This builds an up-to-date Proxmox VE Vagrant Base Box.
Currently this targets Proxmox VE 8.
Create the base box as described in the section corresponding to your provider.
If you want to troubleshoot the packer execution see the .log
file that is created in the current directory.
After the example vagrant environment is started, you can access the Proxmox Web Interface with the default root
user and password vagrant
.
For a cluster example see rgl/proxmox-ve-cluster-vagrant.
Create the base box:
make build-libvirt
Add the base box as suggested in make output:
vagrant box add -f proxmox-ve-amd64 proxmox-ve-amd64-libvirt.box
Start the example vagrant environment with:
cd example
vagrant up --no-destroy-on-error --provider=libvirt
Set the Proxmox VE details:
cat >secrets-proxmox.sh <<EOF
export PROXMOX_URL='https://192.168.1.21:8006/api2/json'
export PROXMOX_USERNAME='root@pam'
export PROXMOX_PASSWORD='vagrant'
export PROXMOX_NODE='pve'
EOF
source secrets-proxmox.sh
Create the template:
make build-proxmox
NB There is no way to use the created template with vagrant (the vagrant-proxmox plugin is no longer compatible with recent vagrant versions). Instead, use packer or terraform.
Follow the rgl/windows-vagrant Hyper-V Usage section to create the Vagrant
vSwitch for use by the packer template and the example vagrant environment.
Create the proxmox
vSwitch for use in the example vagrant environment second
network interface:
PowerShell -NoLogo -NoProfile -ExecutionPolicy Bypass <<'EOF'
$switchName = 'proxmox'
$networkAdapterName = "vEthernet ($switchName)"
$networkAdapterIpAddress = '10.10.10.1'
$networkAdapterIpPrefixLength = 24
# create the vSwitch.
New-VMSwitch -Name $switchName -SwitchType Internal | Out-Null
# assign it an host IP address.
$networkAdapter = Get-NetAdapter $networkAdapterName
$networkAdapter | New-NetIPAddress `
-IPAddress $networkAdapterIpAddress `
-PrefixLength $networkAdapterIpPrefixLength `
| Out-Null
# remove all virtual switches from the windows firewall.
Set-NetFirewallProfile `
-DisabledInterfaceAliases (
Get-NetAdapter -name "vEthernet*" | Where-Object {$_.ifIndex}
).InterfaceAlias
EOF
Set the Hyper-V details:
cat >secrets-hyperv.sh <<'EOF'
# set this value when you need to set the VM Switch Name.
export HYPERV_SWITCH_NAME='Vagrant'
# set this value when you need to set the VM VLAN ID.
unset HYPERV_VLAN_ID
#export HYPERV_VLAN_ID=''
# set the credentials that the guest will use
# to connect to this host smb share.
# NB you should create a new local user named _vagrant_share
# and use that one here instead of your user credentials.
# NB it would be nice for this user to have its credentials
# automatically rotated, if you implement that feature,
# let me known!
export VAGRANT_SMB_USERNAME='_vagrant_share'
export VAGRANT_SMB_PASSWORD=''
# remove the virtual switch from the windows firewall.
# NB execute if the VM fails to obtain an IP address from DHCP.
PowerShell -Command 'Set-NetFirewallProfile -DisabledInterfaceAliases (Get-NetAdapter -name "vEthernet*" | Where-Object {$_.ifIndex}).InterfaceAlias'
EOF
source secrets-hyperv.sh
Create the base box:
make build-hyperv
Add the base box as suggested in make output:
vagrant box add -f proxmox-ve-amd64 proxmox-ve-amd64-hyperv.box
Start the example vagrant environment with:
cd example
vagrant up --provider=hyperv
Download govc and place it inside your /usr/local/bin
directory.
Set your VMware vSphere details and test the connection:
sudo apt-get install build-essential patch ruby-dev zlib1g-dev liblzma-dev
vagrant plugin install vagrant-vsphere
cat >secrets-vsphere.sh <<'EOF'
export GOVC_INSECURE='1'
export GOVC_HOST='vsphere.local'
export GOVC_URL="https://$GOVC_HOST/sdk"
export GOVC_USERNAME='[email protected]'
export GOVC_PASSWORD='password'
export GOVC_DATACENTER='Datacenter'
export GOVC_CLUSTER='Cluster'
export GOVC_DATASTORE='Datastore'
export VSPHERE_OS_ISO="[$GOVC_DATASTORE] iso/proxmox-ve_8.3-1.iso"
export VSPHERE_ESXI_HOST='esxi.local'
export VSPHERE_TEMPLATE_FOLDER='test/templates'
# NB the VSPHERE_TEMPLATE_NAME last segment MUST match the
# builders.vm_name property inside the packer template.
export VSPHERE_TEMPLATE_NAME="$VSPHERE_TEMPLATE_FOLDER/proxmox-ve-amd64"
export VSPHERE_VM_FOLDER='test'
export VSPHERE_VM_NAME='proxmox-ve-example'
# NB for the nested VMs to access the network, this VLAN port group security
# policy MUST be configured to Accept:
# Promiscuous mode
# Forged transmits
export VSPHERE_VLAN='packer'
export VSPHERE_IP_WAIT_ADDRESS='0.0.0.0/0'
# set the credentials that the guest will use
# to connect to this host smb share.
# NB you should create a new local user named _vagrant_share
# and use that one here instead of your user credentials.
# NB it would be nice for this user to have its credentials
# automatically rotated, if you implement that feature,
# let me known!
export VAGRANT_SMB_USERNAME='_vagrant_share'
export VAGRANT_SMB_PASSWORD=''
EOF
source secrets-vsphere.sh
# see https://github.com/vmware/govmomi/blob/master/govc/USAGE.md
govc version
govc about
govc datacenter.info # list datacenters
govc find # find all managed objects
Download the Proxmox ISO (you can find the full iso URL in the proxmox-ve.json file) and place it inside the datastore as defined by the iso_paths
property that is inside the packer template file.
See the example Vagrantfile to see how you could use a cloud-init configuration to configure the VM.
Type make build-vsphere
and follow the instructions.
Try the example guest:
source secrets-vsphere.sh
cd example
vagrant up --provider=vsphere --no-destroy-on-error --no-tty
vagrant ssh
exit
vagrant destroy -f
To improve the build performance you can use the following options.
To speed up package downloads, you can specify an apt caching proxy
(e.g. apt-cacher-ng)
by defining the environment variables APT_CACHE_HOST
(default: undefined)
and APT_CACHE_PORT
(default: 3124).
Example:
APT_CACHE_HOST=10.10.10.100 make build-libvirt
To decrease disk wear (and potentially reduce io times),
you can use /dev/shm
(temporary memory file-system) as output_directory
for Packer builders.
Your system must have enough available memory to store the created virtual machine.
Example:
PACKER_OUTPUT_BASE_DIR=/dev/shm make build-libvirt
Remember to also define PACKER_OUTPUT_BASE_DIR
when you run make clean
afterwards.
Some properties of the virtual machine and the Proxmox VE installation can be overridden.
Take a look at proxmox-ve.pkr.hcl
, variable
blocks, to get an idea which values can be
overridden. Do not override iso_url
and iso_checksum
as the boot_command
s might be
tied to a specific Proxmox VE version.
Create the base box:
make build-libvirt VAR_FILE=example.pkrvars.hcl
The following content of example.pkrvars.hcl
:
- sets the initial disk size to 128 GB
- sets the initial memory to 4 GB
- sets the Packer output base directory to /dev/shm
- uses all default shell provisioners (see
./provisioners
) and a custom one for german localisation
disk_size = 128 * 1024
memory = 4 * 1024
output_base_dir = "/dev/shm"
shell_provisioner_scripts = [
"provisioners/apt_proxy.sh",
"provisioners/upgrade.sh",
"provisioners/network.sh",
"provisioners/localisation-de.sh",
"provisioners/reboot.sh",
"provisioners/provision.sh",
]
The Proxmox installation is automatically configured using the answer.toml
file, but to trigger the automatic installation, this environment has to nudge the default Proxmox installation ISO to use the answer.toml
file through the packer boot_command
interface. This is quite fragile, so be aware when you change anything. The following table describes the current steps and corresponding answers.
step | boot_command |
---|---|
select "Advanced Options" | <end><enter> |
select "Install Proxmox VE (Automated)" | <down><down><down><enter> |
wait for the shell prompt | <wait1m> |
do the installation | proxmox-fetch-answer partition >/run/automatic-installer-answers<enter><wait>exit<enter> |