View Online GNS3 2.2.35 Released! Time to Upgrade Your Network Performance Monitoring Solution 65,032 GNS3 Users Have Tested This Network Performance Monitoring Solution Do you spend time on manual and repetitive tasks? Is your team interrupted frequently and only able to reactively address network performance issues because there is limited visibility across your IT stack like the crew at GNS3? Managing and monitoring your network can be simple and automated with SolarWinds® Network Performance Monitor (NPM). Our favorite features at GNS3 include: Multi-vendor network monitoring Network Insights for deeper visibility Intelligent maps NetPath and PerfStack for easy troubleshooting Smarter scalability for large environments Advanced alerting DOWNLOAD FREE TRIAL CCNA 200-301 Video Boot Camp With Chris Bryant Pass the CCNA 200-301 Cisco certification exam while learning real-world networking skills in this exclusive course from Chris Bryant, CCIE #12933 with over 30 hours of lab-packed video content. START TODAY FOR $7.50 Network Monitoring Training Session Learn how to monitor complex network gear like an expert. Today's networks include complex devices that play key roles in the network, but can be challenging to monitor and manage. It's time to get deeper visibility into critical network switches, firewalls, and load balancers. FREE EBOOK TRAINING GNS3 2.2.35 Released We are super excited to release some upgrades and bug fixes to GNS3 Version 2.2.35, taking into account some of the great user feedback over the past two months including: Support for Python 3.11 Fix issues with VMnet interface on macOS The gns3-server Debian package now installs a systemd service (not enabled by default) Use importlib_resources instead of pkg_resources and install built-in appliances in the config directory Please also check out this brand new training video from David Bombal on how to install the new GNS3 Web interface. DOWNLOAD 2.2.35 TODAY! Does Your Monitoring Fall short? Monitoring is an essential part of any IT organization. However, it requires manual, domain-focused tasks, and can lead to tool sprawl, alert noise, and conflicting sources of truth. LEARN MORE