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1Installing Proxmox VE
2=====================
3ifndef::manvolnum[]
4:pve-toplevel:
5endif::manvolnum[]
6ifdef::wiki[]
7:title: Installation
8endif::wiki[]
9
10{pve} is based on Debian, therefore the disk image (ISO file) provided
11by us includes a complete Debian system ("stretch" for version 5.x) as
12well as all necessary {pve} packages.
13
14Using the installer will guide you through the setup, allowing
15you to partition the local disk(s), apply basic system configurations
16(e.g. timezone, language, network) and install all required packages.
17Using the provided ISO will get you started in just a few minutes,
18that's why we recommend this method for new and existing users.
19
20Alternatively, {pve} can be installed on top of an existing Debian
21system. This option is only recommended for advanced users since
22detailed knowledge about {pve} is necessary.
23
24ifndef::wiki[]
25
26include::pve-system-requirements.adoc[]
27
28endif::wiki[]
29
30
31Using the {pve} Installer
32-------------------------
33
34You can download the ISO from {website}en/downloads.
35It includes the following:
36
37* Complete operating system (Debian Linux, 64-bit)
38
39* The {pve} installer, which partitions the local disk(s) with ext4,
40 ext3, xfs or ZFS and installs the operating system.
41
42* {pve} kernel (Linux) with LXC and KVM support
43
44* Complete toolset for administering virtual machines, containers and
45 all necessary resources
46
47* Web based management interface for using the toolset
48
49NOTE: During the installation process, the complete server
50is used by default and all existing data is removed.
51
52Please insert the installation media (e.g. USB stick, CD-ROM) and boot
53from it.
54
55[thumbnail="screenshot/pve-grub-menu.png"]
56
57After choosing the correct entry (e.g. Boot from USB) the {pve} menu
58will be displayed, you can now select one of the following options:
59
60Install Proxmox VE::
61
62Start normal installation.
63
64TIP: It is possible to only use the keyboard to progress through the
65installation wizard. Buttons can be pressed by pressing down the `ALT`
66key, combined with the underlined character from the respective Button.
67For example, `ALT + N` to press a `Next` button.
68
69Install Proxmox VE (Debug mode)::
70
71Start installation in debug mode. It opens a shell console at several
72installation steps, so that you can debug things if something goes
73wrong. Please press `CTRL-D` to exit those debug consoles and continue
74installation. This option is mostly for developers and not meant for
75general use.
76
77Rescue Boot::
78
79This option allows you to boot an existing installation. It searches
80all attached hard disks and, if it finds an existing installation,
81boots directly into that disk using the existing Linux kernel. This
82can be useful if there are problems with the boot block (grub), or the
83BIOS is unable to read the boot block from the disk.
84
85Test Memory::
86
87Runs `memtest86+`. This is useful to check if your memory is
88functional and error free.
89
90[thumbnail="screenshot/pve-select-target-disk.png"]
91
92You normally select *Install Proxmox VE* to start the installation.
93After that you get prompted to select the target hard disk(s). The
94`Options` button lets you select the target file system, which
95defaults to `ext4`. The installer uses LVM if you select `ext3`,
96`ext4` or `xfs` as file system, and offers additional option to
97restrict LVM space (see <<advanced_lvm_options,below>>)
98
99You can also use ZFS as file system. ZFS supports several software RAID
100levels, so this is specially useful if you do not have a hardware RAID
101controller. The `Options` button lets you select the ZFS RAID level, and
102you can choose disks there. Additionally you can set additional options (see
103<<advanced_zfs_options,below>>).
104
105[thumbnail="screenshot/pve-select-location.png", float="left"]
106
107The next page just ask for basic configuration options like your
108location, the time zone and keyboard layout. The location is used to
109select a download server near you to speed up updates. The installer is
110usually able to auto detect those settings, so you only need to change
111them in rare situations when auto detection fails, or when you want to
112use some special keyboard layout not commonly used in your country.
113
114[thumbnail="screenshot/pve-set-password.png"]
115
116You then need to specify an email address and the superuser (root)
117password. The password must have at least 5 characters, but we highly
118recommend to use stronger passwords - here are some guidelines:
119
120- Use a minimum password length of 12 to 14 characters.
121
122- Include lowercase and uppercase alphabetic characters, numbers and symbols.
123
124- Avoid character repetition, keyboard patterns, dictionary words,
125 letter or number sequences, usernames, relative or pet names,
126 romantic links (current or past) and biographical information (e.g.,
127 ID numbers, ancestors' names or dates).
128
129It is sometimes necessary to send notifications to the system
130administrator, for example:
131
132- Information about available package updates.
133
134- Error messages from periodic CRON jobs.
135
136All those notification mails will be sent to the specified email
137address.
138
139[thumbnail="screenshot/pve-setup-network.png"]
140
141The last step is the network configuration. Please note that you can
142use either IPv4 or IPv6 here, but not both. If you want to configure a
143dual stack node, you can easily do that after installation.
144
145[thumbnail="screenshot/pve-installation.png", float="left"]
146
147If you press `Next` now, installation starts to format disks, and
148copies packages to the target. Please wait until that is finished,
149then remove the installation media and restart your system.
150
151Further configuration is done via the Proxmox web interface. Just
152point your browser to the IP address given during installation
153(https://youripaddress:8006).
154
155NOTE: Default login is "root" (realm 'PAM') and the root password is
156defined during the installation process.
157
158
159[[advanced_lvm_options]]
160Advanced LVM Configuration Options
161~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
162
163The installer creates a Volume Group (VG) called `pve`, and additional
164Logical Volumes (LVs) called `root`, `data` and `swap`. The size of
165those volumes can be controlled with:
166
167`hdsize`::
168
169Defines the total HD size to be used. This way you can save free
170space on the HD for further partitioning (i.e. for an additional PV
171and VG on the same hard disk that can be used for LVM storage).
172
173`swapsize`::
174
175Defines the size of the `swap` volume. The default is the size of the
176installed memory, minimum 4 GB and maximum 8 GB. The resulting value cannot
177be greater than `hdsize/8`.
178+
179NOTE: If set to `0`, no `swap` volume will be created.
180
181`maxroot`::
182
183Defines the maximum size of the `root` volume, which stores the operation
184system. The maximum limit of the `root` volume size is `hdsize/4`.
185
186`maxvz`::
187
188Defines the maximum size of the `data` volume. The actual size of the `data`
189volume is:
190+
191`datasize = hdsize - rootsize - swapsize - minfree`
192+
193Where `datasize` cannot be bigger than `maxvz`.
194+
195NOTE: In case of LVM thin, the `data` pool will only be created if `datasize`
196is bigger than 4GB.
197+
198NOTE: If set to `0`, no `data` volume will be created and the storage
199configuration will be adapted accordingly.
200
201`minfree`::
202
203Defines the amount of free space left in LVM volume group `pve`.
204With more than 128GB storage available the default is 16GB, else `hdsize/8`
205will be used.
206+
207NOTE: LVM requires free space in the VG for snapshot creation (not
208required for lvmthin snapshots).
209
210[[advanced_zfs_options]]
211Advanced ZFS Configuration Options
212~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
213The installer creates a ZFS pool `rpool`. When selecting ZFS, no swap space is
214created by default. You can leave some unpartitioned space for swap or create
215a swap zvol after installation, though the latter can lead to problems
216(see <<zfs_swap,ZFS swap notes>>).
217
218`ashift`::
219
220Defines the `ashift` value for the created pool. The `ashift` needs
221to be set at least to the sector-size of the underlying disks (2 to
222the power of `ashift` is the sector-size), or any disk,
223which might be put in the pool (e.g. during replacing a defective disk).
224
225`compress`::
226
227Defines whether compression is enabled for `rpool`.
228
229`checksum`::
230
231Defines which checksumming algorithm should be used for `rpool`.
232
233`copies`::
234
235Defines the `copies` parameter for `rpool`. Check the `zfs(8)` manpage for the
236semantics, and why this does not replace redundancy on disk-level.
237
238`hdsize`::
239
240Defines the total HD size to be used. This way you can save free
241space on the HD(s) for further partitioning (e.g. for creating a swap-partition).
242`hdsize` is only honored for bootable disks, i.e., only the first disk or
243mirror for RAID0, RAID1 or RAID10, and all disks in RAID-Z[123].
244
245
246ZFS Performance Tips
247~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
248
249ZFS uses a lot of memory, so it is best to add additional RAM if you
250want to use ZFS. A good calculation is 4GB plus 1GB RAM for each TB
251RAW disk space.
252
253ZFS also provides the feature to use a fast SSD drive as write cache. The
254write cache is called the ZFS Intent Log (ZIL). You can add that after
255installation using the following command:
256
257 zpool add <pool-name> log </dev/path_to_fast_ssd>
258
259
260ifdef::wiki[]
261
262link:/wiki/Install_from_USB_Stick[Install from USB Stick]
263---------------------------------------------------------
264
265link:/wiki/Install_Proxmox_VE_on_Debian_Stretch[Install Proxmox VE on Debian Stretch]
266-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
267
268endif::wiki[]
269
270ifndef::wiki[]
271
272include::pve-usbstick.adoc[]
273
274Install {pve} on Debian
275-----------------------
276
277{pve} ships as a set of Debian packages, so you can install it
278on top of a standard Debian installation.
279xref:sysadmin_package_repositories[After configuring the repositories], you
280need to run:
281
282[source,bash]
283----
284apt-get update
285apt-get install proxmox-ve
286----
287
288Installing on top of an existing Debian installation looks easy, but
289it presumes that you have correctly installed the base system, and you
290know how you want to configure and use the local storage. Network
291configuration is also completely up to you.
292
293In general, this is not trivial, especially when you use LVM or
294ZFS.
295
296You can find a detailed step by step how-to guide on the
297{webwiki-url}Install_Proxmox_VE_on_Debian_Stretch[wiki].
298
299
300endif::wiki[]
301
302ifdef::wiki[]
303
304Video Tutorials
305---------------
306
307* List of all official tutorials on our
308 http://www.youtube.com/proxmoxve[Proxmox VE YouTube Channel]
309
310* Tutorials in Spanish language on
311 http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLUULBIhA5QDBdNf1pcTZ5UXhek63Fij8z[ITexperts.es
312 YouTube Play List]
313
314
315See Also
316--------
317
318* link:/wiki/System_Requirements[System Requirements]
319
320* link:/wiki/Package_Repositories[Package Repositories]
321
322* link:/wiki/Host_System_Administration[Host System Administration]
323
324* link:/wiki/Network_Configuration[Network Configuration]
325
326* link:/wiki/Installation:_Tips_and_Tricks[Installation: Tips and Tricks]
327
328endif::wiki[]