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1 [[chapter_installation]]
2 Installing {pve}
3 ================
4 ifndef::manvolnum[]
5 :pve-toplevel:
6 endif::manvolnum[]
7 ifdef::wiki[]
8 :title: Installation
9 endif::wiki[]
10
11 {pve} is based on Debian. This is why the install disk images (ISO files)
12 provided by Proxmox include a complete Debian system as well as all necessary
13 {pve} packages.
14
15 TIP: See the xref:faq-support-table[support table in the FAQ] for the
16 relationship between {pve} releases and Debian releases.
17
18 The installer will guide you through the setup, allowing you to partition the
19 local disk(s), apply basic system configurations (for example, timezone,
20 language, network) and install all required packages. This process should not
21 take more than a few minutes. Installing with the provided ISO is the
22 recommended method for new and existing users.
23
24 Alternatively, {pve} can be installed on top of an existing Debian system. This
25 option is only recommended for advanced users because detailed knowledge about
26 {pve} is required.
27
28 ifndef::wiki[]
29
30 include::pve-system-requirements.adoc[]
31
32 include::pve-installation-media.adoc[]
33
34 endif::wiki[]
35
36
37 [[installation_installer]]
38 Using the {pve} Installer
39 -------------------------
40
41 The installer ISO image includes the following:
42
43 * Complete operating system (Debian Linux, 64-bit)
44
45 * The {pve} installer, which partitions the local disk(s) with ext4, XFS,
46 BTRFS (technology preview), or ZFS and installs the operating system.
47
48 * {pve} Linux kernel with KVM and LXC support
49
50 * Complete toolset for administering virtual machines, containers, the host
51 system, clusters and all necessary resources
52
53 * Web-based management interface
54
55 NOTE: All existing data on the for installation selected drives will be removed
56 during the installation process. The installer does not add boot menu entries
57 for other operating systems.
58
59 Please insert the xref:installation_prepare_media[prepared installation media]
60 (for example, USB flash drive or CD-ROM) and boot from it.
61
62 TIP: Make sure that booting from the installation medium (for example, USB) is
63 enabled in your servers firmware settings and secure boot is disabled.
64
65 [thumbnail="screenshot/pve-grub-menu.png"]
66
67 After choosing the correct entry (e.g. Boot from USB) the {pve} menu will be
68 displayed and one of the following options can be selected:
69
70 Install {pve} (Graphical)::
71
72 Starts the normal installation.
73
74 TIP: It's possible to use the installation wizard with a keyboard only. Buttons
75 can be clicked by pressing the `ALT` key combined with the underlined character
76 from the respective button. For example, `ALT + N` to press a `Next` button.
77
78 Install {pve} (Console)::
79
80 Starts the console-mode installation wizard. It provides the same overall
81 installation experience as the graphical installer, but has generally better
82 compatibility with very old and very new hardware.
83
84 [thumbnail="screenshot/pve-tui-installer.png"]
85
86 Both modes use the same code base for the actual installation process to
87 benefit from more than a decade of bug fixes and ensure feature parity.
88
89 TIP: The 'Console Mode' option can be used in case the graphical installer does
90 not work correctly, due to e.g. driver issues.
91
92 Advanced Options: Install {pve} (Graphical Debug Mode)::
93
94 Starts the installation in debug mode. A console will be opened at several
95 installation steps. This helps to debug the situation if something goes wrong.
96 To exit a debug console, press `CTRL-D`. This option can be used to boot a live
97 system with all basic tools available. You can use it, for example, to
98 xref:chapter_zfs[repair a degraded ZFS 'rpool'] or fix the
99 xref:sysboot[bootloader] for an existing {pve} setup.
100
101 Advanced Options: Install {pve} (Console Debug Mode)::
102
103 Same as the graphical debug mode, but preparing the system to run the
104 console-mode installer instead.
105
106 Advanced Options: Install {pve} (Console Debug - nomodeset)::
107
108 Starts the normal console-mode installation, but prevents the Linux kernel from
109 loading any graphics driver. Can be used as a last-resort option, if e.g. an
110 incompatible driver is automatically loaded on boot.
111
112 Advanced Options: Rescue Boot::
113
114 With this option you can boot an existing installation. It searches all attached
115 hard disks. If it finds an existing installation, it boots directly into that
116 disk using the Linux kernel from the ISO. This can be useful if there are
117 problems with the boot block (grub) or the BIOS is unable to read the boot block
118 from the disk.
119
120 Advanced Options: Test Memory (memtest86+)::
121
122 Runs `memtest86+`. This is useful to check if the memory is functional and free
123 of errors.
124
125 [thumbnail="screenshot/pve-select-target-disk.png"]
126
127 After selecting *Install {pve}* and accepting the EULA, the prompt to select the
128 target hard disk(s) will appear. The `Options` button opens the dialog to select
129 the target file system.
130
131 The default file system is `ext4`. The Logical Volume Manager (LVM) is used when
132 `ext4` or `xfs` is selected. Additional options to restrict LVM space
133 can also be set (see <<advanced_lvm_options,below>>).
134
135 {pve} can be installed on ZFS. As ZFS offers several software RAID levels, this
136 is an option for systems that don't have a hardware RAID controller. The target
137 disks must be selected in the `Options` dialog. More ZFS specific settings can
138 be changed under `Advanced Options` (see <<advanced_zfs_options,below>>).
139
140 WARNING: ZFS on top of any hardware RAID is not supported and can result in data
141 loss.
142
143 [thumbnail="screenshot/pve-select-location.png", float="left"]
144
145 The next page asks for basic configuration options like the location, the time
146 zone, and keyboard layout. The location is used to select a download server
147 close by to speed up updates. The installer usually auto-detects these settings.
148 They only need to be changed in the rare case that auto detection fails or a
149 different keyboard layout should be used.
150
151 [thumbnail="screenshot/pve-set-password.png"]
152
153 Next the password of the superuser (root) and an email address needs to be
154 specified. The password must consist of at least 5 characters. It's highly
155 recommended to use a stronger password. Some guidelines are:
156
157 - Use a minimum password length of 12 to 14 characters.
158
159 - Include lowercase and uppercase alphabetic characters, numbers, and symbols.
160
161 - Avoid character repetition, keyboard patterns, common dictionary words,
162 letter or number sequences, usernames, relative or pet names, romantic links
163 (current or past), and biographical information (for example ID numbers,
164 ancestors' names or dates).
165
166 The email address is used to send notifications to the system administrator.
167 For example:
168
169 - Information about available package updates.
170
171 - Error messages from periodic CRON jobs.
172
173 [thumbnail="screenshot/pve-setup-network.png"]
174
175 The last step is the network configuration. Please note that during installation
176 you can either use an IPv4 or IPv6 address, but not both. To configure a dual
177 stack node, add additional IP addresses after the installation.
178
179 [thumbnail="screenshot/pve-installation.png", float="left"]
180
181 The next step shows a summary of the previously selected options. Re-check every
182 setting and use the `Previous` button if a setting needs to be changed. To
183 accept, press `Install`. The installation starts to format disks and copies
184 packages to the target. Please wait until this step has finished; then remove
185 the installation medium and restart your system.
186
187 [thumbnail="screenshot/pve-install-summary.png"]
188
189 If the installation failed, check out specific errors on the second TTY
190 (`CTRL + ALT + F2') and ensure that the systems meets the
191 xref:install_minimal_requirements[minimum requirements]. If the installation
192 is still not working, look at the xref:getting_help[how to get help chapter].
193
194 Further configuration is done via the Proxmox web interface. Point your browser
195 to the IP address given during installation (https://youripaddress:8006).
196
197 NOTE: Default login is "root" (realm 'PAM') and the root password was defined
198 during the installation process.
199
200 [[advanced_lvm_options]]
201 Advanced LVM Configuration Options
202 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
203
204 The installer creates a Volume Group (VG) called `pve`, and additional Logical
205 Volumes (LVs) called `root`, `data`, and `swap`. To control the size of these
206 volumes use:
207
208 `hdsize`::
209
210 Defines the total hard disk size to be used. This way you can reserve free space
211 on the hard disk for further partitioning (for example for an additional PV and
212 VG on the same hard disk that can be used for LVM storage).
213
214 `swapsize`::
215
216 Defines the size of the `swap` volume. The default is the size of the installed
217 memory, minimum 4 GB and maximum 8 GB. The resulting value cannot be greater
218 than `hdsize/8`.
219 +
220 NOTE: If set to `0`, no `swap` volume will be created.
221
222 `maxroot`::
223
224 Defines the maximum size of the `root` volume, which stores the operation
225 system. The maximum limit of the `root` volume size is `hdsize/4`.
226
227 `maxvz`::
228
229 Defines the maximum size of the `data` volume. The actual size of the `data`
230 volume is:
231 +
232 `datasize = hdsize - rootsize - swapsize - minfree`
233 +
234 Where `datasize` cannot be bigger than `maxvz`.
235 +
236 NOTE: In case of LVM thin, the `data` pool will only be created if `datasize` is
237 bigger than 4GB.
238 +
239 NOTE: If set to `0`, no `data` volume will be created and the storage
240 configuration will be adapted accordingly.
241
242 `minfree`::
243
244 Defines the amount of free space left in the LVM volume group `pve`. With more
245 than 128GB storage available the default is 16GB, else `hdsize/8` will be used.
246 +
247 NOTE: LVM requires free space in the VG for snapshot creation (not required for
248 lvmthin snapshots).
249
250 [[advanced_zfs_options]]
251 Advanced ZFS Configuration Options
252 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
253 The installer creates the ZFS pool `rpool`. No swap space is created but you can
254 reserve some unpartitioned space on the install disks for swap. You can also
255 create a swap zvol after the installation, although this can lead to problems.
256 (see <<zfs_swap,ZFS swap notes>>).
257
258 `ashift`::
259
260 Defines the `ashift` value for the created pool. The `ashift` needs to be set at
261 least to the sector-size of the underlying disks (2 to the power of `ashift` is
262 the sector-size), or any disk which might be put in the pool (for example the
263 replacement of a defective disk).
264
265 `compress`::
266
267 Defines whether compression is enabled for `rpool`.
268
269 `checksum`::
270
271 Defines which checksumming algorithm should be used for `rpool`.
272
273 `copies`::
274
275 Defines the `copies` parameter for `rpool`. Check the `zfs(8)` manpage for the
276 semantics, and why this does not replace redundancy on disk-level.
277
278 `hdsize`::
279
280 Defines the total hard disk size to be used. This is useful to save free space
281 on the hard disk(s) for further partitioning (for example to create a
282 swap-partition). `hdsize` is only honored for bootable disks, that is only the
283 first disk or mirror for RAID0, RAID1 or RAID10, and all disks in RAID-Z[123].
284
285
286 ZFS Performance Tips
287 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
288
289 ZFS works best with a lot of memory. If you intend to use ZFS make sure to have
290 enough RAM available for it. A good calculation is 4GB plus 1GB RAM for each TB
291 RAW disk space.
292
293 ZFS can use a dedicated drive as write cache, called the ZFS Intent Log (ZIL).
294 Use a fast drive (SSD) for it. It can be added after installation with the
295 following command:
296
297 ----
298 # zpool add <pool-name> log </dev/path_to_fast_ssd>
299 ----
300
301 ifndef::wiki[]
302
303 Install {pve} on Debian
304 -----------------------
305
306 {pve} ships as a set of Debian packages and can be installed on top of a standard
307 Debian installation.
308 xref:sysadmin_package_repositories[After configuring the repositories] you need
309 to run the following commands:
310
311 ----
312 # apt-get update
313 # apt-get install proxmox-ve
314 ----
315
316 Installing on top of an existing Debian installation looks easy, but it presumes
317 that the base system has been installed correctly and that you know how you want
318 to configure and use the local storage. You also need to configure the network
319 manually.
320
321 In general, this is not trivial, especially when LVM or ZFS is used.
322
323 A detailed step by step how-to can be found on the
324 {webwiki-url}Install_Proxmox_VE_on_Debian_12_Bookworm[wiki].
325
326
327 endif::wiki[]
328
329 ifdef::wiki[]
330
331 Video Tutorials
332 ---------------
333
334 See the list of all official tutorials on our
335 https://www.youtube.com/proxmoxve[{pve} YouTube Channel]
336
337
338 See Also
339 --------
340
341 * link:/wiki/Prepare_Installation_Media[Prepare Installation Media]
342
343 * link:/wiki/Install_Proxmox_VE_on_Debian_Buster[Install Proxmox VE on Debian Buster]
344
345 * link:/wiki/System_Requirements[System Requirements]
346
347 * link:/wiki/Package_Repositories[Package Repositories]
348
349 * link:/wiki/Host_System_Administration[Host System Administration]
350
351 * link:/wiki/Network_Configuration[Network Configuration]
352
353 * link:/wiki/Installation:_Tips_and_Tricks[Installation: Tips and Tricks]
354
355 endif::wiki[]