Timos-sr-13.0.r4-vm.qcow2
: Represents the "Time-division Multiplexing Operating System" tailored for the Service Router (SR) product pipeline.
Do you need help setting up the parameters?
: The router reboots every 60 minutes or drops line cards.
Once the VM is booted, you must apply a valid license. The process involves: Timos-sr-13.0.r4-vm.qcow2
More critically, it enables . In a data center, instead of installing a physical router to connect two subnets, an operator can spin up this image as a virtual router. It performs the same routing, filtering, and forwarding logic as its physical counterpart, albeit at a different throughput. This allows for "on-demand" networking, where routers are created, scaled, and destroyed via API calls rather than shipping hardware.
This command displays the system uptime, model designation (VSR), and the operating system version (13.0.R4). : show card Use code with caution.
Running a full SR OS instance is resource-intensive. For version 13.0.R4, standard requirements include: Once the VM is booted, you must apply a valid license
configure card 1 card-type iom-vrs configure card 1 mda 1 mda-type mda-vrs Use code with caution. High CPU Usage
The default login credentials are:
: 13.0.R4 (Release 13, Maintenance Release 0, Revision 4) File Format : QCOW2 (QEMU Copy-on-Write 2) Typical File Size : ~369 MB MD5 Checksum Reference : d7a3609e506acdcb55f6db5328dba8ed Virtual Resource Requirements It performs the same routing, filtering, and forwarding
: The specific major software version (13.0) and maintenance release (r4).
In essence, this file transforms a standard x86 server into a virtual equivalent of a Nokia 7750 SR router, making it an ideal tool for network labs, training, and validation.