Timos-sr-13.0.r4-vm.qcow2 !new!

: Ensure your EVE-NG installation is up to date. Log in via SSH as root and run:

This file represents the Nokia Service Router Operating System (SR OS), historically known as TiMOS (Time-critical Service Router Operating System), packaged as a virtual machine disk image. Specifically, this image allows engineers to run a virtualized Service Router (vSR) inside hypervisors like QEMU/KVM and network simulation platforms like EVE-NG, GNS3, or PNETLab. What is Timos-sr-13.0.r4-vm.qcow2?

Version 13.0 introduces stable carrier-grade routing protocols into a virtual lab environment: Timos-sr-13.0.r4-vm.qcow2

Virtual routing platforms are essential for modern network engineering, testing, and development. Nokia Service Router Operating System (SR OS) is a major platform in this space. The filename represents a specific virtual disk image used to run Nokia's virtualized router simulator.

To help you get the most out of your Nokia SR OS emulation environment, tell me: : Ensure your EVE-NG installation is up to date

The combination of QCOW2 format benefits with the robust TiMOS operating system creates a flexible and efficient virtualization solution. Whether integrated with EVE-NG, GNS3, or standalone QEMU/KVM deployments, this virtual machine image serves as an invaluable asset for network engineering labs, educational environments, and pre-deployment validation scenarios.

Virtual 7750 SR Available in 12.0.R4 - Page 15 - Alcatel Unleashed What is Timos-sr-13

The ".qcow2" extension is a giveaway; it signifies that this file is a QEMU Copy On Write image, a virtual disk image format used by QEMU (Quick Emulator), a powerful open-source emulator and virtualizer. The "Timos-sr-13.0.r4-vm" part suggests a naming convention that could imply a relation to network devices or software, possibly from a vendor or project named or abbreviated as "Timos," with "sr-13.0.r4" indicating a specific software release or version.

To properly configure licensing:

Once the VM boots, you aren't dropped directly into a shell. You have to navigate the Nokia boot sequence.

A common use case for the .qcow2 image is to use it within the EVE-NG (Emulated Virtual Environment) Professional Community Edition, a popular network emulator. Here is the process: