Are there any benefits of running Proxmox and virtualizing everything, vs having a host OS and running Docker and libvirt to host VMs for services that need it? I know that Proxmox does some storage management etc, but it seems like I could get everything it does with a well-managed host OS + ZFS/btrfs and using virtualization tools

  • Cylian91460@alien.topB
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    9 months ago

    It’s recommended bare metals not vm. Home assistants often require the latest feature, and some of those features may not work well behind any kind of virtualisation (especially docker’s network virtualisation). Running it on a VM is definitely better than running it in an out dated environment (like debian) but it’s not perfect.

    • FateOfNations@alien.topB
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      9 months ago

      Running Home Assistant OS in a virtual machine using the provided VM images is a supported configuration.

      From ADR-0015: Installation Method: Home Assistant OS:

      Supported Hypervisors

      The Home Assistant Operating System can be run on a Hypervisor and thus be run as a virtual machine. The following Hypervisors are supported:

      • KVM/QEMU
      • VirtualBox
      • VMWare
      • Xen

      We will provide documentation for the following systems build on top of these technologies:

      • Proxmox (KVM/QEMU based)
      • Unraid (KVM/QEMU based)
      • VirtualBox
      • VMWare