-.. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
-.. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
-.. _ves-installation:
-
-
-Installation
-============
-
-VESCollector is installed via cloudify blueprint by DCAE bootstrap process on typical ONAP installation.
-As the service is containerized, it can be started on stand-alone mode also.
-
-
-To run VES Collector container on standalone mode, following parameters are required
-
- ``docker run -d -p 8080:8080/tcp -p 8443:8443/tcp -P -e DMAAPHOST='10.0.11.1' nexus.onap.org:10001/onap/org.onap.dcaegen2.collectors.ves.vescollector:1.7.9``
-
-
-DMAAPHOST is required for standalone; for normal platform installed instance the publish URL are obtained from Consul. Below parameters are exposed for DCAE platform (cloudify) deployed instance
-
-
-- COLLECTOR_IP
-- DMAAPHOST - should contain an address to DMaaP, so that event publishing can work
-- CONFIG_BINDING_SERVICE - should be a name of CBS
-- CONFIG_BINDING_SERVICE_SERVICE_PORT - should be a http port of CBS
-- HOSTNAME - should be a name of VESCollector application as it is registered in CBS catalog
-
-These parameters can be configured either by passing command line option during `docker run` call or by specifying environment variables named after command line option name
-
-
-Authentication Support
-----------------------
-
-VES Collector support following authentication types
-
- * *auth.method=noAuth* default option - no security (http)
- * *auth.method=certBasicAuth* is used to enable mutual TLS authentication or/and basic HTTPs authentication
-
-The blueprint is same for both deployments - based on the input configuration, VESCollector can be set for required authentication type.
-Default ONAP deployed VESCollector is configured for "certBasicAuth".
-
-If VESCollector instance need to be deployed with authentication disabled, follow below setup
-
-
-- Execute into Bootstrap POD using kubectl command
- .. note::
- For doing this, follow the below steps
-
- * First get the bootstrap pod name by running run this: kubectl get pods -n onap | grep bootstrap
- * Then login to bootstrap pod by running this: kubectl exec -it <bootstrap pod> bash -n onap
-
-- VES blueprint is available under /blueprints directory ``k8s-ves.yaml``. A corresponding input file is also pre-loaded into bootstrap pod under /inputs/k8s-ves-inputs.yaml
-
-- Deploy blueprint
- .. code-block:: bash
-
- cfy install -b ves-http -d ves-http -i /inputs/k8s-ves-inputs.yaml /blueprints/k8s-ves.yaml
-
-To undeploy ves-http, steps are noted below
-
-- Uninstall running ves-http and delete deployment
- .. code-block:: bash
-
- cfy uninstall ves-http
-
-The deployment uninstall will also delete the blueprint. In some case you might notice 400 error reported indicating active deployment exist such as below
-** An error occurred on the server: 400: Can't delete blueprint ves-http - There exist deployments for this blueprint; Deployments ids: ves-http**
-
-In this case blueprint can be deleted explicitly using this command.
-
- .. code-block:: bash
-
- cfy blueprint delete ves-http
-
-Using external TLS certificates obtained using CMP v2 protocol
---------------------------------------------------------------
-
-In order to use the X.509 certificates obtained from the CMP v2 server (so called "operator`s certificates"), refer to the following description:
-
-.. toctree::
- :maxdepth: 1
-
- Enabling TLS with external x.509 certificates <../../tls_enablement>
+.. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.\r
+.. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0\r
+.. _ves-installation:\r
+\r
+\r
+VES Collector Cloudify Installation\r
+===================================\r
+\r
+VESCollector is installed via cloudify blueprint by DCAE bootstrap process on typical ONAP installation.\r
+As the service is containerized, it can be started on stand-alone mode also.\r
+\r
+\r
+To run VES Collector container on standalone mode, following parameters are required\r
+\r
+ ``docker run -d -p 8080:8080/tcp -p 8443:8443/tcp -P -e DMAAPHOST='10.0.11.1' nexus.onap.org:10001/onap/org.onap.dcaegen2.collectors.ves.vescollector:1.7.9``\r
+\r
+\r
+DMAAPHOST is required for standalone; for normal platform installed instance the publish URL are obtained from Consul. Below parameters are exposed for DCAE platform (cloudify) deployed instance\r
+\r
+\r
+- COLLECTOR_IP\r
+- DMAAPHOST - should contain an address to DMaaP, so that event publishing can work\r
+- CONFIG_BINDING_SERVICE - should be a name of CBS\r
+- CONFIG_BINDING_SERVICE_SERVICE_PORT - should be a http port of CBS\r
+- HOSTNAME - should be a name of VESCollector application as it is registered in CBS catalog\r
+\r
+These parameters can be configured either by passing command line option during `docker run` call or by specifying environment variables named after command line option name\r
+\r
+\r
+Authentication Support\r
+----------------------\r
+\r
+VES Collector support following authentication types\r
+\r
+ * *auth.method=noAuth* default option - no security (http)\r
+ * *auth.method=certBasicAuth* is used to enable mutual TLS authentication or/and basic HTTPs authentication\r
+\r
+The blueprint is same for both deployments - based on the input configuration, VESCollector can be set for required authentication type.\r
+Default ONAP deployed VESCollector is configured for "certBasicAuth".\r
+\r
+If VESCollector instance need to be deployed with authentication disabled, follow below setup\r
+\r
+\r
+- Execute into Bootstrap POD using kubectl command\r
+ .. note::\r
+ For doing this, follow the below steps\r
+\r
+ * First get the bootstrap pod name by running this: kubectl get pods -n onap | grep bootstrap\r
+ * Then login to bootstrap pod by running this: kubectl exec -it <bootstrap pod> -n onap -- bash\r
+\r
+- VES blueprint is available under /blueprints directory ``k8s-ves.yaml``. A corresponding input file is also pre-loaded into bootstrap pod under /inputs/k8s-ves-inputs.yaml\r
+\r
+- Deploy blueprint\r
+ .. code-block:: bash\r
+\r
+ cfy install -b ves-http -d ves-http -i /inputs/k8s-ves-inputs.yaml /blueprints/k8s-ves.yaml\r
+\r
+To undeploy ves-http, steps are noted below\r
+\r
+- Uninstall running ves-http and delete deployment\r
+ .. code-block:: bash\r
+\r
+ cfy uninstall ves-http\r
+\r
+The deployment uninstall will also delete the blueprint. In some case you might notice 400 error reported indicating active deployment exist such as below\r
+** An error occurred on the server: 400: Can't delete blueprint ves-http - There exist deployments for this blueprint; Deployments ids: ves-http**\r
+\r
+In this case blueprint can be deleted explicitly using this command.\r
+\r
+ .. code-block:: bash\r
+\r
+ cfy blueprint delete ves-http\r
+\r
+External repo schema files from OOM connection to VES collector\r
+-------------------------------------------------------------------\r
+In order to not use schema files bundled in VES Collector image but schema files defined in `OOM <https://gerrit.onap.org/r/gitweb?p=oom.git;a=tree;f=kubernetes/dcaegen2/resources/external>`_ repository and installed with dcaegen2 module, follow below setup.\r
+\r
+- Execute into Bootstrap POD using kubectl command\r
+ .. note::\r
+ For doing this, follow the below steps\r
+\r
+ * First get the bootstrap pod name by running this: kubectl get pods -n onap | grep bootstrap\r
+ * Then login to bootstrap pod by running this: kubectl exec -it <bootstrap pod> -n onap -- bash\r
+\r
+- VES blueprint is available under /blueprints directory ``k8s-ves.yaml``. A corresponding input file is also pre-loaded into bootstrap pod under /inputs/k8s-ves-inputs.yaml\r
+\r
+- Edit ``k8s-ves.yaml`` blueprint by adding section below ``docker_config:`` tag:\r
+ .. code-block:: bash\r
+\r
+ volumes:\r
+ - container:\r
+ bind: /opt/app/VESCollector/etc/externalRepo/3gpp/rep/sa5/MnS/blob/SA88-Rel16/OpenAPI\r
+ config_volume:\r
+ name: dcae-external-repo-configmap-sa88-rel16\r
+ - container:\r
+ bind: /opt/app/VESCollector/etc/externalRepo/\r
+ config_volume:\r
+ name: dcae-external-repo-configmap-schema-map\r
+\r
+- After all ``docker_config:`` section in blueprint should looks like:\r
+ .. code-block:: bash\r
+\r
+ docker_config:\r
+ healthcheck:\r
+ endpoint: /healthcheck\r
+ interval: 15s\r
+ timeout: 1s\r
+ type: http\r
+ volumes:\r
+ - container:\r
+ bind: /opt/app/VESCollector/etc/externalRepo/3gpp/rep/sa5/MnS/blob/SA88-Rel16/OpenAPI\r
+ config_volume:\r
+ name: dcae-external-repo-configmap-sa88-rel16\r
+ - container:\r
+ bind: /opt/app/VESCollector/etc/externalRepo/\r
+ config_volume:\r
+ name: dcae-external-repo-configmap-schema-map\r
+\r
+.. note::\r
+\r
+ To undeploy ves-http if it is deployed, steps are noted below\r
+\r
+ Uninstall running ves-http and delete deployment\r
+ .. code-block:: bash\r
+\r
+ cfy uninstall ves-http\r
+\r
+ The deployment uninstall will also delete the blueprint. In some case you might notice 400 error reported indicating active deployment exist such as below\r
+ ** An error occurred on the server: 400: Can't delete blueprint ves-http - There exist deployments for this blueprint; Deployments ids: ves-http**\r
+\r
+ In this case blueprint can be deleted explicitly using this command.\r
+\r
+ .. code-block:: bash\r
+\r
+ cfy blueprint delete ves-http\r
+\r
+To deploy modified ves-http, steps are noted below\r
+\r
+- Load blueprint:\r
+ .. code-block:: bash\r
+\r
+ cfy blueprints upload -b ves-http /blueprints/k8s-ves.yaml\r
+\r
+- Deploy blueprint\r
+ .. code-block:: bash\r
+\r
+ cfy install -b ves-http -d ves-http -i /inputs/k8s-ves-inputs.yaml /blueprints/k8s-ves.yaml\r
+\r
+Using external TLS certificates obtained using CMP v2 protocol\r
+--------------------------------------------------------------\r
+\r
+In order to use the X.509 certificates obtained from the CMP v2 server (so called "operator`s certificates"), refer to the following description:\r
+\r
+.. toctree::\r
+ :maxdepth: 1\r
+\r
+ Enabling TLS with external x.509 certificates <../../tls_enablement>\r