Difference between revisions of "Proxmox All-in-One"

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* & continue messing with pfSense
* & continue messing with pfSense
** '''<span style="color: rgb(186, 55, 42);">Do a BACKUP</span>'''
** '''<span style="color: rgb(186, 55, 42);">Do a BACKUP</span>'''
= pfSense Configuration =
= Taking it LIVE =
Here's where things get a bit fugly...
Up to this point, your server works fine on an internal network. Unfortunately, as far as the world outside the box is concerned, there are 2 machines there. The '''Proxmox''' install AND a '''pfSense''' install. They both show up on the network.
So...
Let's fix that.
# Swap all of the network connections on all existing VMs
#* Go into the '''Hardware''' tab for each VM...
#* edit any '''Network Device'''(s) they have configured...
#* basically, swap them to the opposite '''Bridge''' (vmbr) from what they currently use.
# SSH into Proxmox & change vmbr0 back to static
#* Give it the IP address your pfSense VM should be assigning it & the IP of the pfSense VM as its gateway.
#* It'd be a good idea to edit <code>/etc/hosts</code> to match the new address.
# Switch the physical network cables.
#* If NIC #1 is currently plugged into your network, swap it for NIC #2 (or whichever NIC you set your second bridge up to use...)
# Reboot the machine.

Revision as of 02:39, 4 July 2022

pfSense

  • Install pfSense (a link)
    • Set up a second network bridge internally (& give it a secondary physical NIC if you have one)
    • Build the pfSense VM
      • 8GB drive, 4 cores, 4096MB RAM
      • Add a second network device (on the second bridge... duh...)
    • Do a BACKUP
    • Open the VM console & pretend you're building a normal pfSense router
    • Once the VM is booted into pfSense...
    • Do a BACKUP
    • Then move on to:

Management VM

  • Pick your favourite OS & build a VM (Or... Ya know... Since ya gave that second network bridge a physical NIC (Ya did, right?)... You could just plug a computer in there.)
    • Point its network device at the second network bridge
    • Sign into https://192.168.1.1 (from the Management VM)
    • Go into Services / DHCP Server / LAN
      • Under Servers, add in your DNS server(s) address(es)
    • Restart networking on the Management VM
    • Feed access to this VM through the pfSense firewall
  • & continue messing with pfSense
    • Do a BACKUP

pfSense Configuration

Taking it LIVE

Here's where things get a bit fugly...

Up to this point, your server works fine on an internal network. Unfortunately, as far as the world outside the box is concerned, there are 2 machines there. The Proxmox install AND a pfSense install. They both show up on the network.

So...

Let's fix that.

  1. Swap all of the network connections on all existing VMs
    • Go into the Hardware tab for each VM...
    • edit any Network Device(s) they have configured...
    • basically, swap them to the opposite Bridge (vmbr) from what they currently use.
  2. SSH into Proxmox & change vmbr0 back to static
    • Give it the IP address your pfSense VM should be assigning it & the IP of the pfSense VM as its gateway.
    • It'd be a good idea to edit /etc/hosts to match the new address.
  3. Switch the physical network cables.
    • If NIC #1 is currently plugged into your network, swap it for NIC #2 (or whichever NIC you set your second bridge up to use...)
  4. Reboot the machine.