Network: Virtio, E1000, vmxnet3 (optional).Network: Network adapter, Legacy Network adapter.Disk: IDE, VMware paravirtual SCSI, LSI Logic SAS, LSI Logic Parallel.Usable Network and Disk interfaces on various hypervisors: Warning: Hypervisors that provide paravirtualization are not supported. Hyper-V on Windows Server 2008r2, 2012 and Windows 10 (Only Generation 1 Hyper-V virtual machine is supported at the moment).CHR has been tested on the following platforms: Note: We recommend allocating at least 1024MiB of RAM for CHR instances. You can get an approximate number by using the following formula: The minimum required RAM depends on interface count and CPU count. Disk: 128MB disk space for the CHR virtual hard drive (Max: 16GB).Host CPU: 64-bit with virtualization support.Package version: RouterOS v6.34 or newer.CHR has full RouterOS features enabled by default but has a different licensing model than other RouterOS versions. It supports the x86 64-bit architecture and can be used on most of the popular hypervisors such as VMWare, Hyper-V, VirtualBox, KVM, and others. description "Mikrotik Cloud Hosted Router (CHR) is a RouterOS version intended for running as a virtual machine.Cloud Hosted Router (CHR) is a RouterOS version intended for running as a virtual machine. Gcloud compute images create "routeros" \ Gsutil cp gs://cloud-hosted-router-images
Gsutil mb gs://cloud-hosted-router-images The following instructions assume you have installed Google Cloud Console CLI tools, but you can do the exact steps from the Google Cloud Console in your web browser, via the GUI, if you don't like to install the CLI tools.Äownload the raw disk image archive from Mikrotik Launching your RouterOS in Google Compute Cloud requires a few modifications to the default RAW Disk image, because Google only allows disk images in 1GB size increments. RouterOS CHR supports Google Compute Engine since introduction of VirtIO-SCSI driver in version 6.42rc28.