Proxmox VE 7.0 Released
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It's our pleasure to announce the stable version 7.0 of Proxmox Virtual Environment. It's based on the great Debian 11 "Bullseye" and comes with a 5.11 kernel, QEMU 6.0, LXC 4.0, OpenZFS 2.0.4. and countless enhancements and bugfixes.
Here is a selection of the highlights
- Debian 11 "Bullseye", but using a newer Linux kernel 5.11
- LXC 4.0, QEMU 6.0, OpenZFS 2.0.4
- Ceph Pacific 16.2 as new default; Ceph Octopus 15.2 remains supported.
- Btrfs storage technology with subvolume snapshots, built-in RAID, and self-healing via checksumming for data and metadata.
- New ‘Repositories’ Panel for easy management of the package repositories with the GUI.
- Single Sign-On (SSO) with OpenID Connect
- QEMU 6.0 with ‘io_uring’, a clean-up option for un-referenced VM disks
- LXC 4.0 has full support for cgroups2
- Reworked Proxmox installer environment
- ACME standalone plugin with improved support for dual-stacked (IPv4 and IPv6) environments
- ifupdown2 as default for new installations
- chrony as the default NTP daemon
- and many more enhancements, bugfixes, etc.
As always, we have included countless bugfixes and improvements on many places; see the release notes for all details.
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@voip_n00b said in Proxmox VE 7.0 Released:
It's our pleasure to announce the stable version 7.0 of Proxmox Virtual Environment. It's based on the great Debian 11 "Bullseye" and comes with a 5.11 kernel, QEMU 6.0, LXC 4.0, OpenZFS 2.0.4. and countless enhancements and bugfixes.
Here is a selection of the highlights
- Debian 11 "Bullseye", but using a newer Linux kernel 5.11
- LXC 4.0, QEMU 6.0, OpenZFS 2.0.4
- Ceph Pacific 16.2 as new default; Ceph Octopus 15.2 remains supported.
- Btrfs storage technology with subvolume snapshots, built-in RAID, and self-healing via checksumming for data and metadata.
- New ‘Repositories’ Panel for easy management of the package repositories with the GUI.
- Single Sign-On (SSO) with OpenID Connect
- QEMU 6.0 with ‘io_uring’, a clean-up option for un-referenced VM disks
- LXC 4.0 has full support for cgroups2
- Reworked Proxmox installer environment
- ACME standalone plugin with improved support for dual-stacked (IPv4 and IPv6) environments
- ifupdown2 as default for new installations
- chrony as the default NTP daemon
- and many more enhancements, bugfixes, etc.
As always, we have included countless bugfixes and improvements on many places; see the release notes for all details.
This is the kind of thing that prevents me from running Proxmox.
Debian 11, aka Bullseye, isn't the stable release of Debian. It's the testing distro for Debian. Later this year it's expected to become the new stable - when all serious bugs are ironed out.
Also Proxmox isn't running the Debian kernel. It's the Ubuntu kernel with patches. Why this Frankenstein mix of components? It doesn't inspire confidence.
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@jaredbusch yes
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@voip_n00b said in Proxmox VE 7.0 Released:
@jaredbusch yes
Mark one product off of the options list....
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@pete-s
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@black3dynamite said in Proxmox VE 7.0 Released:
@pete-s
Seems reasonable to me. And Debian is super conservative in most cases. I don't see cause for concern in this case. And remember "based on" is kind of "for your information". Lots of things are "based on" unreleased products before. Most cars are "based on" models that never got to production. It's the quality of the final release, not the process of getting to the release, that ultimately matters.