+1 for cRPD - Thomas Scott | mr.thomas.scott@gmail.com On Mon, Mar 14, 2022 at 2:42 PM Tom Beecher <beecher@beecher.cc> wrote:
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 <matt@netfire.net> wrote:
Matt Harris | Infrastructure Lead 816‑256‑5446 | Direct Looking for help? *Helpdesk* <https://help.netfire.net/> | *Email Support* <help@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 <daryl@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 The image was outdated to the point of having to fire up an older version of VMWare to export the two VMs so I could import them back into 6.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