cRPD is a pretty nifty product as well. Some interesting little tricks you can do with that.
(Although I don't think they free trial that, those licenses are quite reasonable as well. ) On Mon, Mar 14, 2022 at 2:34 PM Matt Harris <m...@netfire.net> wrote: > Matt Harris > | Infrastructure Lead > 816‑256‑5446 > | Direct > Looking for help? > *Helpdesk* <https://help.netfire.net/> > | *Email Support* <h...@netfire.net> > > We build customized end‑to‑end technology solutions powered by NetFire Cloud. > On Mon, Mar 14, 2022 at 1:23 PM Daryl G. Jurbala <da...@introspect.net> > wrote: > >> The last time I worked with vMX was several years ago. The image was >> outdated to the point of having to fire up an older version of VMWare to >> export the two VMs so I could import them back into 6. The >> documentation barely existed. I had to figure out which vmware adapters >> corresponded to which vMX adapters. No one really seemed to be able to >> help at Juniper, even though we ended up licensing the things so we were >> "real" customers of this product. >> >> It looked a lot lot an abandoned project. So unless something has >> changed in the last few years it's not looking good. >> > > Interesting. I haven't had an opportunity to try vMX because of its lack > of Hyper-V support, but we do run vSRX in production quite a bit including > junos versions from 17.x up to 21.x. It's kind of janky on Hyper-V but > works overall (the main issue being very very long boot times - 15+ minutes > to get up and running), but we also run it on KVM on Linux with the "vSRX3" > images, and that works a lot better. The vSRX3 images on KVM, I personally > haven't run into any issues with. The licensing costs are pretty > reasonable, too, imho. > > Good luck with what you're trying to accomplish: maybe give the vSRX > series a shot if you're running on KVM. > > - mdh > >