Difference between revisions of "Proxmox Mail Gateway in container"

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       777        56 running 192.168.2.110  proxmox
 
       777        56 running 192.168.2.110  proxmox
 
[root@vz1 ~]#</pre>
 
[root@vz1 ~]#</pre>
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= Backup considerations, live migration, and HA Cluster =
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The Proxmox HA Cluster consists of a master and several nodes (minimum one node) - All can be run on different OpenVZ servers within the same subnet. Configuration is done on the master, all configuration and data is synchronized to all cluster nodes over a VPN tunnel.
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For online backups: see [[Backup_of_a_running_VE_with_vzdump]]
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Live migration: see [[Checkpointing_and_live_migration]]
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For HA Cluster: see http://www.proxmox.com/cms_proxmox/en/technology/proxmox-ha-cluster/
  
 
= Proxmox configuration =
 
= Proxmox configuration =

Revision as of 07:57, 27 March 2007

The Proxmox Mail Gateway template is an OpenVZ OS template that allows you to run the Antispam & Antivirus Mail Gateway. Proxmox runs in different virtualization environments but in OpenVZ it is almost twice as fast as on the virtualization solutions from the market leader - due to the minimal overhead in OpenVZ.

Prerequisites

I assume you have already a running OpenVZ server. This HowTo is based on an fresh Centos 4.4 installation with OpenVZ kernel 2.6.9 but should work also with all other combinations. I used a Dual Xeon with 2 GB Ram.

Installation

Download the Proxmox OpenVZ template

wget http://www.proxmox.com/cms_proxmox/cms/upload/bittorrent/debian-3.1-proxmox-mailgateway.tar.gz

Copy the template into the template cache, usually to /vz/templates/cache/

Create a default config

Create a reasonable default config if you don’t have one. The following command creates the file /etc/vz/conf/ve-default.conf-sample which contains reasonable defaults if you plan to run 5 VEs:

vzsplit -n 5 -f default

Create the VPS

Choose a free VPS ID, we use 777 inside this guide and

vzctl create 777 --ostemplate debian-3.1-proxmox-mailgateway --config default

Configure the VPS

Set IP Address and DNS nameservers, start servers automatically at boot time: please adapt these settings to your enviroment

vzctl set 777 --onboot yes --ipadd 192.168.2.110 --nameserver 192.168.2.100 --nameserver 192.168.2.101 --hostname proxmox --searchdomain yourdomain.tld --save

Set guaranteed memory to 512MB, maximum disk space to 4GB

vzctl set 777 --vmguarpages 131072:2147483647 --diskspace 4000000:4400000 --save

And finally set the root password:

vzctl set 777 --userpasswd root:YOURPASSWORT

Start the VPS

vzctl start 777

Now you have a running Proxmox! By typing vzlist you should have something like this.

[root@vz1 ~]# vzlist
      VEID      NPROC STATUS  IP_ADDR         HOSTNAME
       777         56 running 192.168.2.110   proxmox
[root@vz1 ~]#

Backup considerations, live migration, and HA Cluster

The Proxmox HA Cluster consists of a master and several nodes (minimum one node) - All can be run on different OpenVZ servers within the same subnet. Configuration is done on the master, all configuration and data is synchronized to all cluster nodes over a VPN tunnel.

For online backups: see Backup_of_a_running_VE_with_vzdump

Live migration: see Checkpointing_and_live_migration

For HA Cluster: see http://www.proxmox.com/cms_proxmox/en/technology/proxmox-ha-cluster/

Proxmox configuration

For the Proxmox configuration point your web browser to the given IP address.

More information on http://www.proxmox.com