• sebinspace
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      61 year ago

      I’ve been using PM for about a year now. It’s quite nice, although I’ll fully admit I’ve barely scratched the surface of what it can do. I’ve heard a lot of people transition to Prox and adapt fairly quickly.

      • @iturnedintoanewt@lemm.ee
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        31 year ago

        It’s not… A walk in the park, and some stuff will have you manually editing files, as the UI might be missing those. But so far I’ve been a happy user for a bunch of years.

        • @wmassingham@lemmy.world
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          31 year ago

          I can’t count the number of times I had to do that under ESXi, or do manual vSAN recoveries, so I found myself quite comfortable doing that in proxmox too (especially since proxmox is regular debian).

        • sebinspace
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          01 year ago

          Yeah, not unlike the Linux experience; there will be times where you have to touch and/or nano configs. If you’re comfortable with such things, excellent. If not… you fidna get comfortable.

    • @pezhore@lemmy.ml
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      41 year ago

      As someone who moved to Proxmox for my 3-node homelab, good luck.

      I find the automation for deploying VMs to be woefully incapable compared to Terraform/PowerCLI on the VMware side. Not to mention things like load balancing/DRS are flat out missing.

      I managed to get it stable enough for homelab-y things like *arr, plex, DNS, etc - but at this point I would quit rather than use it in a production environment. Or maybe I would just look at bare metal kubernetes instead.

      • @emptiestplace@lemmy.ml
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        31 year ago

        IaaS or gtfo? I would love to see more development in this area, but I think you might be covering a bit too much ground with “in a production environment”. Tons of smaller (and not so small) companies are still running piles of bare metal chaos and could benefit greatly from even the simplest Proxmox setup.

        • @pezhore@lemmy.ml
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          21 year ago

          The biggest issue is being in aware of migrations for load balancing. If VM 1 is deployed to Node 1 with Terraform, then is moved to Node 2 at some point for load balancing, Terraform tries to recreate it on Node 1.

          Also, I have a slight moral objection to one of the top providers being developed by a for-profit prison company.

      • @You999@sh.itjust.works
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        31 year ago

        Your use case sounds like kubernetes would be a way better fit as dynamicly scaling and load balancing is kinda the whole point of kubernetes.

        Proxmox clustering is essentially just for adding redundancy and nothing more.