| name | routeros-netinstall |
| description | MikroTik netinstall-cli for automated RouterOS device flashing. Use when: automating netinstall, writing scripts that invoke netinstall-cli, building netinstall tooling, understanding etherboot/BOOTP/TFTP protocols, working with RouterOS package files (.npk), using modescript or configure script, or when the user mentions netinstall, etherboot, or device flashing. |
RouterOS Netinstall
What Netinstall Is
Netinstall is MikroTik's tool for installing and reinstalling RouterOS on hardware devices over a direct Ethernet connection. It uses BOOTP (port 68) and TFTP (port 69) to discover devices in "etherboot" mode and transfer packages to them.
Two variants:
- Netinstall for Windows — GUI application
netinstall-cli — Linux command-line tool (x86 ELF binary only)
Both re-format the device's system drive. The license key and RouterBOOT settings are preserved.
netinstall-cli Command Syntax
netinstall-cli [-r] [-e] [-b] [-m [-o]] [-f] [-v] [-c]
[-k <keyfile>] [-s <userscript>] [-sm <modescript>]
[--mac <mac>] {-i <interface> | -a <client-ip>} [PACKAGES...]
Flags
| Flag | Meaning |
|---|
-r | Reinstall with default configuration (mutually exclusive with -e) |
-e | Reinstall with empty configuration (no defaults applied) |
-b | Discard branding package from device |
-m | Enable multiple device reinstallation (loop). Device will be reinstalled each time it sends BOOTP |
-m -o | Multiple reinstall, but each MAC only once per run |
-f | Ignore storage size constraints |
-v | Verbose output |
-c | Allow concurrent netinstall instances on same host |
-k <keyfile> | Install a license key (.KEY file) |
-s <userscript> | Configure script — custom default config that replaces RouterOS-supplied default. Persists across upgrades until re-netinstalled |
-sm <modescript> | Mode script — one-time first-boot script (7.22+). Runs before configure script. Auto-removed after execution. If it changes device-mode, device reboots immediately |
--mac <mac> | Only serve this specific MAC address |
-i <interface> | Listen on this network interface |
-a <client-ip> | Assign this IP to the device (uses BOOTP server auto-detect for interface) |
Critical Rules
- System package must be listed first —
routeros-VER-ARCH.npk must be the first package in the list
- Requires root/sudo — uses privileged BOOTP (port 68) and TFTP (port 69)
- Multi-arch support — provide packages for multiple architectures; netinstall auto-detects the device's architecture and selects matching packages
- x86 binary only —
netinstall-cli is an i386 Linux ELF; requires QEMU user-mode emulation on ARM/ARM64 hosts
- No
-r and no -e = keep old config — downloads config DB from device, reformats, re-uploads config (does NOT preserve files like Dude/UserManager databases)
Interface vs Client-IP Mode
| Mode | Flag | How it works |
|---|
| Interface | -i <iface> | Listens on the specified interface, auto-detects server IP |
| Client-IP | -a <ip> | Assigns the specified IP to the booting device; netinstall auto-selects the interface |
In containers on RouterOS 7.21+, the VETH interface name matches the configured VETH name (e.g., veth-netinstall), so use -i veth-netinstall.
Etherboot Mode
Devices must be in "etherboot" mode for netinstall to discover them. Methods to enter etherboot:
| Method | How |
|---|
| Reset button | Power off, hold reset, power on, hold until device appears in netinstall |
| Serial console | Press Ctrl+E during boot |
| RouterOS CLI | /system/routerboard/settings/set boot-device=try-ethernet-once-then-nand then reboot |
| Protected bootloader | Reset button behavior changes — must remember settings used |
Etherboot uses BOOTP (same ports as DHCP). On networks with DHCP servers, conflicts can occur. Best practice: use a dedicated interface/switch with no other DHCP sources.
Configure Script vs Mode Script
| Feature | Configure Script (-s) | Mode Script (-sm) |
|---|
| When it runs | After default config is applied (on reboot) | First boot, before configure/default scripts |
| Persistence | Kept across upgrades and resets until re-netinstalled | One-time — auto-deleted after execution |
| Min version | Any RouterOS 7.x | RouterOS and netinstall-cli both >= 7.22 |
| Timeout | 120 seconds | 120 seconds |
| Use case | Custom default config replacement | Device-mode setup, protected-routerboot |
| File format | Regular .rsc with RouterOS CLI commands | Regular .rsc with RouterOS CLI commands |
| Device-mode | If script changes device-mode, reboots immediately | Same |
Configure script variables (7.10beta8+):
$defconfPassword — factory-set admin password (read-only)
$defconfWifiPassword — factory-set WiFi password (read-only)
Mode Script for Device-Mode
The primary use case for -sm is enabling device-mode features on first boot without requiring manual power-cycle confirmation:
# Enable advanced mode + container support
/system/device-mode update mode=advanced container=yes
# Enable advanced mode + container + zerotier
/system/device-mode update mode=advanced container=yes zerotier=yes
When the mode script changes device-mode, the device automatically reboots to apply the change. This replaces what would otherwise require a physical power-cycle/reset-button press.
Package Files (.npk)
URL Pattern
See the routeros-fundamentals skill (version-parsing reference) for download URLs, version channels, and pre-release host selection.
https://download.mikrotik.com/routeros/{version}/routeros-{version}-{arch}.npk
https://download.mikrotik.com/routeros/{version}/all_packages-{arch}-{version}.zip
https://download.mikrotik.com/routeros/{version}/netinstall-{version}.tar.gz
x86 exception: x86 packages omit the architecture suffix entirely: routeros-7.22.npk, container-7.22.npk (not routeros-7.22-x86.npk). The all_packages zip does use x86: all_packages-x86-7.22.zip.
Note: Starting sometime around 7.18+, netinstall-cli is distributed as a .tar.gz containing the netinstall-cli binary.
Architecture Names in Packages
| Architecture | Package suffix | Example |
|---|
| ARM | -arm | routeros-7.22-arm.npk |
| ARM64 | -arm64 | routeros-7.22-arm64.npk |
| MIPS big-endian | -mipsbe | routeros-7.22-mipsbe.npk |
| MIPS multi-core | -mmips | routeros-7.22-mmips.npk |
| MIPS single-core | -smips | routeros-7.22-smips.npk |
| PowerPC | -ppc | routeros-7.22-ppc.npk |
| Tilera | -tile | routeros-7.22-tile.npk |
| x86 | (none) | routeros-7.22.npk |
All-Packages ZIP
The all_packages-{arch}-{version}.zip contains all optional packages for a given architecture. Extract to get individual .npk files. The system package (routeros-*.npk) is also included.
Version Resolution
Current version per channel is available as plain text — see the routeros-fundamentals skill (version-parsing reference) for full details on channels, URL patterns, download host selection (stable vs pre-release), and version comparison logic.
DNS retry pattern: When running in a container at boot time, DNS may not be ready. Retry logic (5 attempts, 2s delay) is recommended for any version resolution at startup:
channel_ver = $(firstword $(shell for _i in 1 2 3 4 5; do \
_v=$$(wget -q -O - https://upgrade.mikrotik.com/routeros/NEWESTa7.$(1)) && \
[ -n "$$_v" ] && echo "$$_v" && break; sleep 2; done))
Running on Non-x86 Hosts
netinstall-cli is an x86 (i386) Linux ELF binary. On non-x86 hosts:
| Host | Solution |
|---|
| ARM/ARM64 Linux | qemu-i386-static or qemu-i386 (user-mode emulation) |
| x86_64 Linux | Runs natively (kernel supports i386 binaries) |
| macOS (any arch) | QEMU system VM with vmnet-bridged networking and 9p host sharing |
On ARM/ARM64 Linux, QEMU user-mode emulation is transparent — prefix the command with the QEMU binary path. See the tikoci-qemu-user-emulation skill for details.
On macOS, system-level QEMU is needed because netinstall-cli uses raw network sockets (BOOTP/TFTP) that require actual kernel network stack access, not just process emulation.
Network Requirements
- Privileged ports: BOOTP uses ports 67/68, TFTP uses port 69 — requires root/sudo
- Direct L2 connection: Device must be on the same Layer 2 segment as the netinstall host
- Static IP recommended: Configure a static IP on the host interface (e.g., 192.168.88.2/24)
- Client IP must be unique: The
-a IP address must not conflict with any other device on the network
- Link flaps: Some USB Ethernet adapters cause link flaps that prevent device detection. Use a switch between adapter and device as workaround
- DHCP snooping: If using a managed switch with DHCP snooping, mark the netinstall-facing port as "trusted"
Automation Patterns
Single Device Install
sudo netinstall-cli -r -b -i eth0 \
routeros-7.22-arm64.npk \
container-7.22-arm64.npk \
wifi-qcom-7.22-arm64.npk
Multi-Device Install (Service Loop)
sudo netinstall-cli -r -b -m -o -i eth0 \
routeros-7.22-arm64.npk \
container-7.22-arm64.npk
With Mode Script (7.22+)
cat > modescript.rsc << 'EOF'
/system/device-mode update mode=advanced container=yes
EOF
sudo netinstall-cli -r -b -sm modescript.rsc -i eth0 \
routeros-7.22-arm64.npk \
container-7.22-arm64.npk
Containerized Netinstall on RouterOS
Run netinstall-cli inside a RouterOS container with VETH networking for "self-provisioning" — the router runs a container that can netinstall other devices on the same LAN.
Key environment variables (passed via /container/envs):
/container envs add key=ARCH list=NETINSTALL value=arm64
/container envs add key=PKGS list=NETINSTALL value="container wifi-qcom"
/container envs add key=CHANNEL list=NETINSTALL value=stable
/container envs add key=OPTS list=NETINSTALL value="-b -r"
/container envs add key=IFACE list=NETINSTALL value=veth-netinstall
See the routeros-container skill for container setup details.
Additional Resources
Related skills:
- For RouterOS CLI/REST basics: see the
routeros-fundamentals skill
- For device-mode configuration: see the
routeros-container skill (device-mode section)
- For running netinstall-cli on non-x86 hosts: see the
tikoci-qemu-user-emulation skill
- For building container images for RouterOS: see the
tikoci-oci-image-building skill
MCP tools:
- For RouterOS documentation lookups: use the
rosetta MCP server tools (routeros_search, routeros_get_page)
External docs: