I just use a few shell scripts. Basically some simple bash scripts that do all the work after a fresh install.
Kubernetes/Ansible are great to learn, but are also more complicated for simple setups.
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I just use a few shell scripts. Basically some simple bash scripts that do all the work after a fresh install.
Kubernetes/Ansible are great to learn, but are also more complicated for simple setups.
haven't thought about it. I guess I'll learn some bash :)
BTW what is a good OS for the VM host? many here are running proxmox... would you recommend it for this purpose of bash automation to bring up VMs?
Proxmox is built on Debian and is great. My second choice would just be plain Debian.
Okay 👍 Thanks for your suggestions. Think I'll just stick with Debian 🙂
I use Debian and Ganeti. I've not toyed with much else, so I dont know how they compare.
thanks for the info... I'm thinking of sticking with just Debian (as my simple usecase) and use virsh commands..
~~Stop. Docker is not a hypervisor and shouldn't be used as one.
Either use a docker compose file to do automated deployments or move to Proxmox and use host templates to deploy VMs which then can host docker.
There is zero reason to run KVM in docker.~~
Never mind, I misread. What you are looking for is Ansible. You can create a VM template that has your SSH keys configured and then you use Ansible to spin up a VM and do stuff instead the VM. I know how to do this under Proxmox but I have no idea how to do it under pure Debian. A lot of it is probably the same.
Thanks.. Just for clarification, you can use Ansible to control Proxmox as well.. and automate the entire VM bring up?
Yes
Proxmox is basically a VM management software that runs in a Debian install. You may be able to add it to your current install, but I am not certain about that.
I'm now using Fedora CoreOS which can be deployed from config files. It's really neat to be able to define everything the way you need it and just start up the VM with no further config necessary. I'm using podman to manage my services.
When I change my server, I always start from scratch, hoping that it will come out better.
I don't know what I'm expecting, it was always working well..
Personally, if you're considering it already, kubernetes might be something to look into. It's a lot. Like a lot to learn. But I can honestly say I could do it for a job now with how much I've learned. Then it's less about how to set up machines and more about just reapplying your infrastructure.