![]() ![]() One perfect tutorial, as “ Installing Olive 12.1R1.9 under Qemu“, sugest omitt the usage of signed packages (it remove all keys and does not making tgz package with them) and also remove hardware platform checking. All tutorials proposes to change the resolving of checkpic binary of the pkgtool package. Then we have to modify original domestic signed junos package and make them usable for a qemu machine to install. In general, many of them run GNS3/qemu inside of linux OS, i’m using windows, where at least ftp/scp/sftp service have to be supplied. Here again many tutorials are available, however in my case there are not straightforwardly applicable as I always found kind of installing problem. These packages have to be modified before we may install them into a qemu FreeBSD machine. Making qemu JunOS router installing JunOS 10.1 OLIVE package inside of qemu FreeBSD under Win 7 64bitĪs the second possibility, we may on the net find original Junos packages, which are preprepared to run inside of real junos HW, all are signed with hash keys. The olive package we may usually install directly inside of FreeBsD machine. This kind of Junos packages are so called OLIVE. We may found Junos packages which are already preprepared to run inside of FreeBSD, all running inside of PC (real or virtual). ![]() On the net we may found different packages and tutorials how to do it. Here again we have several ways available, all of them require junos installation package. Now we will install a junos system inside of qemu FreeBSd virtual machine. For Junos versions of 9, 10 and 11 is 4G enough, for versions 12 and higher should enlarge this up to 10G/12G. For newer versions of junos OS we need to enlarge the disk size and its logical partitions. The tutorial Installing FreeBSD for JunOS Olive using Qemu under Win 7 64bit is describing how to do it.
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