with the demise of ESXi, I am looking for alternatives. Currently I have PfSense virtualized on four physical NICs, a bunch of virtual ones, and it works great. Does Proxmox do this with anything like the ease of ESXi? Any other ideas?

  • DeltaTangoLima@reddrefuge.com
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    9 months ago

    Tossing in my vote for Proxmox. I’m running OPNsense as a VM without any issues. I did originally try pfSense, but didn’t like it for some reason (I genuinely can’t recall what it was).

    Either way, Proxmox virtual networking has been relatively easy to learn.

    • ikidd@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      pfSense, but didn’t like it for some reason

      Probably the shitbirds at Netgate put you off it, understandably.

    • kalpol@lemmy.worldOP
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      9 months ago

      Admittedly I have not dug too deeply into Proxmox but its learning curve appears kinda steep.

      • anamethatisnt@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        There’s multiple guides on virtualizing pfsense in proxmox, but the easiest is to simply pci passthrough the nics you wanna use.
        I do recommend you leave a physical nic for proxmox itself to maintain LAN access to it if your pfsense is down.

        • twei@discuss.tchncs.de
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          9 months ago

          There could be driver issues doing this. I had a bad experience with Emulex NICs under OPNsense, Intel OTOH worked flawlessly. Switched back to virtual interfaces tho, as it works about as good as a physical NIC

      • BlueÆther@no.lastname.nz
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        9 months ago

        its not too bad. i switched from esxi to proxmox about 2 years ago.

        i run a virtualized opnsense with 2 nic’s passed through and another 2 virt, so it can be done

        • bean@lemmy.world
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          9 months ago

          Hey! I have been using ESXi about three year now. I have two identical NIC I bought. One for WAN and one for LAN. I also discovered I had to use the onboard LAN port (3rd port!) just to be able to access the web control. (Is that normal?)

          Anyway, I want to move to Proxmox, and then virtualize my OPNSense like I have on ESXi.

          I get so confused by how the adapters should be. Ideally I would love to have the LAN connect to a (dumb) switch, and provide Wi-Fi. But one thing I never tried before is a VLAN to protect the LAN from the Wi-Fi traffic, but still allowing some systems to still work like streaming data from the wired PC on the LAN to the NVIDIA Shield Pro. But then keeping the Alexa/Echo system on a more restricted WiFi.

          Can I do all this? I’m thinking I can, but. The hurdle of learning vlans and configuring the new Proxmox (which I’m pretty damn new to) is a daunting challenge.

          I’m ready to try this though. I have a 4G wireless plus WiFi system to keep the other half happy while I tinker to get it all working.

          Thoughts/Tips? Anyone?

          • BlueÆther@no.lastname.nz
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            9 months ago

            All doable, you might need a managed or smart switch though

            I have 4 bland at home plus untagged all through proxmox and a smart switch

            • one for wan
            • one for web facing servers
            • one for iot
            • one for guest wifi
            • rest of lab is untagged
          • tofubl@discuss.tchncs.de
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            9 months ago

            Incus looks cool. Have you virtualised a firewall on it? Is it as flexible as proxmox in terms of hardware passthrough options?

            I find zero mentions online of opnsense on incus. 🤔

            • TCB13@lemmy.world
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              9 months ago

              Yes it does run, but BSD-based VMs running on Linux have their details as usual. This might be what you’re looking for: https://discuss.linuxcontainers.org/t/run-freebsd-13-1-opnsense-22-7-pfsense-2-7-0-and-newer-under-lxd-vm/15799

              Since you want to run a firewall/router you can ignore LXD’s networking configuration and use your opnsense to assign addresses and whatnot to your other containers. You can created whatever bridges / vlan-based interface on your base system and them assign them to profiles/containers/VMs. For eg. create a cbr0 network bridge using systemd-network and then run lxc profile device add default eth0 nic nictype=bridged parent=cbr0 name=eth0 this will use cbr0 as the default bridge for all machines and LXD won’t provide any addressing or touch the network, it will just create an eth0 interface on those machines attached to the bridge. Then your opnsense can be on the same bridge and do DHCP, routing etc. Obviously you can passthrough entire PCI devices to VMs and containers if required as well.

              When you’re searching around for help, instead of “Incus” you can search for “LXD” as it tend to give you better results. Not sure if you’re aware but LXD was the original project run by Canonical, recently it was forked into Incus (and maintained by the same people who created LXD at Canonical) to keep the project open under the Linux Containers initiative.

              • tofubl@discuss.tchncs.de
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                9 months ago

                With Incus only officially supported in Debian 13, and LXD on the way out, should I get going with LXD and migrate to Incus later? Or use the Zabbly repo and switch over to official Debian repos when they become available? What’s the recommended trajectory, would you say?

                • TCB13@lemmy.world
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                  9 months ago

                  It depends on how fast you want updates. I’m sure you know how Debian works, so if you install LXD from Debian 12 repositories you’ll be on 5.0.2 LTS most likely for ever. If you install from Zabbly you’ll get the latest and greatest right now.

                  My companies’ machines are all running LXD from Debian repositories, except for two that run from Zabbly for testing and whatnot. At home I’m running from Debian repo. Migration from LXD 5.0.2 to a future version of Incus with Debian 13 won’t be a problem as Incus is just a fork and stgraber and other members of the Incus/LXC projects work very closely or also work in Debian.

                  Debian users will be fine one way or the other. I specifically asked stgraber about what’s going to happen in the future and this was his answer:

                  We’ve been working pretty closely to Debian on this. I expect we’ll keep allowing Debian users of LXD 5.0.2 to interact with the image server either until trixie is released with Incus available OR a backport of Incus is made available in bookworm-backports, whichever happens first.

                  I hope this helps you decide.

              • tofubl@discuss.tchncs.de
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                9 months ago

                Very informative, thank you.

                I am generally very comfortable with Linux, but somehow this seems intimidating.

                Although I guess I’m not using proxmox for anything other than managing VMs, network bridges and backups. Well, and for the feeling of using something that was set up by people who know what they’re doing and not hacked together by me until it worked…

                • TCB13@lemmy.world
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                  9 months ago

                  I guess I’m not using proxmox for anything other than managing VMs, network bridges and backups.

                  And LXD/Incus can do that as well for you. Install it an by running incus init it will ask you a few questions and get an automated setup with networking, storage etc. all running and ready for you to create VMs/Containers.

                  What I was saying is that you can also ignore the default / automated setup and install things manually if you’ve other requirements.

              • tofubl@discuss.tchncs.de
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                9 months ago

                I have another question, if you don’t mind: I have a debian/incus+opnsense setup now, created bridges for my NICs with systemd-networkd and attached the bridges to the VM like you described. I have the host configured with DHCP on the LAN bridge and ideally (correct me if I’m wrong, please), I’d like the host to not touch the WAN bridge at all (other than creating it and hooking it up to the NIC).

                Here’s the problem: if I don’t configure the bridge on the host with either dhcp or a static IP, the opnsense VM also doesn’t receive an IP on that interface. I have a br0.netdev to set up the bridge, a br0.network to connect the bridge to the NIC, and a wan.network to assign a static IP on br0, otherwise nothing works. (While I’m working on this, I have the WAN port connected to my old LAN, if it makes a difference.)

                My question is: Is my expectation wrong or my setup? Am I mistaken that the host shouldn’t be configured on the WAN interface? Can I solve this by passing the pci device to the VM, and what’s the best practice here?

                Thank you for taking a look! 😊

                • TCB13@lemmy.world
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                  9 months ago

                  Am I mistaken that the host shouldn’t be configured on the WAN interface? Can I solve this by passing the pci device to the VM, and what’s the best practice here?

                  Passing the PCI network card / device to the VM would make things more secure as the host won’t be configured / touching the network card exposed to the WAN. Nevertheless passing the card to the VM would make things less flexible and it isn’t required.

                  I think there’s something wrong with your setup. One of my machines has a br0 and a setup like yours. 10-enp5s0.network is the physical “WAN” interface:

                  root@host10:/etc/systemd/network# cat 10-enp5s0.network
                  [Match]
                  Name=enp5s0
                  
                  [Network]
                  Bridge=br0 # -> note that we're just saying that enp5s0 belongs to the bridge, no IPs are assigned here.
                  
                  root@host10:/etc/systemd/network# cat 11-br0.netdev
                  [NetDev]
                  Name=br0
                  Kind=bridge
                  
                  root@host10:/etc/systemd/network# cat 11-br0.network
                  [Match]
                  Name=br0
                  
                  [Network]
                  DHCP=ipv4 # -> In my case I'm also requesting an IP for my host but this isn't required. If I set it to "no" it will also work.
                  

                  Now, I have a profile for “bridged” containers:

                  root@host10:/etc/systemd/network# lxc profile show bridged
                  config:
                   (...)
                  description: Bridged Networking Profile
                  devices:
                    eth0:
                      name: eth0
                      nictype: bridged
                      parent: br0
                      type: nic
                  (...)
                  

                  And one of my VMs with this profile:

                  root@host10:/etc/systemd/network# lxc config show havm
                  architecture: x86_64
                  config:
                    image.description: HAVM
                    image.os: Debian
                  (...)
                  profiles:
                  - bridged
                  (...)
                  

                  Inside the VM the network is configured like this:

                  root@havm:~# cat /etc/systemd/network/10-eth0.network
                  [Match]
                  Name=eth0
                  
                  [Link]
                  RequiredForOnline=yes
                  
                  [Network]
                  DHCP=ipv4
                  

                  Can you check if your config is done like this? If so it should work.

      • ikidd@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        Proxmox is quite simple. As a former VCP, I find Proxmox more intuitive to use.

        If you need specific help with Proxmox and/or ZFS, you might also look at posting on https://www.practicalzfs.com

        And +1 for using OPNsense

      • kylian0087@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        From my understanding is that Proxmox is one of the more easy platforms to learn. I must say iI never used it personally.

  • Decronym@lemmy.decronym.xyzB
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    9 months ago

    Acronyms, initialisms, abbreviations, contractions, and other phrases which expand to something larger, that I’ve seen in this thread:

    Fewer Letters More Letters
    ESXi VMWare virtual machine hypervisor
    HTTP Hypertext Transfer Protocol, the Web
    IP Internet Protocol
    LTS Long Term Support software version
    LXC Linux Containers
    SSH Secure Shell for remote terminal access
    SSO Single Sign-On
    VPN Virtual Private Network
    ZFS Solaris/Linux filesystem focusing on data integrity
    nginx Popular HTTP server

    10 acronyms in this thread; the most compressed thread commented on today has 28 acronyms.

    [Thread #508 for this sub, first seen 13th Feb 2024, 06:05] [FAQ] [Full list] [Contact] [Source code]

  • node815@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    As Another Proxmox user - I’ve been doing well with it. I use these scripts for the LXC’s which has been fantastic:

    https://tteck.github.io/Proxmox/

    I also can log into it from the web as it’s secured by Authentik, SSO OIDC login when Away from home and need to manage it. Rare! But the option is there! :)

  • stewie410@programming.dev
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    9 months ago

    We’ve been running KVM on CentOS/Rocky hosts for our VM platforms; seems to work fine for our needs.

    I’m not sure how ESXi would differ as I’ve never used it, but may be an option if you want to roll your own vs proxmox.

  • genie@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    I see a lot of love for proxmox in this thread.

    Word of warning from my experience, sometimes PfSense seems to get confused with virtual interfaces. It works flawlessly once it’s up and running, but every time I reboot I have to assign interfaces. It will hang until I do so and will not completely come back online until I manually intervene.

  • CarbonatedPastaSauce@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    I ran it on Hyper-V for many years. Still running OPNsense that way. It manages 4 VLANS, RDNSBL, a metric ass ton of firewall rules, and several VPN clients and gateways, with just 2GB of ram and 4 virtual procs. It works and doesn’t even breathe hard.