PUQ Mautic

Configurable Options

Proxmox KVM module WHMCS

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WHMCS Configurable Options allow clients to customize their virtual machine resources at order time and during upgrades. The PUQ Proxmox KVM module reads configurable option values and uses them to override the product's default settings during provisioning and change package operations.

New in v3.3. Eleven new options (every disk size / bandwidth / IOPS parameter plus Network Bandwidth) and clean plain-English names for the four previously prefix-only ones (Backups, Snapshots, IPv4 Addresses, IPv6 Addresses). Every overridable resource also has a default in Module Settings, so a product works without any Configurable Options at all.

Full list of Configurable Options assigned to a product

The screenshot above shows all 18 supported options assigned to a single product. The next screenshot shows how a client sees them on the order form:

Client order form with Configurable Options


Overview

Configurable Options provide a way to offer multiple resource tiers within a single product. For example, you can create one "KVM VPS" product with configurable options for CPU, RAM, and disk, letting clients pick their desired configuration and pricing tier at checkout.

When a configurable option is set on an order, its value takes precedence over the corresponding product-level default configured in the Module Settings.


Setup

  1. Navigate to Setup > Products/Services > Configurable Options
  2. Click Create a New Group
  3. Name the group (e.g., "KVM VPS Options")
  4. Add individual options as described below
  5. Assign the group to your PUQ ProxmoxKVM product(s) using the Assigned Products tab

Supported Configurable Options

The module recognizes the following configurable option names. The Option Name must match exactly (case-sensitive) for the module to detect and apply the value.

Compute Resources

Option Name Type Description Example Values
CPU Cores Dropdown Number of virtual CPU cores 1, 2, 4, 8, 16
RAM Dropdown Memory size in GB 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32

Backups & Snapshots

Option Name Type Description Example Values
Backups Dropdown Maximum number of backups for the service (0 = backups disabled) 0, 3, 7, 14, 30
Snapshots Dropdown Maximum number of snapshots for the service (0 = snapshots disabled) 0, 1, 3, 5, 10

Storage

Option Name Type Description Example Values
System Disk Dropdown Boot disk size in GB 10, 20, 40, 80, 160
Additional Disk Dropdown Secondary disk size in GB (0 = no additional disk) 0, 10, 20, 50, 100
System Disk Read Bandwidth Dropdown System disk read throughput limit in MB/s 0, 50, 100, 200
System Disk Write Bandwidth Dropdown System disk write throughput limit in MB/s 0, 50, 100, 200
System Disk Read IOPS Dropdown System disk read IOPS limit 0, 500, 1000, 5000
System Disk Write IOPS Dropdown System disk write IOPS limit 0, 500, 1000, 5000
Additional Disk Read Bandwidth Dropdown Additional disk read throughput limit in MB/s 0, 50, 100
Additional Disk Write Bandwidth Dropdown Additional disk write throughput limit in MB/s 0, 50, 100
Additional Disk Read IOPS Dropdown Additional disk read IOPS limit 0, 500, 1000
Additional Disk Write IOPS Dropdown Additional disk write IOPS limit 0, 500, 1000

Network

Option Name Type Description Example Values
Network Bandwidth Dropdown Network bandwidth limit in MB/s (0 = unlimited) 0, 10, 50, 100, 1000
IPv4 Addresses Dropdown Number of IPv4 addresses to allocate from the pool 1, 2, 4, 8
IPv6 Addresses Dropdown Number of IPv6 addresses to allocate from the pool 0, 1, 4, 16

Operating System

Option Name Type Description Example Values
Operating System Dropdown OS template selection (Proxmox template VM ID) Template IDs from Proxmox

Creating a Configurable Option

For each option:

  1. Click Add New Configurable Option in your group
  2. Set the Option Name to match one of the supported names above
  3. Set the Option Type to Dropdown
  4. Add sub-options with the format: value|Display Name

Compute resources

Example: CPU Cores

Option Name: CPU Cores
Option Type: Dropdown

Sub-options:
1|1 Core
2|2 Cores
4|4 Cores
8|8 Cores
16|16 Cores

Example: RAM

Option Name: RAM
Option Type: Dropdown

Sub-options:
1|1 GB
2|2 GB
4|4 GB
8|8 GB
16|16 GB
32|32 GB

Backups & Snapshots

Example: Backups

Option Name: Backups
Option Type: Dropdown

Sub-options:
0|No backups
3|3 backups
7|7 backups
14|14 backups
30|30 backups

Example: Snapshots

Option Name: Snapshots
Option Type: Dropdown

Sub-options:
0|No snapshots
1|1 snapshot
3|3 snapshots
5|5 snapshots
10|10 snapshots

Storage — size

Example: System Disk

Option Name: System Disk
Option Type: Dropdown

Sub-options:
10|10 GB
20|20 GB
40|40 GB
80|80 GB
160|160 GB

Example: Additional Disk

Option Name: Additional Disk
Option Type: Dropdown

Sub-options:
0|No additional disk
10|10 GB
20|20 GB
50|50 GB
100|100 GB
500|500 GB

Note: 0 means no additional disk required by the package. If a disk already exists on the VM, the module does not delete it — the existing disk is preserved.

Storage — I/O limits

Example: System Disk Read Bandwidth

Option Name: System Disk Read Bandwidth
Option Type: Dropdown

Sub-options:
0|Unlimited
50|50 MB/s
100|100 MB/s
200|200 MB/s
500|500 MB/s

Example: System Disk Write Bandwidth

Option Name: System Disk Write Bandwidth
Option Type: Dropdown

Sub-options:
0|Unlimited
50|50 MB/s
100|100 MB/s
200|200 MB/s
500|500 MB/s

Example: System Disk Read IOPS

Option Name: System Disk Read IOPS
Option Type: Dropdown

Sub-options:
0|Unlimited
500|500 IOPS
1000|1000 IOPS
2500|2500 IOPS
5000|5000 IOPS

Example: System Disk Write IOPS

Option Name: System Disk Write IOPS
Option Type: Dropdown

Sub-options:
0|Unlimited
500|500 IOPS
1000|1000 IOPS
2500|2500 IOPS
5000|5000 IOPS

Example: Additional Disk Read Bandwidth

Option Name: Additional Disk Read Bandwidth
Option Type: Dropdown

Sub-options:
0|Unlimited
50|50 MB/s
100|100 MB/s
200|200 MB/s

Example: Additional Disk Write Bandwidth

Option Name: Additional Disk Write Bandwidth
Option Type: Dropdown

Sub-options:
0|Unlimited
50|50 MB/s
100|100 MB/s
200|200 MB/s

Example: Additional Disk Read IOPS

Option Name: Additional Disk Read IOPS
Option Type: Dropdown

Sub-options:
0|Unlimited
500|500 IOPS
1000|1000 IOPS
2500|2500 IOPS

Example: Additional Disk Write IOPS

Option Name: Additional Disk Write IOPS
Option Type: Dropdown

Sub-options:
0|Unlimited
500|500 IOPS
1000|1000 IOPS
2500|2500 IOPS

Note: For bandwidth / IOPS options, 0 means unlimited — the value is omitted from the disk config string sent to Proxmox.

Network

Example: Network Bandwidth

Option Name: Network Bandwidth
Option Type: Dropdown

Sub-options:
0|Unlimited
10|10 MB/s
50|50 MB/s
100|100 MB/s
500|500 MB/s
1000|1 GB/s

Example: IPv4 Addresses

Option Name: IPv4 Addresses
Option Type: Dropdown

Sub-options:
1|1 IPv4
2|2 IPv4
4|4 IPv4
8|8 IPv4
16|16 IPv4

Example: IPv6 Addresses

Option Name: IPv6 Addresses
Option Type: Dropdown

Sub-options:
0|No IPv6
1|1 IPv6
4|4 IPv6
16|16 IPv6

Note: Setting either count to 0 means «no addresses of that family will be allocated from the IP pool for this service». Upgrades that lower the count automatically release the excess addresses back to the pool.

Operating System

Example: Operating System

Option Name: Operating System
Option Type: Dropdown

Sub-options:
9001|Ubuntu 22.04 LTS
9002|Debian 12
9003|AlmaLinux 9
9004|Windows Server 2022

Note: The sub-option values for Operating System must be the Proxmox template VM IDs. The display names can be human-readable OS names.


Pricing

Each sub-option can have its own pricing configured per billing cycle. Navigate to the sub-option's pricing section to set monthly, quarterly, semi-annual, and annual prices.

For options where 0 means "not configured" or "unlimited" (such as Additional Disk = 0, Network Bandwidth = 0), you would typically set the price for the 0 sub-option to $0.00.


Upgrade/Downgrade

When a client upgrades or downgrades their service through the WHMCS client area, the module automatically detects the changed configurable option values and triggers a change package operation. This operation updates the VM's resources on Proxmox to match the new configuration.

The change package process is logged step-by-step in the Deploy Log and can be monitored from the admin service management page.


Disk size constraints

System Disk and Additional Disk size can only be increased. Proxmox does not support shrinking VM disks (it would risk corrupting/losing data), so any configurable option that would result in a smaller disk than the current size is rejected by the module.

Client upgrade page with shrink protection — smaller disk options are disabled with a clear warning banner

How it is enforced

The module applies the constraint at three layers:

  1. Client-area upgrade page — on /clientarea.php?action=upgrade&type=configoptions, sub-options whose value is smaller than the currently selected one are visually disabled in the System Disk / Additional Disk dropdowns and marked (downgrade not allowed). A warning banner is shown above the form.
  2. Change-package state machine — if a smaller value still reaches the backend (e.g. via direct admin edit), the Resize system disk / Resize additional disk step is skipped with status skip — shrink not allowed by Proxmox. The VM is not stopped, snapshots are not removed, and the step is logged via logModuleCall under the action name system_disk_shrink_rejected / additional_disk_shrink_rejected.
  3. Post-backup-restore re-apply — when the module re-applies package configuration after a backup restore, a smaller package disk size is treated the same way: the resize is silently skipped, the existing larger disk is kept, and the rejection is logged.

Resulting behaviour for clients

Additional Disk special cases

Note for clients: The upgrade form shows a confirmation dialog before submitting an Additional Disk = 0 change. The sub-option is also labeled (removes the existing disk — data will be lost) in the dropdown to make the destructive effect visible.

Note for admins: If you do not want clients to be able to delete the additional disk via the configurable option, omit the 0|... sub-option from the Additional Disk dropdown — make the lowest entry the minimum disk size you offer (e.g. 10|10 GB).


Priority Order

When determining the final value for a VM resource, the module follows this priority:

  1. Configurable Option value (highest priority — applied whenever the option is assigned to the service, including a value of 0)
  2. Product Module Settings default (used only when no configurable option for that resource is assigned to the service)

Every overridable resource has a default in Module Settings for the product. If you do not create a Configurable Option for a resource, that default is used for every service of the product. The defaults live in:

Resource Module Settings location Default value (if you don't set it)
CPU Cores VM Configuration → CPU 1
RAM VM Configuration → RAM 1 GB
Backups VM Configuration → Backups 0 (disabled)
Snapshots VM Configuration → Snapshots 0 (disabled)
System Disk size + bandwidth + IOPS Storage → System Disk 0 (no change)
Additional Disk size + bandwidth + IOPS Storage → Additional Disk 0 (no additional disk)
Network Bandwidth Network → Bandwidth 0 (unlimited)
IPv4 count Network → IPv4 count 1
IPv6 count Network → IPv6 count 0
Operating System VM Configuration → OS template configoption4 (default OS template)

0 is a meaningful value for many options and is always applied when a client selects it through a Configurable Option:

This means you can set conservative defaults in the product configuration and allow clients to customize resources both upward (more CPU/RAM/disk) and downward (disable additional disk, set unlimited bandwidth) through configurable options.


Legacy prefix-based option names (v1.x–v2.x)

Still supported in v3.0. In v1.x–v2.x, PUQ Proxmox KVM used a prefix-based convention for configurable option names where the prefix identified the option type and the display name was free text. If you upgraded from an older version, your existing configurable options continue to work without any changes — the module recognizes both the legacy prefix-based names and the v3.0 plain names.

The legacy convention uses an Option Name of the form PREFIX|Display Name (the text on the right of the | can be whatever you want — "My Backup Offer", "Sicherung", etc.) and sub-options of the form value|Display Name.

Legacy Option Name Sub-option format Meaning
B|Backup <count>|Name Number of allowed backups (0 disables backups for the service)
S|Snapshot <count>|Name Number of allowed snapshots (0 disables snapshots for the service)
CPU|Processor <count>|Name Number of CPU cores
RAM|Memory <count>|Name RAM in GB
ipv4|IPv4 <count>|Name Number of IPv4 addresses to allocate
ipv6|IPv6 <count>|Name Number of IPv6 addresses to allocate
OS|Operating system <template_id>|Name Proxmox template VM ID to clone from

Legacy example: Operating System

Option Name: OS|Operating system
Option Type: Dropdown

Sub-options:
1010|Debian-10.12
1011|Debian-11
1012|Debian-12
1021|Ubuntu-20.04
1022|Ubuntu-22.04

The sub-option values are the Proxmox template VMIDs (e.g. 1010 = a template VM in Proxmox with ID 1010 based on Debian 10). The module uses the number on the left of the | to call qm clone; the text on the right is shown to the admin/client in the order form.

Legacy example: Backup

Option Name: B|Backup
Option Type: Dropdown

Sub-options:
0|No backups
3|3 backups
7|7 backups
14|14 backups

Legacy example: Snapshot

Option Name: S|Snapshot
Option Type: Dropdown

Sub-options:
0|No snapshots
1|1 snapshot
3|3 snapshots
5|5 snapshots
10|10 snapshots

Legacy example: CPU

Option Name: CPU|Processor
Option Type: Dropdown

Sub-options:
1|1 Core
2|2 Cores
4|4 Cores
8|8 Cores
16|16 Cores

Legacy example: RAM

Option Name: RAM|Memory
Option Type: Dropdown

Sub-options:
1|1 GB
2|2 GB
4|4 GB
8|8 GB
16|16 GB

Legacy example: IPv4

Option Name: ipv4|IPv4
Option Type: Dropdown

Sub-options:
1|1 IPv4
2|2 IPv4
4|4 IPv4
8|8 IPv4

Legacy example: IPv6

Option Name: ipv6|IPv6
Option Type: Dropdown

Sub-options:
0|No IPv6
1|1 IPv6
4|4 IPv6
16|16 IPv6

Which format should I use?


Revision #8
Created 10 April 2026 19:07:51 by Ruslan
Updated 15 May 2026 14:07:22 by Ruslan