| name | routeros-fundamentals |
| description | RouterOS v7 domain knowledge for AI agents. Use when: working with MikroTik RouterOS, writing RouterOS CLI/script commands, calling RouterOS REST API, debugging why a Linux command fails on RouterOS, or when the user mentions MikroTik, RouterOS, CHR, or /ip /system /interface paths. Scope: RouterOS 7.x (long-term and newer) only — v6 is NOT covered and accuracy for v6 problems will be low. |
RouterOS Fundamentals
RouterOS Is NOT GNU/Linux
RouterOS runs a Linux kernel (5.6.3) but everything above the kernel is MikroTik's proprietary nova system. This is the single most important fact for agents to internalize.
What does NOT exist on RouterOS:
- No
/bin, /usr, /etc, /var — no FHS layout
- No bash, sh, ash, zsh — no Unix shell at all
- No coreutils (
ls, cat, grep, ps, mount, ip, iptables, etc.)
- No glibc, musl, busybox
- No apt, pkg, opkg — no package manager (packages are
.npk files installed via upload + reboot)
- No
systemctl, service, init system
- No
/proc or /sys accessible from userland
- No
docker, podman — RouterOS has its own /container subsystem (7.x+)
What DOES exist:
- RouterOS CLI — its own language, not shell. Accessed via SSH, serial, WinBox, or WebFig
- REST API at
/rest/ (HTTP, port 80 by default) — the primary programmatic interface
- RouterOS scripting language (
.rsc files) — its own syntax, not bash. See Scripting reference
- WebFig (web UI) on port 80
- WinBox protocol on port 8291
Common agent mistakes to avoid:
- Do NOT try
ssh admin@host 'ls /' — it opens RouterOS CLI, not a shell
- Do NOT suggest
mount, fdisk, mkfs — use /disk commands instead
- Do NOT look for config files at
/etc/ — configuration is in the RouterOS database
- Do NOT assume
ping works the same — it's /tool/ping or /ping in CLI
- Do NOT suggest installing packages via
apt or opkg — upload .npk via SCP then /system/reboot
- See Extra packages reference for the full package list and installation pattern
RouterOS CLI Syntax
RouterOS CLI uses path-based navigation, not Unix command pipelines:
# Navigation
/ip/address/print
/interface/print
/system/resource/print
# Adding entries
/ip/address/add address=192.168.1.1/24 interface=ether1
# Modifying (by internal ID or find expression)
/ip/address/set [find interface=ether1] address=10.0.0.1/24
# Removing
/ip/address/remove [find address="192.168.1.1/24"]
# Running a command
/system/reboot
/tool/fetch url="http://example.com/file.npk" dst-path="/"
Key syntax differences from shell:
= assigns properties (no spaces around it)
[find ...] is the query expression (like WHERE)
- Strings use
"" (double quotes only)
- Comments use
#
- Variables:
:local myVar "value" and $myVar
- No pipes, no redirection, no subshell
REST API Patterns
RouterOS REST API (v7.x+) at http://HOST:PORT/rest/:
const base = "http://192.168.1.1/rest";
const auth = { headers: { Authorization: `Basic ${btoa("admin:")}` } };
const interfaces = await fetch(`${base}/interface`, auth).then(r => r.json());
await fetch(`${base}/ip/address`, {
method: "PUT",
...auth,
headers: { ...auth.headers, "Content-Type": "application/json" },
body: JSON.stringify({ address: "192.168.1.1/24", interface: "ether1" }),
});
await fetch(`${base}/ip/address/*1`, {
method: "PATCH",
...auth,
body: JSON.stringify({ address: "10.0.0.1/24" }),
});
await fetch(`${base}/ip/address/*1`, { method: "DELETE", ...auth });
await fetch(`${base}/ip/dns/cache/flush`, { method: "POST", ...auth });
REST gotchas:
PUT creates, PATCH updates — opposite of many APIs
- Empty password:
admin: (colon required, empty string after)
- WebFig (port 80, GET
/) returns HTTP 200 without auth — useful for health checks
- REST API (
/rest/) returns HTTP 401 without auth
- Property names may differ from CLI names (hyphens vs underscores vary by version)
.id field is *HEX format (e.g., *1, *A)
- POST to
/rest/system/reboot — no body needed for action commands
Version Scheme
Format: MAJOR.MINOR[.PATCH][betaN|rcN] — e.g., 7.22, 7.22.1, 7.23beta2, 7.22rc1
Channels (from upgrade.mikrotik.com/routeros/NEWESTa7.<channel>):
stable — production recommended
long-term — conservative, gets backported fixes
testing — pre-release candidates
development — beta features
const version = await fetch(
"https://upgrade.mikrotik.com/routeros/NEWESTa7.stable"
).then(r => r.text());
Download URLs:
- Standard:
https://download.mikrotik.com/routeros/<ver>/chr-<ver>.img.zip (x86_64)
- ARM64:
https://download.mikrotik.com/routeros/<ver>/chr-<ver>-arm64.img.zip
Architecture Names
MikroTik uses these architecture identifiers (not standard Linux arch names):
| MikroTik name | CPU | Common hardware |
|---|
x86 | x86_64 | CHR, x86-based RouterBOARDs |
arm64 | aarch64 | Modern ARM boards (RB5009, Chateau) |
arm | ARMv7 | Older ARM boards |
mipsbe | MIPS big-endian | Legacy RouterBOARDs |
mmips | MIPS multi-core | hAP ac, RB4011 |
smips | MIPS single-core | hAP lite, mAP |
ppc | PowerPC | CCR1xxx series |
tile | Tilera | CCR (older models) |
CHR (Cloud Hosted Router) is available only for x86 and arm64.
Default Credentials
- Username:
admin
- Password: (empty — no password)
- On first login via SSH/console, RouterOS 7.x prompts to set a password or press
a to skip
- REST API and WebFig allow empty-password access
Inspecting Hardware from RouterOS CLI
# PCI devices (the RouterOS equivalent of lspci)
/system/resource/hardware/print
# IRQ assignments (shows driver binding)
/system/resource/irq/print
# System overview
/system/resource/print
# Disk info
/disk/print
# Installed packages
/system/package/print
# IP services and ports
/ip/service/print
# Network interfaces
/interface/print
Additional Resources
Reference files:
Related skills:
- For the /container subsystem (VETH, device-mode, lifecycle): see the
routeros-container skill
- For netinstall-cli and device flashing: see the
routeros-netinstall skill
- For the /app YAML container format (7.22+): see the
routeros-app-yaml skill
- For /console/inspect tree traversal and schema generation: see the
routeros-command-tree skill
- For running CHR in QEMU (local or CI): see the
routeros-qemu-chr skill
- For QEMU user-mode emulation and macOS VM bridging: see the
tikoci-qemu-user-emulation skill
- For building OCI images for RouterOS: see the
tikoci-oci-image-building skill
MCP tools:
- For command tree browsing and property lookups: use the
rosetta MCP server tools (routeros_search, routeros_get_page, routeros_command_tree)