Fgtvm64kvmv723fbuild1262fortinetoutkvmqcow2 New -

This article provides an exhaustive walkthrough—from understanding the filename components to deploying, configuring, and optimizing this virtual appliance in your production or lab environment. Before diving into deployment, let’s demystify the string piece by piece:

qemu-img convert -f qcow2 -O qcow2 -o preallocation=metadata,backing_fmt=qcow2 input.qcow2 output.qcow2 For production, pin vCPUs to physical cores: fgtvm64kvmv723fbuild1262fortinetoutkvmqcow2 new

Extract the QCOW2 file:

| Component | Interpretation | |-----------|----------------| | fgtvm64 | FortiGate Virtual Machine for 64-bit architecture | | kvm | Hypervisor type – KVM (Linux native virtualization) | | v723f | FortiOS version 7.2.3 (the ‘f’ may indicate a patch or specific branch) | | build1262 | Internal build ID – specific compiled version | | fortinet | Vendor – Fortinet Networks | | outkvmqcow2 | Output format: KVM-compatible QCOW2 disk image | | new | Indicates a recent release or updated artifact | Check XML:

virsh vcpupin fortigate-vm 0 2 virsh vcpupin fortigate-vm 1 3 Create thin-provisioned snapshots before upgrades: backing_fmt=qcow2 input.qcow2 output.qcow2 For production

config firewall policy edit 1 set name "LAN to WAN" set srcintf "port3" set dstintf "port2" set srcaddr "all" set dstaddr "all" set action accept set schedule "always" set service "ALL" next end config system fortiguard set protocol udp set port 8888 set anycast enable end 6. Performance Optimization for KVM/QCOW2 6.1 Enable VirtIO Drivers Ensure interfaces use model type='virtio' (not e1000). Check XML: