Running a Third-Party Application on Junos Evolved — Example Using OpenR

Let’s get technical: How to run a third-party app on Junos Evolved.
In this demo, we take a look at how to run the third-party app OpenR inside a container on a Junos Evolved system. Watch to discover how easy it is to run third-party apps on Junos Evolved from inside a container or natively.
You’ll learn
OpenR is a complex routing protocol developed by Facebook to be used in high-speed wireless networks
How OpenR jet APIs learn interfaces and add routes to a device
How OpenR establishes a peering session by exchanging udp v6 packets over data ports