Junos Olive 12 Download
Mar 27, 2014 - Where can I get a copy of olive 12,1r9 for use with GMS3. I have heard that there are websites available that talk about how to download and install Olive. To provide you a copy of Junos is, as you will be committing piracy.
Introduction The article describes installation of Junos 12.1R1.9 on emulated x86 hardware. Hardware is emulated by and Junos installed on it is known as Olive.
As Olive does not have Packet Forwarding Engine PFE attached, packet forwarding is exclusively depending on performance of the host CPU. In addition, they are also configuration known not working on Olive. Considering these limits, Olive can never substitute real Juniper hardware. In spite all of that Olive is an excellent tool for testing configurations that can be later deployed on real Juniper hardware. Lirik lagu wajib nasional.
Thanks to project that offers lightweight GUI for Qemu, complex labs can be easily deployed without real need of knowing Qemu commands. The article could not be written without help of guide. My goal is to rewrite these articles for actual Junos 12.1R1.9 version and create a guide that helps you to install Junos. Please use links above if you feel that you need to clarify details or further explanation.
Prerequisites host system - any Linux installed on x86 with at least 2GB RAM and 5 GB HDD space dedicated for Qemu disk. Have in mind that you need to dedicate 512MB RAM for each Olive instance. Qemu emulator - installed on Linux FreeBSD 4.11 installation CD - 4.11-RELEASE-i386-miniinst.iso the copy of the jinstall 12.1R1.9 package (M/T series install package) - jinstall-12.1R1.9-domestic-signed.tgz Installation Steps 1.
Create Qemu Disk 2. Install FreeBSD 3. Install Junos 4. Install jweb GUI Create Qemu Disk /usr/local/bin/qemu-img create -f qcow2 olive-base.img 16G Install FreeBSD /usr/local/bin/qemu-system-i386 -m 512 -hda olive-base.img -cdrom./4.11-RELEASE-i386-miniinst.iso -enable-kvm The command starts Qemu disk olive-base.img with 512MB RAM with attached FreeBSD image. Omit a parameter -enable-kvm if your hardware does not support hardware virtualization. Steps: a) Select - Standard Installation b) Create Disks Partitions Press a - Use entire disk, q to confirm.
Select install a standard MBR and when you see the FreeBSD Disklabel editor, press c to create the following partitions: ad0s1a / 4096M ad0s1b swap 4096M ad0s1e /config 256M ad0s1f /var rest Press q to finish. Choose Minimal distribution type and install from a FreeBSD CD/DVD. Once files are copied, the installer program will ask you many questions. Just answer No for each of them. Set password for root account and exit. When FreeBSD start to reboot itself, close the Qemu window.