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Proxmox VE automation scripts

Collection of scripts to manage Proxmox environments.

Please read section Using Docker on LXC if you are planning to use Docker with Linux Containers (LXC).

To migrate an existing Windows VM from Hyper-V to Proxmox see this other project (for Windows) first.

How to install

To download all scripts into a temporary folder:

source <(curl -Ls https://bit.ly/p-v-a)

This will download and execute bootstrap.sh. It will also install unzip apt package.

Scripts

Summary

download-cloud-image

Usage: ./download-cloud-image.sh <url> [OPTIONS]
    <url>                Url of image to download.
    --no-clobber, -nc    Doesn't overwrite an existing image.
    --help, -h           Display this help message.

Downloads an image from given url into /var/lib/vz/template/iso/ folder.

If the image already exists it will not be downloaded again.

If the file is compressed with gz, xz or zip it will also uncompress it.

Returns the full path of downloaded image.

Example

# Download Ubuntu 22.04 LTS image
UBUNTU_IMAGE='ubuntu-22.04-standard_22.04-1_amd64.tar.zst'
pveam download local $UBUNTU_IMAGE

import-vm-windows

Usage: ./import-vm-windows.sh <vmid> --image <file> --name <name> [OPTIONS]
    <vmid>              Proxmox unique ID of the VM.
    --image             Path to image file.
    --name              A name for the VM.

Additional options:
    --ostype            Guest OS type (default = win11).
    --cores             Number of cores per socket (default = 2).
    --memory            Amount of RAM for the VM in MB (default = 2048).
    --help, -h          Display this help message.

Creates a VM from an existing Hyper-V Windows VM. For Generation 2 (UEFI) types only.

Image must be in qcow2 format. You may use Convert-VhdxToQcow2 (on Windows) to convert a VHDX.

Please see qm command documentation for more information about the options.

Example

# Creates a Windows VM from a vhdx converted to qcow2.
VM_ID=103
./import-vm-windows.sh $VM_ID --image '/tmp/TstWindows.qcow2' --name 'tst-windows'

new-ct-docker-volume

Deprecated since Proxmox VE 8.1.

Usage: ./new-ct-docker-volume.sh <ctid> [--attach]
    <ctid>              Proxmox unique ID of the CT.
    --volsize           Size of volume (default = 8G).
    --attach            Attach created volume to CT.

Creates a special ext4 volume for Docker usage with LXC containers running over zfs.

There's no need to use this script directly. Please see section Using Docker on LXC for more information.

Returns the name of created volume.

new-ct

Usage: ./new-ct.sh <ctid> --ostemplate <file> --hostname <name> --password <password> [OPTIONS]
    <ctid>              Proxmox unique ID of the CT.
    --ostemplate        The OS template or backup file.
    --hostname          Set a host name for the container.
    --password          Sets root password inside container.

Additional options:
    --ostype            OS type (default = ubuntu).
    --cores             Number of cores per socket (default = 2).
    --memory            Amount of RAM for the VM in MB (default = 2048).
    --rootfs            Use volume as container root (default = local-zfs:120).
    --sshkey[s]         Setup public SSH keys (one key per line, OpenSSH format).
    --privileged        Makes the container run as privileged user (default = unprivileged).
    --bridge            Use bridge for container networking (default = vmbr0)
    --install-docker    Install docker and docker-compose.
    --no-docker-volume  Do not create a new volume for /var/lib/docker (default for PVE 8.1+).
    --docker-volsize    Set container volume size (default = 8G)
    --help, -h          Display this help message.

Creates a LXC container (CT).

Additionally, you can use --install-docker to also install docker into container (currently implemented only for Ubuntu, Debian and Alpine). In this case, please see section Using Docker on LXC for more information.

Any additional arguments are passed to pct create command. Please see pct command documentation for more information about the options.

Example

# Download Ubuntu 22.04 LTS image
UBUNTU_IMAGE='ubuntu-22.04-standard_22.04-1_amd64.tar.zst'
UBUNTU_TEMPLATE="local:vztmpl/$UBUNTU_IMAGE"
pveam download local $UBUNTU_IMAGE

# Creates an Ubuntu LXC container with a 120G storage, "my-key.pub" ssh key and Docker installed.
CT_ID=310
CT_NAME='ct-ubuntu'
CT_PASSWORD='uns@f3p@ss0rd'
./new-ct.sh $CT_ID --memory 1024 --ostemplate $UBUNTU_TEMPLATE --hostname $CT_NAME --password $CT_PASSWORD --sshkey ~/.ssh/my-key.pub --rootfs local-zfs:120 --install-docker

new-vm

Usage: ./new-vm.sh <vmid> --image <file> --name <name> [--cipassword <password>] | [--sshkey[s] <filepath>] [OPTIONS]
    <vmid>              Proxmox unique ID of the VM.
    --image             Path to image file.
    --name              A name for the VM.
    --cipassword        Password to assign the user. Using this is generally not recommended. Use ssh keys instead.
    --sshkey[s]         Setup public SSH keys (one key per line, OpenSSH format).

Additional options:
    --ostype            Guest OS type (default = l26).
    --cores             Number of cores per socket (default = 2).
    --memory            Amount of RAM for the VM in MB (default = 2048).
    --disksize          Size of VM main disk (default = 120G).
    --balloon           Amount of target RAM for the VM in MB. Using zero (default) disables the ballon driver.
    --install-docker    Install docker and docker-compose.
    --help, -h          Display this help message.

Creates a VM from a cloud image.

You can use any image containing cloud-init and qemu-guest-agent installed.

Additionally, you can use --install-docker to also install docker into virtual machine (currently implemented only for Ubuntu).

Any additional arguments are passed to qm create command. Please see qm command documentation for more information about the options.

Example

# Download Ubuntu 22.04 LTS image
URL='https://cloud-images.ubuntu.com/releases/jammy/release/ubuntu-22.04-server-cloudimg-amd64.img'
UBUNTU_IMAGE_FILE=$(./download-cloud-image.sh $URL --no-clobber)

# Creates an Ubuntu VM with "my-key.pub" ssh key and Docker installed.
VM_ID=201
./new-vm.sh $VM_ID --image $UBUNTU_IMAGE_FILE --name 'vm-ubuntu' --sshkey '~/.ssh/my-key.pub' --install-docker

remove-nag-subscription

Usage: ./remove-nag-subscription.sh

Removes Proxmox VE / Proxmox Backup Server nag dialog from web UI.

restore-ct

Usage: ./restore-ct.sh <ctid> --from <file> [OPTIONS]
    <ctid>              Proxmox unique ID of the CT.
    --from              The backup file.

Additional options:
    --rootfs            Use volume as container root (default = local-zfs:120).
    --restore-docker    Restore docker zfs volumes.
    --help, -h          Display this help message.

Restores a CT from a backup.

Use --restore-docker to rebuild docker zfs volume for /var/lib/docker.

Example

# Local backups are stored into '/var/lib/vz/dump/'
CT_ID=321
FROM='/var/lib/vz/dump/vzdump-lxc-321-2022_12_22-18_21_59.tar.zst'
./restore-ct.sh $CT_ID --from $FROM --restore-docker

setup-pbs

Usage: ./setup-pbs.sh

First-time setup for Proxmox Backup Server.

Remove enterprise (subscription-only) sources and adds pbs-no-subscription repository provided by proxmox.com. NOT recommended for production use.

This script must be run only once.

setup-pve

Usage: ./setup-pve.sh

First-time setup for Proxmox VE.

Remove enterprise (subscription-only) sources and adds pve-no-subscription repository provided by proxmox.com. NOT recommended for production use.

This script must be run only once.

Using Docker on LXC

The following is a compilation about the subject I found around the net. Please read if you wish to follow this path.

Overview

Using Docker on LXC is not recommended by Proxmox team. However, certain features of LXC like reduced memory usage and bind mount points between containers and host may be an incentive to go against this recommendation.

Two discussions about the pros and cons of each alternative may be found here and here.

ZFS

Update (2023-Nov)

Proxmox VE 8.1 uses ZFS 2.2 which finally supports overlay2 out of the box.

All previous workarounds should be considered deprecated.

Starting with Proxmox VE 8.1 the new-ct.sh script will always assume --no-docker-volume, never creating the workaround volume needed for previous Proxmox VE versions (see below).

Update (2023-Jun)

As of Proxmox 7.3 Docker over LXC does uses overlay2 by default. However there are still problems when using it over ZFS.

The default behavior of new-ct.sh script when invoked with --install-docker option is to create a dedicated volume for /var/lib/docker as explained in the next section.

You may try to use --no-docker-volume to skip this step. However, be advised that (currently) many docker images fail to start due another problem with permissions. If you got an error like

docker: failed to register layer: ApplyLayer exit status 1 stdout: stderr: unlinkat /var/log/apt: invalid argument.

simply rebuild your container without --no-docker-volume and it will work.

Legacy information

IMPORTANT: This section contains outdated information.

Using Docker over ZFS storage causes an additional burden: It will use vfs driver by default, which is terribly inefficient.

To check what storage driver Docker is currently using, use docker info and look for the Storage Driver line:

$ docker info

<...>
Storage Driver: vfs
<...>

To avoid this, you have 3 options:

To make a long story short, I did not find any successful report of the two first options.

overlay2 is a stable and recommended driver but only works with xfs and ext4 filesystems.

This did not not stop u/volopasse some years ago to find a workaround: to create a sparse zfs volume formatted as ext4 and use it as a bind mount point for /var/lib/docker. This will make Docker use overlay2 without any changes needed in Docker configuration.

It may seem a hack (which it is) but it reportedly works better than the very own Docker ZFS driver.

All these steps are wrapped into new-ct-docker-volume.sh script, which is also used by new-ct.sh script when invoked with --install-docker option.

From my personal experience: I am using this solution for more than a year now in my home servers with zero problems of performance nor stability. That said I do not use nor recommend this solution in any production capacity. Also, see Caveats section below.

Caveats when using Docker on LXC

Backups

Backups (both to local storage and to Proxmox Backup Server) works fine.

However, please note that the contents of /var/lib/docker will not be included in backups.

Because of this you should not use Docker volumes to store any persistent data which is important since they will be kept at this location (and, again, will not be included in backups).

Instead you should use Docker bind mounts which mounts a file or directory from the Docker host (LXC, in our case) into a Docker container. All files from LXC filesystem will be included into backups.

Lastly, since we are talking about backups, please remember again that all this is very new and not recommended by Proxmox team. I put these scripts initially for my personal usage and they have yet a long way to run until be considered stable and battle-tested. Thus, caution is advised.

Restoring backups

To restore an existing backup you must use restore-ct script with the --restore-docker option. This will rebuild the zfs volume for /var/lib/docker and mount it correctly.

Simply using the Restore command from Proxmox Web UI will fail since it doesn't know what to do with /var/lib/docker/ bind mount point.

Migrations & Snapshots

Originally this method caused migrations and snapshot to fail.

iGadget found that naming the ZFS volume in a very specific way solves the snapshot and migration problems. This naming scheme is already adopted by these scripts so, for now, migrations and snapshots are working.

However, please be aware that this takes advantage of a very specific way Proxmox was implemented and it may break in future Proxmox versions.

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Collection of scripts to manage Proxmox environments.

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