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That's when he stumbled upon EVE-NG. A colleague recommended it, having used it extensively for his own certifications. Intrigued, Alex decided to give it a try. He downloaded the EVE-NG image and began the process of setting it up on his computer.
| Issue | Likely Cause | Solution | |-------|--------------|----------| | Image not appearing | Wrong folder name | Use correct QEMU naming format | | Node fails to start | Missing virtioa.qcow2 | Rename disk file accordingly | | Permission denied | Incorrect ownership | Run fixpermissions | | IOL license error | Missing or wrong .yml | Place iourc.txt in /opt/unetlab/addons/iol/ | eve-ng image
/opt/unetlab/addons/ ├── dynamips/ # .image files ├── iol/ # .bin IOL images + .yml key file ├── qemu/ # Subfolders per device type (e.g., "linux-ubuntu-20.04") └── docker/ # Docker images (used by EVE-NG community/pro) That's when he stumbled upon EVE-NG
: The most versatile category, supporting modern, heavy-duty images like Cisco CSR1000V, Palo Alto PAN-OS, FortiGate, and even Windows or Linux workstations. Key Features of EVE-NG Images He downloaded the EVE-NG image and began the
Adding images to your EVE-NG server is a specific procedural process that requires precision. While the exact steps vary by image type, the general workflow involves: