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Gns3 Junos

Gns3 and junosDownload juniper vmx image for gns3

Juniper Olive Download

Gns3 Junos

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Junos Gns3 Image

End-user experience monitoring is done from more than 100 locations across the world and various wireless carriers. Hi Guys and to ALL those in making GNS3 great,A very nice tool this gns3 is, kudos all round.I have a few feature requests that should be easy to implement:1 - Please add a 'Close Project' button as well as a menu item under the 'File' menu.REASON: in general closing something like a file or project makes more sense to the everyday user as we were taught this from the 1990's already.2 - When a topology is made by dragging items to the screen, do not bind the gns3 version (2.1.21 or 2.2 etc. ) to the topology. Instead have a compatible window to state the version number compatibility.REASON: We share topologies between friends/programmers/consultants and not ALL of us prefer to use the latest greatest versions.

It will be best to make the topology stand-alone item that can be exported/imported with ease across different versions of GNS33 - Please add a feature to the 'Snapshots' window to:-edit the name of the snapshot- 'Lock' & 'Unlock' the snapshot to prevent ANY changes to it- 'Autoload' a snapshot upon project opening- 'Update' a snapshots' items in the window after a config change was done so the user can open the 'Snapshots' window, select the relevant snapshot and click 'Update'.The 'Delete' and 'Restore' features works just great.Thanks Guys, hear from you soonJM.

Hi, i'm CCNP level in Cisco and I have just got a new job where almost the entire estate is Juniper so i NEED to get up on my Juniper skills and start labbing the way I've always done with Cisco products.To best go about this from layer 2 switches to routers and firewalls what are my best bet for downloading what images to run in GNS3?I've looked and come across the SRXv that is a firewall? But then I've read that it can do everything from access layer switches to acting as a firewall?Are there any other great sites out there to such as networklessons.com (for Cisco) that apply to Juniper?, that site helped me alot with my CCNA & P.Thanks again everyone! I would recommend JUNOS Olive for labbing if you don't have access to any images.

If you have access to images under a support contract, I would advise logging in and downloading what you're entitled to. However, JUNOS Olive would be a great stepping stone for learning the OS. As for websites, I highly recommend the JUNOS workbook. I believe It's only JNCIA level, but I think it should suffice in learning the OS. Personally, when I was studying for my JNCIS-ENT, I found their study guides and feature guides extremely helpful in learning JUNOS. That link is for the JunOS Genius course titled 'Migrating from the Cisco CCNA to the JNCIA-Junos' and is specifically geared towards people in your situation. It will prompt you for a login, but if you create an account it should autofill a package code to get you a free account.As the URL so helpfully points out, this is the free training page from juniper.net, and it points you to some different resources you have available.

You'll see that first link there, but another important one that helped me was the link to the Day One books. These give 'short' overviews of different topics, so when you encounter something you don't recognize, search for a Day One book on it.Here's one that seems like it would be helpful; it's a side-by-side of how to do a thing in IOS and then how to do it in JunOS. That might be a good reference book to keep handy at first.

Let me know if you have any other questions, I'll see what else I can come up with! Sorry, another thing you asked that I forgot to mention:The SRX line is like a security-focused router/firewall, depending on the size of your deployment and other hardware. A small branch could use an SRX300 as router and firewall in one, a larger enterprise may only use an SRX4100 for its security abilities. The vSRX is just a virtual variation of the hardware-based ones.The most-likely to be used lines are the EX's and QFX's; the EX is an access switch line with full management abilities, the QFX line is a more layer 3 line. To give you a real-world example for reference, we use EX3300-48Ps in our closets that run back via fiber to a single QFX5100-48S in each building's IDF for routing in between locations over OSPF.

If your new gig is doing some heavier-duty routing, they may likely have an MX-series router for that; I don't have personal experience with those. I would recommend JUNOS Olive for labbing if you don't have access to any images. If you have access to images under a support contract, I would advise logging in and downloading what you're entitled to. However, JUNOS Olive would be a great stepping stone for learning the OS. As for websites, I highly recommend the JUNOS workbook. I believe It's only JNCIA level, but I think it should suffice in learning the OS. Personally, when I was studying for my JNCIS-ENT, I found their study guides and feature guides extremely helpful in learning JUNOS.