the following Network storage types:
105
106* LVM Group (network backing with iSCSI targets)
107* iSCSI target
108* NFS Share
109* Ceph RBD
110* Directly use iSCSI LUNs
111* GlusterFS
112
113Local storage types supported are:
114
115* LVM Group (local backing devices like block devices, FC devices, DRBD, etc.)
116* Directory (storage on existing filesystem)
117* ZFS
118
119Integrated Backup and Restore
120-----------------------------
121
122The integrated backup tool (vzdump) creates consistent snapshots of
123running Containers and KVM guests. It basically creates an archive of
124the VM or CT data which includes the VM/CT configuration files.
125
126KVM live backup works for all storage types including VM images on
127NFS, iSCSI LUN, Ceph RBD or Sheepdog. The new backup format is
128optimized for storing VM backups fast and effective (sparse files, out
129of order data, minimized I/O).
130
131High Availability Cluster
132-------------------------
133
134A multi-node Proxmox VE HA Cluster enables the definition of highly
135available virtual servers. The Proxmox VE HA Cluster is based on
136proven Linux HA technologies, providing stable and reliable HA
137services.
138
139Flexible Networking
140-------------------
141
142Proxmox VE uses a bridged networking model. All VMs can share one
143bridge as if virtual network cables from each guest were all plugged
144into the same switch. For connecting VMs to the outside world, bridges
145are attached to physical network cards assigned a TCP/IP
146configuration.
147
148For further flexibility, VLANs (IEEE 802.1q) and network
149bonding/aggregation are possible. In this way it is possible to build
150complex, flexible virtual networks for the Proxmox VE hosts,
151leveraging the full power of the Linux network stack.
152
153Integrated Firewall
154-------------------
155
156The intergrated firewall allows you to filter network packets on
157any VM or Container interface. Common sets of firewall rules can be grouped into 'security groups'.
158
159Why Open Source
160---------------
161
162Proxmox VE uses a Linux kernel and is based on the Debian GNU/Linux
163Distribution. The source code of Proxmox VE is released under the
164http://www.gnu.org/licenses/agpl-3.0.html[GNU Affero General Public
165License, version 3]. This means that you are free to inspect the
166source code at any time or contribute to the project yourself.
167
168At Proxmox we are committed to use open source software whenever
169possible. Using open source software guarantees full access to all
170functionalities - as well as high security and reliability. We think
171that everybody should have the right to access the source code of a
172software to run it, build on it, or submit changes back to the
173project. Everybody is encouraged to contribute while Proxmox ensures
174the product always meets professional quality criteria.
175
176Open source software also helps to keep your costs low and makes your
177core infrastructure independent from a single vendor.
178
179Your benefit with {pve}
180-----------------------
181
182* Open source software
183* No vendor lock-in
184* Linux kernel
185* Fast installation and easy-to-use
186* Web-based management interface
187* REST API
188* Huge active community
189* Low administration costs and simple deployment
190
191Project History
192---------------
193
194The project started in 2007, followed by a first stable version in
1952008. By that time we used OpenVZ for containers, and KVM for virtual
196machines. The clustering features were limited, and the user interface
197was simple (server generated web page).
198
199But we quickly developed new features using the
200http://corosync.github.io/corosync/[Corosync] cluster stack, and the
201introduction of the new Proxmox cluster file system (pmxcfs) was a big
202step forward, because it completely hides the cluster complexity from
203the user. Managing a cluster of 16 nodes is as simple as managing a
204single node.
205
206We also introduced a new REST API, with a complete declarative
207spezification written in JSON-Schema. This enabled other people to
208integrate {pve} into their infrastructur, and made it easy provide
209additional services.
210
211Also, the new REST API made it possible to replace the original user
212interface with a modern HTML5 application using JavaScript. We also
213replaced the old Java based VNC console code with
214https://kanaka.github.io/noVNC/[noVNC]. So you only need a web browser
215to manage your VMs.
216
217The support for various storage types is another big task. Notably,
218{pve} was the first distribution to ship ZFS on Linux by default in
2192014. Another milestone was the ability to run and manage
220http://ceph.com/[Ceph] storage on the hypervisor nodes. Such setups
221are extremely cost effective.
222
223When we started we were among the first companies providing
224commercial support for KVM. The KVM project itself continuously
225evolved, and is now a widely used hypervisor. New features arrives
226with each release. We developed the KVM live backup feature, which
227makes it possible to create snapshot backups on any storage type.
228
229The most notable change with version 4.0 was the move from OpenVZ to
230https://linuxcontainers.org/[LXC]. Containers are now deeply
231integrated, and they can use the same storage and network features
232as virtual machines.