Thanks for this, I bumbled around in Juniper docs for an hour and learned nothing and then watched this video and feel confident at beginning with JunOS and getting what I need to do done. Excellent presentation.
Great start! I've been working with Juniper for over 5 years now. A nice command for production, is "Commit confirmed." This will commit the configuration but will rollback the configuration changes if you don;t enter another commit command. This definitely helps when doing remote configuration.
I've worked professionally in the Juniper environment for 5 years, and I never knew about the virtual labs or Olive. Very impressive opening impression of your tutorial content. Also, your vocals and accent are "just right" to my Midwestern ears.
I really love the 'commit confirmed' command on junos, it's much better than setting a 'reload in' time on a Cisco device and hoping you don't mess up since you'd have to wait not only for the reboot time, but however long you set for the reload timer.
Thank you, these videos are very helpful. I am attending the AJEX course in a month and will be hitting up every video and lab I can get my hands on. Even got my hands on an EX-4300 for a short time.
Fantastic! It's good to get hands-on experience I have a full series on Juniper devices now, if that interests you. You could also check out Juniper's vLabs
@@NetworkDirection oh yes, I have access to the V-Labs. They have an amazing training system for free. The challenge for me is learning the syntax of the JUNOS commands.
after working with cisco for the past 11 years i'm kind of glad my department is going with Juniper for the future, outside of the aussie dollar being terrible for buying cisco stuff and Juniper now being much cheaper it looks far easier to use.
Very good video. I came here wanting to know how to use Jlabs, and got more than what I bargained for. You should definitely do another video for a more complex topology like OSPF or BGP, simply because a number of Cisco users may have difficulties navigating around the Jlabs, not the configuration part.
There are so many ways to manipulate the configuration and to display the configuration as well. I personally only used "show configuration | display set", and you can further modify it: "show configuration interfaces | display set | match disabled" - shows you all lines that contain disabled = you can identify all disabled interfaces - you see the whole conf. hierarchy on each line thanks to the display set option. I think there is no way to do this on a Cisco. And the video omits the best feature of the commit system - you can do commit confirmed to automatically roll back in case of not confirming the commit a second time. And the device stores a number of previous commits allowing you to do a manual roll back any time (days, weeks...).
I agree! Especially the commit model. Juniper is a lot younger, and have the advantage that they were able to learn from other companies. More recently cisco released IOS-XR. I haven't used it, but from what I hear, it's more similar to Junos.
Network Direction, automation, and programmability is at the heart of JUNOS, would definitely love to have a good series of JUNOS from a home network to the data center and automation ^^/ I really appreciate the great work and your content. Until the next JUNOS video.
Hello Network Direction, you have an excellent way to explain, well redacted and with an excellent voice, I can't wait to continue watching the next video about BGP, OSPF, and perhaps site to site IPsec VPNs?
Wow I actually had to do work on a juniper switch today at work... I was so lost and felt like a non network person looking over someone's shoulder when configuring a Cisco device. I should have checked TH-cam before walking on site lol
it was a nice and concise video! great work. Would like to see more. It makes me appreciate the ease of working and modeling with YANG compared to SMIv1
For virtualized environments there's another option to use vQFX switches using Vagrant/VirtualBox - github.com/Juniper/vqfx10k-vagrant Although I've had little success in getting EVPN/VXLAN working using a virtual topology. I think it should be fine for learning configuration basics.
Great video.. SO MUCH better than another I just watched that was 3x longer and didn't have a tenth of the info in it.. Couple questions.. You showed that you can't have multiple subinterfaces on the loopback.. Can you have more than one loopback, each with an IP address, and if so, is that how you'd do layer 3 routing? If I wanted to basically have a dedicated layer 3 switch for a home lab, where the switch is trunked to a couple of VMWare servers, and I want the routing to happen in the switch, I can't figure out the best way to configure IP addresses for each VLAN without dedicating a specific port, and then I'm assuming if I did that, it wouldn't route to that VLAN if the port was down, so I'm wondering if each VLAN gets a loopback so that it remains up? Thanks!
Awesome video for a beginner in JUN-OS as I am. Looking for more chain of videos on JUN-OS like basci switch configuration, BASIC SRX configuration...Thanks
Tried doing the same exersice as you, assigning IP to lo0. The commit check throws a error every time i use anything other than unit 12 with lo0. Why so could anyone help here ?
There are two ways to do this. If you have the config in it's native form (with the curly braces), you can type 'load merge terminal', and then paste in your config. The other way is to get config as set commands. To do this, type 'show configuration | display set'. This will give you commands you can type straight in
I'm planning to add a series that teaches Juniper to someone with CCNA level experience. It's going to take a while to get it in order though. Lots of planning involved.
That's a good point, yes it may However, it depends if it's enabled. For example, I always configure switches with the web console disabled to reduce the attack surface On the other hand, I leave it enabled on the SRX firewalls, but limit access to certain IP's. The thing is, you need to know the CLI, as you don't always have the GUI available. Troubleshooting on a console port is another example of this
@@NetworkDirection I hear you. We just don't have any CCNA techs on prem and would like to be able to program the equipment ourselves without having to pay 3rd party IT support. We are considering moving away from Cisco to either Juniper Extreme or maybe Arista
@@CommentingTheTruth in that case, yes! you can definitely use the web console. It still helps to understand the CLI concepts, as JWeb is based around that. For example, you still have commit and commit confirmed.
@@Sandman432 no, it's true. There are plenty of things you can do from operational mode, especially in Junos (request commands for example). But configuration mode is where the most changes take place
One thing I have noticed through all these years is that people who make a Cisco video, they make a Cisco video, Juniper isn't even mentioned. But every Juniper video feels like little children comparing themselves to the big guy Cisco. Even you do it "In Cisco that's like this and that". Why? Why must you compare Juniper to Cisco? Can't a Juniper video be made without these comparisons and so that like a tree Juniper can stand on its own? I don't make videos so maybe I don't get it. Imagine Burger King commercials comparing themselves to McDonald's constantly? Or the other way around? Great video though. I learned much. Juniper makes more sense than Cisco.
That's a good point. The fact is, Cisco dominates the market, and are very well known. Most people who want to work with Juniper already have some experience with Cisco. Juniper even do this on their own site from time to time. It is good to consider Juniper for what it is, but we need to remember that it's easier to learn if we build on what we already have.
There is very little out there isn't there? I'm planning a full series, but there's a lot of work to go into it, so it may be a couple of months until it's ready.
Hola buena noche, mi amigo necesita informé para crear una plataforma de comercio electrónico y está buscando tecnología que pueda ayudarlo a crearla, necesita lo más novedoso de las tecnologías,que sea amigable,flexible y súper rápida, espero que ustedes puedan apoyarlo, gracias por compartir y por contestar, saludos desde México 👊🏽😄
Please do more Juniper. A full configuration of an organisation with a data center, and multiple branch offices would be amazing.
I'll definitely be doing more Juniper.
The topology you're suggesting sounds complicated... I'll need to figure out how to lab that.
Thanks .. juniper srx config as well sir.
www.juniper.net/us/en/training/junos-genius/
Thanks for this, I bumbled around in Juniper docs for an hour and learned nothing and then watched this video and feel confident at beginning with JunOS and getting what I need to do done. Excellent presentation.
THANK YOU! This was even better than Juniper's "Learning Bytes". Your presentation is professional, instructive, and it just clicks well.
Great start! I've been working with Juniper for over 5 years now. A nice command for production, is "Commit confirmed." This will commit the configuration but will rollback the configuration changes if you don;t enter another commit command. This definitely helps when doing remote configuration.
That is a fantastic tip, thanks!
How much time do you have to do another commit command? Is there a timer or can you change the time?
New Juniper series here: th-cam.com/video/uAAHvv4OMA8/w-d-xo.html
Juniper's vLabs are here: jlabs.juniper.net/vlabs/
please do make more of these.
Looking at creating a series to transition CCNA skills to JNCIA level skills.
Interested?
@@NetworkDirection that's great
Network Direction thanks for this video. I’d love to see more :)
I've worked professionally in the Juniper environment for 5 years, and I never knew about the virtual labs or Olive. Very impressive opening impression of your tutorial content. Also, your vocals and accent are "just right" to my Midwestern ears.
Thanks Jim!
I really love the 'commit confirmed' command on junos, it's much better than setting a 'reload in' time on a Cisco device and hoping you don't mess up since you'd have to wait not only for the reboot time, but however long you set for the reload timer.
I agree so much!
@@NetworkDirection I was surprised not to see "commit confirmed" in the video.
@@jhferu That's coming up in the new series: th-cam.com/video/uAAHvv4OMA8/w-d-xo.html
Thank you, these videos are very helpful. I am attending the AJEX course in a month and will be hitting up every video and lab I can get my hands on.
Even got my hands on an EX-4300 for a short time.
Fantastic! It's good to get hands-on experience
I have a full series on Juniper devices now, if that interests you.
You could also check out Juniper's vLabs
@@NetworkDirection oh yes, I have access to the V-Labs. They have an amazing training system for free. The challenge for me is learning the syntax of the JUNOS commands.
great video, I have 2 Cisco certs and my company barely uses cisco so this is great to see the similarities and differences. Great job!
Thanks!
after working with cisco for the past 11 years i'm kind of glad my department is going with Juniper for the future, outside of the aussie dollar being terrible for buying cisco stuff and Juniper now being much cheaper it looks far easier to use.
Very good video. I came here wanting to know how to use Jlabs, and got more than what I bargained for. You should definitely do another video for a more complex topology like OSPF or BGP, simply because a number of Cisco users may have difficulties navigating around the Jlabs, not the configuration part.
This was so well presented. Even a kid can understand. Your concepts are super clear. Looking forward to more of these 😎
Awesome, thank you!
Junos CLI is awesome :) Any time I switched between Cisco and Juniper during the day I felt like Cisco CLI is a decade in the past.
There are so many ways to manipulate the configuration and to display the configuration as well. I personally only used "show configuration | display set", and you can further modify it: "show configuration interfaces | display set | match disabled" - shows you all lines that contain disabled = you can identify all disabled interfaces - you see the whole conf. hierarchy on each line thanks to the display set option. I think there is no way to do this on a Cisco.
And the video omits the best feature of the commit system - you can do commit confirmed to automatically roll back in case of not confirming the commit a second time. And the device stores a number of previous commits allowing you to do a manual roll back any time (days, weeks...).
I agree! Especially the commit model.
Juniper is a lot younger, and have the advantage that they were able to learn from other companies.
More recently cisco released IOS-XR. I haven't used it, but from what I hear, it's more similar to Junos.
Thank you! We’re starting to use Junipers, this helps.
Thank you for the introduction to Junos! I hope to start using it soon!
I'm sure you will love Junos, and will have plenty of opportunity to see it in action soon 😉
Very Good tutorial & Easy To Understand. Please make other Configuration Video as soon as possible
Network Direction, automation, and programmability is at the heart of JUNOS, would definitely love to have a good series of JUNOS from a home network to the data center and automation ^^/ I really appreciate the great work and your content. Until the next JUNOS video.
That was great man!
Thanks!
Very nice intro vid!! I'll be using Juniper at my job and aim for certification on their products. Keep up the good work!!
The good news is, the first level of cert is really not hard.
Not sure after that. JNCIA is all I've done so far
Great video! Excited to see more JUNOS!
Thanks! I'm thinking about OSPF next
Excellent lesson
Thankyou
Hello Network Direction, you have an excellent way to explain, well redacted and with an excellent voice, I can't wait to continue watching the next video about BGP, OSPF, and perhaps site to site IPsec VPNs?
Wow I actually had to do work on a juniper switch today at work... I was so lost and felt like a non network person looking over someone's shoulder when configuring a Cisco device. I should have checked TH-cam before walking on site lol
You never know what you’ll face at a customer’s site 😀
@@NetworkDirection after today I'm going to be sure I can at least get fundamentals down. I hope to see more
it was a nice and concise video! great work. Would like to see more. It makes me appreciate the ease of working and modeling with YANG compared to SMIv1
what a Perfect training and nice accent! Thanks a bunch
Magnificent video! Thanks
you're welcome
Love it! I'm very deep in the Cisco field but likely I'll be having to diversify soon. Great video thanks.
You’re welcome
Thank you for the introduction on JUNOs
You're welcome
Fantastic Introduction , please do more Juniper based videos
This was a very concise tutorial, please do more
I have a series on getting started with Juniper, if that interests you
@@NetworkDirection I will check it out, thank you so much
Its very informative. thanks for posting this much fruitful video.
Thank you!
Nice video to kick start on JunOS. Thanks.
More to come in 2020!
Great tutorial. Thanks!
yery good lesson well presented. looking forward to watching more thank you...
Thank you! Hoping to have more very soon
this is a very nice video. good to see the differences with ios
For virtualized environments there's another option to use vQFX switches using Vagrant/VirtualBox - github.com/Juniper/vqfx10k-vagrant
Although I've had little success in getting EVPN/VXLAN working using a virtual topology. I think it should be fine for learning configuration basics.
I'll have a look into this, thanks!
Great job! I'll be waiting for the more advanced video
Great Job and thanks!
Thank you, and you're welcome
Great video.. SO MUCH better than another I just watched that was 3x longer and didn't have a tenth of the info in it.. Couple questions.. You showed that you can't have multiple subinterfaces on the loopback.. Can you have more than one loopback, each with an IP address, and if so, is that how you'd do layer 3 routing? If I wanted to basically have a dedicated layer 3 switch for a home lab, where the switch is trunked to a couple of VMWare servers, and I want the routing to happen in the switch, I can't figure out the best way to configure IP addresses for each VLAN without dedicating a specific port, and then I'm assuming if I did that, it wouldn't route to that VLAN if the port was down, so I'm wondering if each VLAN gets a loopback so that it remains up? Thanks!
Awesome video for a beginner in JUN-OS as I am. Looking for more chain of videos on JUN-OS like basci switch configuration, BASIC SRX configuration...Thanks
More to come!
Tried doing the same exersice as you, assigning IP to lo0. The commit check throws a error every time i use anything other than unit 12 with lo0. Why so could anyone help here ?
What device are you configuring?
Is there anything already configured on lo0?
Amazing as always
Thanks!
Amazing 👏 love and respect for you...
Thank you, glad you liked the video
Awesome! Very informative. I'm familiar with pasting a config in cisco under config t. Is there a way to paste a config in junos?? Hmm 🤔
There are two ways to do this.
If you have the config in it's native form (with the curly braces), you can type 'load merge terminal', and then paste in your config.
The other way is to get config as set commands. To do this, type 'show configuration | display set'. This will give you commands you can type straight in
@@NetworkDirection Awesome ill check that out once i get access to vlabs. Thanks!
hope you add more videos about juniper
I'm planning to add a series that teaches Juniper to someone with CCNA level experience.
It's going to take a while to get it in order though. Lots of planning involved.
nice! very nice. please keep it going same - simple and straight :D thanks a lot
My intentions exactly! Thanks!
Does anyone know if the Juniper srx5400 is worth anything?
I found one in a barn I was asked to clear out and it's fairly heavy.
Thank you, very good explanation
Thanks!
Make more videos in juniper sir ....and ccnp tshoot also ...looking forward for palo Alto f5 even ...plz do
Spot on mate
Thanks
Very helpful thanks, would love to see more
Deep into planning a full series (20 videos or so)
@14:19 candidate config is not similar to Cisco running config. Cisco running config is active config.
Great video, helped me a lot. Thanks and regards.
You're very welcome!
Great review
Kindly share the video of access list and prefix list and what is the difference.
Do you mean in JunOS specifically, or in general?
@@NetworkDirection Thanks for the reply, In general
Best 20 minutes of my 1440 minutes :) .
Thaks alot :)
Hi , thanks firstly . cli screen does not appear properly, please increase the size of it .
I suspected it might be a bit small
I'll find a way to make it better on the next one.
Thanks for the feedback
please do more!
Very soon! I promise!
Well explained !
Awesome, thanks! Keep up the good work :)
Thanks, will do!
Really helpful and great work
Thanks!
What are these used for I have gotten a hold of a srx240 and have no idea what it is used for
The SRX is a branch router and a firewall
So similar to Cisco XR, or I should say XR is so similar to this
Yeah, Cisco realised that their CLI could use an improvement I think
Simplified. Thanks a lot
You're welcome
Thank you for this video
You're welcome, thank you for your comment
Thanks for the Video. it looks like Fortigate CLI to me but a little bit different
I see what you mean, but personally I think Junos is far superior
Yes it was a good video.
Thanks!
Thanks man very helpful
Thanks
Hello there
I have registered on the juniper site for free VLAB. But I haven't received any confirmation mail yet. more than one day
Once you figure out the hierarchy and layout, JunOS is pretty easy to get around. Learn your networking fundamentals, you'll be fine.
I though junos had GUI available??
That's a good point, yes it may
However, it depends if it's enabled. For example, I always configure switches with the web console disabled to reduce the attack surface
On the other hand, I leave it enabled on the SRX firewalls, but limit access to certain IP's.
The thing is, you need to know the CLI, as you don't always have the GUI available. Troubleshooting on a console port is another example of this
@@NetworkDirection I hear you. We just don't have any CCNA techs on prem and would like to be able to program the equipment ourselves without having to pay 3rd party IT support. We are considering moving away from Cisco to either Juniper Extreme or maybe Arista
@@CommentingTheTruth in that case, yes! you can definitely use the web console.
It still helps to understand the CLI concepts, as JWeb is based around that. For example, you still have commit and commit confirmed.
very useful. thank you :-)
You're welcome.
There are more Juniper videos on the channel now if you're interested
very informative , thank you for the video
Thank you
Welcome!
*using juniper for the first time*
juniper the green cat :
I don't know what you mean 😄
Please Make Tutorial for ISP Configuration ( BGP From Upstream Like:-IIG,GGC,FNA,IX).....do it briefly
it was great !
What no show configuration | display set? 😮
Sounds like you don't need this video 😄
'display set' is going to be featured in some upcoming videos
Network Direction done jncia a few years back but watched anyway. Great video’s, keep up the good work.
There are plenty of changes you can make from operational mode.
sure
@@NetworkDirection you dont think so?
@@Sandman432 no, it's true. There are plenty of things you can do from operational mode, especially in Junos (request commands for example).
But configuration mode is where the most changes take place
Oh cool, so you like GD
YES
Why do these things cost more than my house?
😅
One thing I have noticed through all these years is that people who make a Cisco video, they make a Cisco video, Juniper isn't even mentioned. But every Juniper video feels like little children comparing themselves to the big guy Cisco. Even you do it "In Cisco that's like this and that". Why? Why must you compare Juniper to Cisco? Can't a Juniper video be made without these comparisons and so that like a tree Juniper can stand on its own? I don't make videos so maybe I don't get it. Imagine Burger King commercials comparing themselves to McDonald's constantly? Or the other way around? Great video though. I learned much. Juniper makes more sense than Cisco.
That's a good point.
The fact is, Cisco dominates the market, and are very well known. Most people who want to work with Juniper already have some experience with Cisco. Juniper even do this on their own site from time to time.
It is good to consider Juniper for what it is, but we need to remember that it's easier to learn if we build on what we already have.
ITs much easier to understand for people who already know cisco to compare both other wise it looks completely different and don't make sense. Thanks
Extremely sorry to say that video while commanding is not clear on Blackboard can't see white letter
Thanks for the feedback, I don't use the blackboard background anymore for this reason
I s there anymore as I can not wait till the next one........I am searching like there is no tomorrow. lol
There is very little out there isn't there?
I'm planning a full series, but there's a lot of work to go into it, so it may be a couple of months until it's ready.
Great
Thanks
aka the "Cisco-killer" or netter yet "resume maker.....
Juniper’s videos say Junos not Jun-OS so thats how i say it
Thanks Adam!
for like 9 years do you know how i can change tNice tutorials?
Hola buena noche, mi amigo necesita informé para crear una plataforma de comercio electrónico y está buscando tecnología que pueda ayudarlo a crearla, necesita lo más novedoso de las tecnologías,que sea amigable,flexible y súper rápida, espero que ustedes puedan apoyarlo, gracias por compartir y por contestar, saludos desde México 👊🏽😄
the cli is pretty unconfortable for me to watch, it is very easy to configure it but nah
Geometry Dash
Please get a new mic
thank you
You are welcome, I'm glad you liked our video!
Thank you
Thank you!
Thank you