


Press RETURN to get started.įreeBSD/i386 bootstrap loader, Revision Sat Mar 24 08:37:) Start it and open the console so you can see JUNOS running: JunOS console is now available. Note that in order to run multiple Olive routers you will need to clone the Olive vm. System: Remove any unnecessary options like: Floppy drives, sound cards, USB devices, etc.Ħ) Go to GNS3 VirtualBox Guest Settings and configure the Olive vm:ħ) Drag a JunOS router into the topology for testing.

Hard Drive: Select “Use an existing VDI file” and point to the vdi.Memory: 512Mb (256Mb will do but you need more to run jweb).11:40 AM 5,368,709,120 Olive12.1R1.9.imgĥ) Create a virtual machine in Virtualbox with the following specifications: You will end up with the following files: D:\=Estudo=\Juniper> dir If you need help on how to install gns3 and qemu patched please refer to my previous tutorial.ġ) Download latest Olive12.1R1.9, save and decompress the file, in my case the directory is “D:\Juniper\Olive12.1R1.9.img”Ģ) Open cmd prompt, change to the directory where Olive image is located: C:\Users\nuno> cd "D:\=Estudo=\Juniper"ģ) Look for the file “VBoxManage.exe” which is located in the VirtualBox installation directory, copy the location of the file.Ĥ) From the Olive image directory, convert the image file into a “.vdi” (Virtual Disk Image) file: D:\=Estudo=\Juniper> "C:\Program Files\Oracle\VirtualBox\VBoxManage.exe" convertdd Olive12.1R1.9.img Olive12.1R1.9.vdiĬonverting from raw image file="Olive12.1R1.9.img" to file="Olive12.1R1.9.vdi".Ĭreating dynamic image with size 5368709120 bytes (5120MB). This can be done both on Windows and Linux. I assume you already have the following setup: Simple and easy but I still need to test what works and what don’t. This tutorial covers the configuration of a JUNOS Olive12.1R1.9 system up and running on a virtual machine using Virtualbox and GNS3 in a matter of minutes.
