X-Git-Url: https://gerrit.onap.org/r/gitweb?a=blobdiff_plain;f=docs%2Foom_quickstart_guide.rst;h=bd5e3eeee6a48539521968e086d3416a49340787;hb=a4535c94d838cd0d784fd14ff8497be878c81176;hp=501deda7e48ccff497694e55e3d57ece1facb697;hpb=47ad13899b9b91cc7266c93e1635ab97550a784e;p=oom.git diff --git a/docs/oom_quickstart_guide.rst b/docs/oom_quickstart_guide.rst index 501deda7e4..bd5e3eeee6 100644 --- a/docs/oom_quickstart_guide.rst +++ b/docs/oom_quickstart_guide.rst @@ -30,7 +30,7 @@ file like onap-all.yaml, onap-vfw.yaml or openstack.yaml file to suit your deplo OpenStack tenant information. .. note:: - Standard and example override files (e.g. onap-all.yaml, openstack.yaml) can be found in + Standard and example override files (e.g. onap-all.yaml, openstack.yaml) can be found in the oom/kubernetes/onap/resources/overrides/ directory. @@ -77,22 +77,65 @@ Java encryption library is not easy to integrate with openssl/python that ROBOT uses in Dublin. .. note:: - To generate SO openStackEncryptedPasswordHere : + To generate SO openStackEncryptedPasswordHere and openStackSoEncryptedPassword: + + SO_ENCRYPTION_KEY=`cat ~/oom/kubernetes/so/resources/config/mso/encryption.key` - SO_ENCRYPTION_KEY=`cat ~/oom/kubenertes/so/resources/config/mso/encrypt.key` OS_PASSWORD=XXXX_OS_CLEARTESTPASSWORD_XXXX git clone http://gerrit.onap.org/r/integration - cd integration/deployment/heat/onap-oom/scripts + + cd integration/deployment/heat/onap-rke/scripts + + javac Crypto.java + + [ if javac is not installed 'apt-get update ; apt-get install default-jdk' ] + java Crypto "$OS_PASSWORD" "$SO_ENCRYPTION_KEY" d. Update the OpenStack parameters: +There are assumptions in the demonstration VNF heat templates about the networking +available in the environment. To get the most value out of these templates and the +automation that can help confirm the setup is correct, please observe the following +constraints. + +openStackPublicNetId: + +This network should allow heat templates to add interfaces. +This need not be an external network, floating IPs can be assigned to the ports on +the VMs that are created by the heat template but its important that neutron allow +ports to be created on them. + +openStackPrivateNetCidr: "10.0.0.0/16" + +This ip address block is used to assign OA&M addresses on VNFs to allow ONAP connectivity. +The demonstration heat templates assume that 10.0 prefix can be used by the VNFs and the +demonstration ip addressing plan embodied in the preload template prevent conflicts when +instantiating the various VNFs. If you need to change this, you will need to modify the preload +data in the robot helm chart like integration_preload_parametes.py and the demo/heat/preload_data +in the robot container. The size of the CIDR should be sufficient for ONAP and the VMs you expect +to create. + +openStackOamNetworkCidrPrefix: "10.0" + +This ip prefix mush match the openStackPrivateNetCidr and is a helper variable to some of the +robot scripts for demonstration. A production deployment need not worry about this +setting but for the demonstration VNFs the ip asssignment strategy assumes 10.0 ip prefix. + + +Example Keystone v2.0 .. literalinclude:: example-integration-override.yaml :language: yaml +Example Keystone v3 (required for Rocky and later releases) +.. literalinclude:: example-integration-override-v3.yaml + :language: yaml + + + **Step 4.** To setup a local Helm server to server up the ONAP charts:: > helm serve & @@ -128,32 +171,42 @@ single command The --timeout 900 is currently required in Dublin to address long running initialization tasks for DMaaP and SO. Without this timeout value both applications may fail to deploy. - a. To deploy all ONAP applications use this command:: +To deploy all ONAP applications use this command:: > cd oom/kubernetes - > helm deploy dev local/onap --namespace onap -f onap/resources/overrides/onap-all.yaml -f onap/resources/overrides/openstack.yaml --timeout 900 + > helm deploy dev local/onap --namespace onap -f onap/resources/overrides/onap-all.yaml -f onap/resources/overrides/environment.yaml -f onap/resources/overrides/openstack.yaml --timeout 900 - b. If you are using a custom override (e.g. integration-override.yaml) use this command:: +All override files may be customized (or replaced by other overrides) as per needs. - > helm deploy dev local/onap -f /root/integration-override.yaml --namespace onap --timeout 900 +onap-all.yaml + Enables the modules in the ONAP deployment. As ONAP is very modular, it is possible to customize ONAP and disable some components through this configuration file. - c. If you have a slower cloud environment you may want to use the public-cloud.yaml - which has longer delay intervals on database updates.:: +environment.yaml - > helm deploy dev local/onap -f /root/oom/kubernetes/onap/resources/environments/public-cloud.yaml -f /root/integration-override.yaml --namespace onap --timeout 900 + Includes configuration values specific to the deployment environment. + Example: adapt readiness and liveness timers to the level of performance of your infrastructure -**Step 9.** Commands to interact with the OOM installation +openstack.yaml -Use the following to monitor your deployment and determine when ONAP is -ready for use:: + Includes all the Openstack related information for the default target tenant you want to use to deploy VNFs from ONAP and/or additional parameters for the embedded tests. + +**Step 9.** Verify ONAP installation + +Use the following to monitor your deployment and determine when ONAP is ready for use:: > kubectl get pods -n onap -o=wide -Undeploying onap can be done using the following command:: +.. note:: + While all pods may be in a Running state, it is not a guarantee that all components are running fine. + + Launch the healthcheck tests using Robot to verify that the components are healthy. + + > ~/oom/kubernetes/robot/ete-k8s.sh onap health - > helm undeploy dev --purge +**Step 10.** Undeploy ONAP +> helm undeploy dev --purge More examples of using the deploy and undeploy plugins can be found here: https://wiki.onap.org/display/DW/OOM+Helm+%28un%29Deploy+plugins