| Alternatives Considered:
- - Kubernetes port forwarding was considered but discarded as it would require
- the end user to run a script that opens up port forwarding tunnels to each of
- the pods that provides a portal application widget.
+ - Kubernetes port forwarding was considered but discarded as it would
+ require the end user to run a script that opens up port forwarding tunnels
+ to each of the pods that provides a portal application widget.
- Reverting to a VNC server similar to what was deployed in the Amsterdam
- release was also considered but there were many issues with resolution, lack
- of volume mount, /etc/hosts dynamic update, file upload that were a tall order
- to solve in time for the Beijing release.
+ release was also considered but there were many issues with resolution,
+ lack of volume mount, /etc/hosts dynamic update, file upload that were
+ a tall order to solve in time for the Beijing release.
Observations:
- - If you are not using floating IPs in your Kubernetes deployment and directly attaching
- a public IP address (i.e. by using your public provider network) to your K8S Node
- VMs' network interface, then the output of 'kubectl -n onap get services | grep "portal-app"'
+ - If you are not using floating IPs in your Kubernetes deployment and
+ directly attaching a public IP address (i.e. by using your public provider
+ network) to your K8S Node VMs' network interface, then the output of
+ 'kubectl -n onap get services | grep "portal-app"'
will show your public IP instead of the private network's IP. Therefore,
- you can grab this public IP directly (as compared to trying to find the floating
- IP first) and map this IP in /etc/hosts.
+ you can grab this public IP directly (as compared to trying to find the
+ floating IP first) and map this IP in /etc/hosts.
.. figure:: oomLogoV2-Monitor.png
:align: right