| Component | Minimum | Recommended | |-----------|---------|--------------| | CPU | 2 cores (x86_64 with VT-x/AMD-V) | 4+ cores | | RAM | 8 GB total (host) | 16 GB | | Disk | 15 GB free | 30 GB SSD | | Hypervisor | KVM (libvirt 1.3+), ESXi 6.0 | KVM (preferred) | | Host OS | Ubuntu 16.04, CentOS 7, RHEL 7 | Ubuntu 18.04 (backward compatibility) | 17.1R1.8 does not support VMware’s VMXNET3 driver efficiently; use e1000 for lab use. 5. Deployment Procedure (KVM/Linux Host) 5.1 Pre-requisites sudo apt-get install qemu-kvm libvirt-bin bridge-utils virt-manager sudo systemctl enable libvirtd 5.2 Download and Extraction Assuming the bundle is obtained from a valid Juniper support account (or legacy backup):
For contemporary learning or prototyping, engineers should seek or later (or cRPD containers ), which offer better performance, security, and feature parity with current hardware MX routers. Appendix: Checksums (Verification) If you have the original file, validate its integrity:
ssh root@192.168.122.10 Default credentials: root / (no password) → set root authentication upon first login. As an early vMX release, this bundle has significant constraints:
1. Introduction Juniper vMX is a virtualized version of the Juniper Networks MX Series Universal Routing Platform. It allows network engineers and architects to run Juniper’s Junos OS in a hypervisor environment (KVM, ESXi, etc.) without requiring physical hardware.