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-(about)=
-
-# About
-
-VyOS is an open-source network operating system that provides a single unified
-CLI and API to manage routing protocols, firewall and NAT, QoS, load balancing,
-DHCP and DNS servers, and many other features.
-
-VyOS runs on a wide variety of commodity hardware, virtual machines, and
-multiple cloud environments.
-
-We provide a dedicated user guide for each major
-VyOS release that receives long-term support (LTS). We maintain multiple user
-guide versions, all hosted at <https://docs.vyos.io>.
-To switch between versions, select the appropriate version in the bottom-right
-corner.
-
-VyOS CLI syntax may vary between major and sometimes minor releases. Always
-refer to the documentation matching your current running installation. If
-a change in the CLI is required, VyOS provides a migration script to handle
-the syntax adjustments. No user action is required.
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-(history)=
-
-# History
-
-## In the beginning...
-
-There was a network operating system based on Debian GNU/Linux, called
-Vyatta. :sup:`\*` Introduced in 2006, it served as a great free-software alternative
-to proprietary products. Vyatta came in two editions: Vyatta Core
-(formerly known as Vyatta Community Edition), which was free software, and
-Vyatta Subscription Edition, which included proprietary features and was
-available only to paying customers.
-
-Brocade Communications Systems acquired Vyatta in 2012. Shortly after, Brocade
-renamed Vyatta Subscription Edition to Brocade vRouter, discontinued Vyatta
-Core, and shut down the community forum without notice. The bug tracker and Git
-repositories were closed the following year.
-
-By the time Brocade acquired Vyatta, the development of Vyatta Core had
-already stagnated. The focus had shifted to Vyatta Subscription Edition,
-where core components were replaced with proprietary software. As a result,
-Vyatta Core received fewer new features, and some of those added faced issues.
-
-In 2013, shortly after Vyatta Core was discontinued, the community forked its
-final version (6.6R1) to create the VyOS project. In 2014, the maintainers
-established a company to fund VyOS development through technical support,
-consulting services, and LTS release access subscriptions. The company was
-originally named Sentrium and was later reorganized under the VyOS brand.
-
-## Major releases
-
-VyOS originally named its major versions after elements by atomic number.
-Beginning with version 1.2, this naming scheme was changed. It now uses the
-Latin names of constellations recognized by the International Astronomical
-Union ([IAU](<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IAU_designated_constellations_by_area>)),
-ordered by their solid angle area, beginning with the smallest.
-
-### Hydrogen (1.0)
-
-Released just in time for the holidays on 22 December 2013, Hydrogen was
-the first major VyOS release. It fixed features that were broken in
-Vyatta Core 6.6, such as IPv4 BGP peer groups and DHCPv6 relay, and
-introduced command scripting, a task scheduler, and web proxy LDAP
-authentication.
-
-### Helium (1.1)
-
-Helium, released on 9 October 2014, marked the first anniversary of the
-VyOS Project. The release introduced an event handler, L2TPv3 support,
-802.1ad (QinQ), and IGMP proxy, as well as experimental support for VXLAN
-and DMVPN. Notably, DMVPN remained non-functional in Vyatta Core due to its
-reliance on a proprietary NHRP implementation.
-
-### Crux (1.2)
-
-Crux (the Southern Cross) was released on 28 January 2019 and marked a
-departure from legacy Vyatta codebase and the start of the migration from
-Perl to Python as the primary language. The underlying base system was
-upgraded from Debian 6 (Squeeze) to Debian 8 (Jessie).
-
-Crux introduced many new features, some of the most noteworthy are:
-an mDNS repeater, a broadcast relay, a high-performance PPPoE server,
-an HFSC scheduler, and support for Wireguard, unicast VRRP, RPKI for BGP,
-and fully 802.1ad-compliant QinQ ethertype. The telnet server and support
-for P2P filtering were removed.
-
-Crux was the first VyOS release to feature a modular image build system.
-CLI definitions were written using an XML syntax automatically checked
-against a schema at build time. Python APIs were introduced for command
-scripting and configuration migration. New Perl code and old-style (non-XML)
-command definition were no longer accepted from that point.
-
-Crux reached the end of support in 2023.
-
-### Equuleus (1.3)
-
-Equuleus (the Little Horse) was a long-term support version released
-on 21 December 2021, just in time for the winter holidays.
-
-Equuleus brought many long-awaited features, most notably an SSTP VPN
-server, an IPoE server, an OpenConnect VPN server, and a serial console
-server. It also introduced reworked support for WWAN interfaces, support
-for GENEVE and MACSec interfaces, VRF, IS-IS routing, and preliminary support
-for MPLS and LDP.
-
-Equuleus reached the end of support in 2025.
-
-### Sagitta (1.4)
-
-Sagitta (the Arrow), the current LTS release, became generally available on
-4 June 2024. Its development began in late 2021 and focused on eliminating
-remaining legacy components and reworking core subsystems.
-
-The transition to XML-defined command definitions and script refactoring with
-separate verify, update, and apply stages were completed. The firewall
-subsystem was rebuilt on nftables, introducing interface-independent rulesets
-and the reimplemented zone-based firewall model. The PKI subsystem was
-redesigned to manage cryptographic material directly within the configuration
-file.
-
-Sagitta introduced rollback without reboot, support for Babel and PIM6 routing
-protocols, failover routes, segment routing, NAT64, an IKEv2 remote-access VPN
-server, Zabbix monitoring, HTTP load balancing, and configuration
-synchronization using the HTTP API.
-
-The underlying base system was upgraded to Debian 12 (Bookworm).
-
-### Circinus (1.5)
-
-Circinus (the Drawing Compass) is the codename for the upcoming development
-branch. VyOS 1.5 Circinus has not been released yet.
-
-## A note on copyright
-
-Unlike Vyatta, VyOS has never had closed-source code and never will.
-The only proprietary material in VyOS is non-code assets, such as
-graphics and the trademark "VyOS". :sup:`†`
-
-Note that we do not provide support for images distributed by a third party.
-See the
-[artwork license](https://github.com/vyos/vyos-build/blob/current/LICENSE.artwork)
-and the end-user license agreement at `/usr/share/vyos/EULA` in
-any pre-built image for more information.
-
-[\*] From the Sanskrit adjective "Vyātta" (व्यात्त), meaning opened.
-
-[†] This is similar to how Linus Torvalds owns the Linux trademark.