A Terraform / OpenTofu Provider which adds support for Proxmox solutions.
This repository is a fork of https://github.com/danitso/terraform-provider-proxmox which is no longer maintained.
Compatibility promise
This provider is compatible with the latest version of Proxmox VE (currently 8.2).
While it may work with older 7.x versions, it is not guaranteed to do so.
While provider is on version 0.x, it is not guaranteed to be backwards compatible with all previous minor versions.
However, we will try to keep the backwards compatibility between provider versions as much as possible.
Requirements
Using the provider
You can find the latest release and its documentation in the Terraform Registry.
Testing the provider
In order to test the provider, you can simply run make test
.
make test
Tests are limited to regression tests, ensuring backwards compatibility.
A limited number of acceptance tests are available in the proxmoxtf/test
directory, mostly for "new" functionality implemented using the Terraform Provider Framework.
These tests are not run by default, as they require a Proxmox VE environment to be available.
They can be run using make testacc
, the Proxmox connection can be configured using environment variables, see provider documentation for details.
Deploying the example resources
There are number of TF examples in the example
directory, which can be used to deploy a Container, VM, or other Proxmox resources on your test Proxmox environment.
The following assumptions are made about the test environment:
- It has one node named
pve
- The node has local storages named
local
and local-lvm
- The "Snippets" content type is enabled in
local
storage
Create example/terraform.tfvars
with the following variables:
virtual_environment_username = "root@pam"
virtual_environment_password = "put-your-password-here"
virtual_environment_endpoint = "https://<your-cluster-endpoint>:8006/"
Then run make example
to deploy the example resources.
If you don't have free proxmox cluster to play with, there is dedicated how-to tutorial how to setup Proxmox inside VM and run make example
on it.
Future work
The provider is using the Terraform SDKv2, which is considered legacy and is in maintenance mode.
The work has started to migrate the provider to the new Terraform Plugin Framework, with aim to release it as a new major version 1.0.
Known issues
Disk images cannot be imported by non-PAM accounts
Due to limitations in the Proxmox VE API, certain actions need to be performed using SSH. This requires the use of a PAM account (standard Linux account).
Disk images from VMware cannot be uploaded or imported
Proxmox VE is not currently supporting VMware disk images directly.
However, you can still use them as disk images by using this workaround:
resource "proxmox_virtual_environment_file" "vmdk_disk_image" {
content_type = "iso"
datastore_id = "datastore-id"
node_name = "node-name"
source_file {
# We must override the file extension to bypass the validation code
# in the Proxmox VE API.
file_name = "vmdk-file-name.img"
path = "path-to-vmdk-file"
}
}
resource "proxmox_virtual_environment_vm" "example" {
//...
disk {
datastore_id = "datastore-id"
# We must tell the provider that the file format is vmdk instead of qcow2.
file_format = "vmdk"
file_id = "${proxmox_virtual_environment_file.vmdk_disk_image.id}"
}
//...
}
Snippets cannot be uploaded by non-PAM accounts
Due to limitations in the Proxmox VE API, certain files (snippets, backups) need to be uploaded using SFTP.
This requires the use of a PAM account (standard Linux account).
Cluster hardware mappings cannot be created by non-PAM accounts
Due to limitations in the Proxmox VE API, cluster hardware mappings must be created using the root
PAM account (standard Linux account) due to IOMMU interactions.
Hardware mappings allow to use PCI "passthrough" and map physical USB ports.
Contributors
See CONTRIBUTORS.md for a list of contributors to this project.
Repository Metrics
❤️ This project is sponsored by:
Thanks again for your continuous support, it is much appreciated! 🙏
Acknowledgements
This project has been developed with GoLand IDE under the JetBrains Open Source license, generously provided by JetBrains s.r.o.