This is an unofficial compilation of Proxmox Backup Server to run it in a container for AMD64 and ARM64.
Running in a container might result in some functions not working properly. Feel free to create an issue to debug those.
If you found it useful :)
- Some people see authentication failure using
admin@pbs
: Ensure that/run
is mounted totmpfs
which is requirement of2.1.x
- Some Synology devices use a really old kernel (3.1), for such the ayufan#15 is needed, and image needs to be manually recompiled.
For starting quickly all images are precompiled and hosted at https://hub.docker.com/r/ayufan/proxmox-backup-server.
Or:
docker pull ayufan/proxmox-backup-server:latest
docker-compose up -d
Then login to https://<ip>:8007/
with admin / pbspbs
.
After that change a password.
The core features should work, but there are ones do not work due to container architecture:
- ZFS: it is not installed in a container
- Shell: since the PVE (not PAM) authentication is being used, and since the shell access does not make sense in an ephemeral container environment
- PAM authentication: since containers are by definition ephemeral and no
/etc/
configs are being persisted
See Releases.
Since it runs in a container, it is by default self-signed. Follow the tutorial: https://pbs.proxmox.com/docs/pve-integration.html.
You might need to read a PBS fingerprint:
docker-compose exec server proxmox-backup-manager cert info | grep Fingerprint
Create a new file (or merge with existing): docker-compose.override.yml
:
version: '2.1'
services:
pbs:
volumes:
- backups:/backups
volumes:
backups:
driver: local
driver_opts:
type: ''
o: bind
device: /srv/dev-disk-by-label-backups
Then, add a new datastore in a PBS: https://<IP>:8007/
.
If you are running in Docker it might be advised to configure timezone.
Create a new file (or merge with existing): docker-compose.override.yml
:
version: '2.1'
services:
pbs:
environment:
TZ: Europe/Warsaw
To be able to view SMART parameters via UI you need to expose drives and give container a special capability.
Create a new file (or merge with existing): docker-compose.override.yml
:
version: '2.1'
services:
pbs:
devices:
- /dev/sda
- /dev/sdb
cap_add:
- SYS_RAWIO
Create a new file (or merge with existing): docker-compose.override.yml
:
version: '2.1'
volumes:
pbs_etc:
driver: local
driver_opts:
type: ''
o: bind
device: /srv/pbs/etc
pbs_logs:
driver: local
driver_opts:
type: ''
o: bind
device: /srv/pbs/logs
pbs_lib:
driver: local
driver_opts:
type: ''
o: bind
device: /srv/pbs/lib
Docker is convienient, but in some cases it might be simply better to install natively.
Since the packages are built against Debian Buster
your system needs to run soon
to be stable distribution.
You can copy compiled *.deb
(it will automatically pick amd64
or arm64v8
based on your distribution)
from the container and install:
cd /tmp
docker run --rm ayufan/proxmox-backup-server:latest tar c /src/ | tar x
apt install $PWD/src/*.deb
You can compile latest version or master with a set of commands and push them to the registry.
# build v1.0.5
make all-build VERSION=v1.0.5
# build master
make all-build
# build and push to registry v1.0.5
make all-push VERSION=v1.0.5 REGISTRY=my.registry.com/pbs
# build and push to registry v1.0.5
make all-push REGISTRY=my.registry.com/pbs
# make the given version latest
make all-latest VERSION=v1.0.5
make dev-build
It builds on any platform, which can be: amd64
, arm32v7
, arm64v8
,
etc. Wait a around 1-3h to compile.
Then you can push to your registry:
make dev-push
Or run locally:
make dev-shell
make dev-run
You might as well pull the *.deb
from within the image
and install on Debian Bullseye.
This is just built by Kamil Trzciński, 2020-2023 from the sources found on http://git.proxmox.com/.