proxmox: Do you use a headless Linux OS as a VM or one with a GUI? - eviltoast

Hi. Since yesterday i selfhosted all my stuff with a raspberry pi and two odroids. Everything works ok, but after i read about a few apps that are not supported by the arm-architecture of the SBCs and about the advantages of the backup-solution in proxmox, i bought a little server (6500T/8GB/250GB) to try proxmox.

Installed proxmox, but now - before i install my first VM - i have a few questions:

a) What Linux OS do i take? Ubuntu Server?

b) Should it be headless?

The server is in the cellar of my house, so would there be any advantages of installing an OS with a GUI?

  • ikidd@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Pretty much all my VMs are headless Debian for whatever purpose I’m using them. I’ve tried Ubuntu but it has done some weird shit with snaps over the years, things like installing Docker concurrently as a snap when I’ve already had it on as an apt package then shitting itself unpredictably until I figured out what was going on.

    If you can, use LXCs where appropriate to reduce overhead usage. An LXC container will use much less resources than a full VM. You can even set up Docker on a Debian LXC and I’ll set up a few hosts like that to partition my applications.

    There’s little reason to install a desktop environment for a server. Learn how to set up SSH keys and use the command line, most server applications don’t have GUI interfaces anyway unless they provide a webpage for admin, in which case you don’t need a DE anyway.

    If you do need remote access with a GUI, try installing a Guacamole webtop instance to remote into, and manage your services from that.