This extrasmall image was created for tests purpose only, for example on this project based unit testing of routeros-api-php library. If you need fully functional "RouterOS in Docker" for production usage look at VR Network Lab project.
List of all available tags is here,
latest
will be used by default.
FROM evilfreelancer/docker-routeros
ADD ["your-scripts.sh", "/"]
RUN /your-scripts.sh
docker pull evilfreelancer/docker-routeros
docker run -d -p 2222:22 -p 8728:8728 -p 8729:8729 -p 5900:5900 -ti evilfreelancer/docker-routeros
Example is here.
version: "3"
services:
routeros-6-42:
image: evilfreelancer/docker-routeros:6.42.12
restart: unless-stopped
ports:
- "12222:22"
- "12223:23"
- "18728:8728"
- "18729:8729"
routeros-6-44:
image: evilfreelancer/docker-routeros:6.44
restart: unless-stopped
ports:
- "22222:22"
- "22223:23"
- "28728:8728"
- "28729:8729"
For this you need download project and build everything from scratch:
git clone https://github.com/EvilFreelancer/docker-routeros.git
cd docker-routeros
docker build . --tag ros
docker run -d -p 2222:22 -p 8728:8728 -p 8729:8729 -p 5900:5900 -ti ros
Now you can connect to your RouterOS container via VNC protocol (on localhost 5900 port) and via SSH (on localhost 2222 port).
For access via VNC: 5900
Default ports of RouterOS: 21, 22, 23, 80, 443, 8291, 8728, 8729
IPSec: 50, 51, 500, 4500
OpenVPN: 1194
L2TP: 1701
PPTP: 1723