New Proxmox VE 7.3 released!

Thu, 24 Nov 2022 19:24:00 Dan

We're very excited to announce the release of Proxmox Virtual Environment 7.3. It's based on #Debian 11.5 "#Bullseye" but using a newer #Linux kernel 5.15 or 5.19, QEMU 7.1, LXC 5.0.0, and ZFS 2.1.6.

Proxmox Virtual Environment 7.3 comes with initial support for Cluster Resource Scheduling, enables updates for air-gapped systems with the new Proxmox Offline Mirror tool, and has improved UX for various management tasks, as well as interesting storage technologies like ZFS dRAID and countless enhancements and bugfixes.

We're very excited to announce the release of Proxmox Virtual Environment 7.3. It's based on Debian 11.5 "Bullseye" but using a newer Linux kernel 5.15 or 5.19, QEMU 7.1, LXC 5.0.0, and ZFS 2.1.6.

Proxmox Virtual Environment 7.3 comes with initial support for Cluster Resource Scheduling, enables updates for air-gapped systems with the new Proxmox Offline Mirror tool, and has improved UX for various management tasks, as well as interesting storage technologies like ZFS dRAID and countless enhancements and bugfixes.

Here is a selection of the highlights

  • Debian 11.5 "Bullseye", but using a newer Linux kernel 5.15 or 5.19
  • QEMU 7.1, LXC 5.0.0, and ZFS 2.1.6
  • Ceph Quincy 17.2.5 and Ceph Pacific 16.2.10; heuristical checks to see if it is safe to stop or remove a service instance (MON, MDS, OSD)
  • Initial support for a Cluster Resource Scheduler (CRS)
  • Proxmox Offline Mirror - https://pom.proxmox.com/
  • Tagging virtual guests in the web interface
  • CPU pinning: Easier affinity control using taskset core lists
  • New container templates: Fedora, Ubuntu, Alma Linux, Rocky Linux
  • Reworked USB devices: can now be hot-plugged
  • ZFS dRAID pools
  • Proxmox Mobile: based on Flutter 3.0
  • And many more enhancements.

As always, we have included countless bugfixes and improvements on many places; see the release notes for all details.

https://forum.proxmox.com/threads/proxmox-ve-7-3-released.118389/

About the author


Dan

Dan

 

I'm a long-time user and enthusiast of open source software and espouse the philosophy that software code should be open (readable). So that everyone can see what happens behind the scenes while we use our electronic devices every day.