If your MikroTik lacks the CPU power to run containers, use this method to route target traffic through an external V2Ray instance running on your local network (IP: 192.168.88.254 ). Step 1: Mark Specific Traffic
Paste the following standardized client configuration, replacing the placeholder capital letters with your specific server details:
Running V2Ray at the router level offers several key advantages: v2ray mikrotik
Only works for HTTP/HTTPS. No UDP, no non-web traffic.
In the era of advanced censorship and heightened privacy concerns, securing network traffic has become paramount. While MikroTik devices are renowned for their powerful routing capabilities, implementing modern proxy protocols like V2Ray directly on the router was once a significant challenge. However, with the introduction of in RouterOS v7, running advanced V2Ray clients directly on MikroTik has become the preferred, efficient solution for network-wide proxying. If your MikroTik lacks the CPU power to
If your MikroTik router has an older MIPS architecture or limited RAM, running containers locally will crash your system. The cleanest workaround is to offload the V2Ray decryption processing to a secondary cheap device (like a Raspberry Pi, mini-PC, or local server) and use your MikroTik to manage the intelligent network paths. Step 1: Set Up the External Proxy Server
: You need the connection credentials (IP, UUID, Port, AlterId, and Security type) from an external, working V2Ray provider or your own VPS. Step 1: Enable Container Support on MikroTik In the era of advanced censorship and heightened
Since MikroTik can't see inside the V2Ray tunnel, monitor via: