V2ray Mikrotik Instant
/queue simple add target=192.168.1.100/32 max-limit=10M/10M | Scenario | Recommended Method | | :--- | :--- | | Home lab with RB5009 | Native Container (Method 1) | | Small office with old RouterBoard | External Gateway + TPROXY (Method 4) | | Quick test / temporary setup | Socks Client (Method 2) | | Censorship circumvention (China, Iran, Russia) | Domain-based PBR + DNS trick (Method 3) |
Bind this volume to the container. You will need to transfer the file using FTP/SCP. v2ray mikrotik
By mastering the Mangle table and understanding TPROXY, you transform your MikroTik from a simple router into a censorship-evading, geo-unblocking powerhouse. Last updated: October 2025. RouterOS v7.15+ and V2Fly core v5.22+ tested. /queue simple add target=192
/container add remote-image=v2fly/v2fly-core:latest interface=veth1 root-dir=usb1/v2ray /container start 0 You need a config.json file. Create it on your USB drive: Last updated: October 2025
The question isn't if you should integrate them, but how . Running V2Ray on a separate PC or a Raspberry Pi adds latency and a single point of failure. Installing V2Ray directly on your MikroTik device (where possible) or routing traffic through an external V2Ray server via MikroTik's routing engine gives you enterprise-level control.
Thus, the standard workflow is:
MikroTik does not natively support the VMess or VLESS protocol. Therefore, every "V2Ray MikroTik" setup is essentially a sophisticated routing trick. The most robust, long-term solution is to use that directs specific traffic to a Linux-based V2Ray transparent proxy .