blob: 55becb5c6bb59fd6bc0c542915732312af3c549c [file] [log] [blame]
Gary Wue4a2df82018-11-29 12:49:09 -08001.. _docs_scaleout:
2
mrichomme3345d142020-11-30 18:31:29 +01003:orphan:
4
Marco Plataniae5064cd2018-11-28 15:33:47 -05005VF Module Scale Out Use Case
6----------------------------
7
8Source files
9~~~~~~~~~~~~
sebdet0ca9db52020-12-09 13:42:28 +010010- Heat templates directory: https://git.onap.org/demo/tree/heat?h=guilin
11- Heat templates directory (vLB_CDS use case): https://git.onap.org/demo/tree/heat/vLB_CDS?h=guilin
Marco Plataniae5064cd2018-11-28 15:33:47 -050012
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -040013Additional files
14~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -040015- TOSCA model template: https://git.onap.org/integration/tree/docs/files/scaleout/service-Vloadbalancercds-template.yml
ChrisC94604b82020-12-02 13:32:10 +010016- Naming policy script: :download:`push_naming_poliy.sh <files/scaleout/push_naming_policy.sh>`
17- Controller Blueprint Archive (to use with CDS) : https://git.onap.org/ccsdk/cds/tree/components/model-catalog/blueprint-model/service-blueprint/vLB_CDS_Kotlin?h=guilin
sebdet0ca9db52020-12-09 13:42:28 +010018- TCA blueprint: :download:`guilin-tca.yaml <files/scaleout/latest-tca-guilin.yaml>`
ChrisC94604b82020-12-02 13:32:10 +010019
20Useful tool
21~~~~~~~~~~~
sebdet0ca9db52020-12-09 13:42:28 +010022POSTMAN collection that can be used to simulate all inter process queries : https://www.getpostman.com/collections/878061d291f9efe55463
23To be able to use this postman collection, you may need to expose some ports that are not exposed in OOM by default.
24These commands may help for exposing the ports:
25::
ChrisC94604b82020-12-02 13:32:10 +010026
sebdet0ca9db52020-12-09 13:42:28 +010027 kubectl port-forward service/cds-blueprints-processor-http --address 0.0.0.0 32749:8080 -n onap &
28 kubectl port-forward service/so-catalog-db-adapter --address 0.0.0.0 30845:8082 -n onap &
29 kubectl port-forward service/so-request-db-adapter --address 0.0.0.0 32223:8083 -n onap &
30
31OOM Installation
32~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
33Before doing the OOM installation, take care to the following steps:
34
35- Set the right Openstack values for Robot and SO:
36The config for robot must be set in an OOM override file before the OOM installation, this will initialize the robot framework & SO with all the required openstack info.
37A section like that is required in that override file
38::
39 robot:
40 enabled: true
41 flavor: small
42 appcUsername: "appc@appc.onap.org"
43 appcPassword: "demo123456!"
44 openStackKeyStoneUrl: "http://10.12.25.2:5000"
45 openStackKeystoneAPIVersion: "v3"
46 openStackPublicNetId: "5771462c-9582-421c-b2dc-ee6a04ec9bde"
47 openStackTenantId: "c9ef9a6345b440b7a96d906a0f48c6b1"
48 openStackUserName: "openstack_user"
49 openStackUserDomain: "default"
50 openStackProjectName: "CLAMP"
51 ubuntu14Image: "trusty-server-cloudimg-amd64-disk1"
52 ubuntu16Image: "xenial-server-cloudimg-amd64-disk1"
53 openStackPrivateNetCidr: "10.0.0.0/16"
54 openStackPrivateNetId: "fd05c1ab-3f43-4f6f-8a8c-76aee04ef293"
55 openStackPrivateSubnetId: "fd05c1ab-3f43-4f6f-8a8c-76aee04ef293"
56 openStackSecurityGroup: "f05e9cbf-d40f-4d1f-9f91-d673ba591a3a"
57 openStackOamNetworkCidrPrefix: "10.0"
58 dcaeCollectorIp: "10.12.6.10"
59 vnfPubKey: "ssh-rsa AAAAB3NzaC1yc2EAAAADAQABAAABAQDKXDgoo3+WOqcUG8/5uUbk81+yczgwC4Y8ywTmuQqbNxlY1oQ0YxdMUqUnhitSXs5S/yRuAVOYHwGg2mCs20oAINrP+mxBI544AMIb9itPjCtgqtE2EWo6MmnFGbHB4Sx3XioE7F4VPsh7japsIwzOjbrQe+Mua1TGQ5d4nfEOQaaglXLLPFfuc7WbhbJbK6Q7rHqZfRcOwAMXgDoBqlyqKeiKwnumddo2RyNT8ljYmvB6buz7KnMinzo7qB0uktVT05FH9Rg0CTWH5norlG5qXgP2aukL0gk1ph8iAt7uYLf1ktp+LJI2gaF6L0/qli9EmVCSLr1uJ38Q8CBflhkh"
60 demoArtifactsVersion: "1.6.0"
61 demoArtifactsRepoUrl: "https://nexus.onap.org/content/repositories/releases"
62 scriptVersion: "1.6.0"
63 nfsIpAddress: "10.12.6.10"
64 config:
65 openStackEncryptedPasswordHere: "e10c86aa13e692020233d18f0ef6d527"
66 openStackSoEncryptedPassword: "1DD1B3B4477FBAFAFEA617C575639C6F09E95446B5AE1F46C72B8FD960219ABB0DBA997790FCBB12"
67 so:
68 enabled: true
69 so-catalog-db-adapter:
70 config:
71 openStackUserName: "opesntack_user"
72 openStackKeyStoneUrl: "http://10.12.25.2:5000/v3"
73 openStackEncryptedPasswordHere: "1DD1B3B4477FBAFAFEA617C575639C6F09E95446B5AE1F46C72B8FD960219ABB0DBA997790FCBB12"
74 openStackKeystoneVersion: "KEYSTONE_V3"
75
76The values that must be changed according to your lab are all "openStack******" parameters + dcaeCollectorIp + nfsIpAddress
77To know how to encrypt the openstack passwords, please look at these guides:
78https://docs.onap.org/en/dublin/submodules/oom.git/docs/oom_quickstart_guide.html
79https://docs.onap.org/en/elalto/submodules/oom.git/docs/oom_quickstart_guide.html
80
81- Initialize the Customer and Owning entities:
82The robot script can be helpful to initialize the customer and owning entity that will be used later to instantiate the VNF (PART 2 - Scale Out Use Case Instantiation)
83::
84 In the oom_folder/kubernetes/robot/ execute the following command:
85./demo-k8s.sh onap init_customer
86
87If this command is unsuccessful it means that the parameters provided to the OOM installation were not correct.
88
89- Verify and Get the tenant/owning entity/cloud-regions defined in AAI by Robot script:
90These values will be required by the POSTMAN collection when instantiating the Service/vnf ...
91To get them some POSTMAN collection queries are useful to use:
92- GET "AAI Owning Entities"
93- GET "AAI Cloud-regions"
94- GET "AAI Cloud-regions/tenant"
stark, steven6a507a42019-04-24 12:04:41 -070095
Marco Plataniae5064cd2018-11-28 15:33:47 -050096Description
97~~~~~~~~~~~
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -040098The scale out use case uses a VNF composed of three virtual functions. A traffic generator (vPacketGen), a load balancer (vLB), and a DNS (vDNS). Communication between the vPacketGen and the vLB, and the vLB and the vDNS occurs via two separate private networks. In addition, all virtual functions have an interface to the ONAP OAM private network, as shown in the topology below.
Marco Plataniae5064cd2018-11-28 15:33:47 -050099
Marco Platania9442f8f2019-06-17 09:12:21 -0400100.. figure:: files/scaleout/topology.png
101 :align: center
Marco Plataniae5064cd2018-11-28 15:33:47 -0500102
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400103The vPacketGen issues DNS lookup queries that reach the DNS server via the vLB. vDNS replies reach the packet generator via the vLB as well. The vLB reports the average amount of traffic per vDNS instances over a given time interval (e.g. 10 seconds) to the DCAE collector via the ONAP OAM private network.
Marco Plataniae5064cd2018-11-28 15:33:47 -0500104
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400105To run the use case, make sure that the security group in OpenStack has ingress/egress entries for protocol 47 (GRE). Users can test the VNF by running DNS queries from the vPakcketGen:
106
Marco Plataniae5064cd2018-11-28 15:33:47 -0500107::
108
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400109 dig @vLoadBalancer_IP host1.dnsdemo.onap.org
110
Rene_Robert8f8f27f2019-07-01 15:18:40 +0200111The output below means that the vLB has been set up correctly, has forwarded the DNS queries to a vDNS instance, and the vPacketGen has received the vDNS reply message.
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400112
Marco Plataniae5064cd2018-11-28 15:33:47 -0500113::
114
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400115 ; <<>> DiG 9.10.3-P4-Ubuntu <<>> @192.168.9.111 host1.dnsdemo.onap.org
116 ; (1 server found)
117 ;; global options: +cmd
118 ;; Got answer:
119 ;; ->>HEADER<<- opcode: QUERY, status: NOERROR, id: 31892
120 ;; flags: qr aa rd; QUERY: 1, ANSWER: 1, AUTHORITY: 1, ADDITIONAL: 2
121 ;; WARNING: recursion requested but not available
Rene_Robert8f8f27f2019-07-01 15:18:40 +0200122
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400123 ;; OPT PSEUDOSECTION:
124 ; EDNS: version: 0, flags:; udp: 4096
125 ;; QUESTION SECTION:
126 ;host1.dnsdemo.onap.org. IN A
Rene_Robert8f8f27f2019-07-01 15:18:40 +0200127
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400128 ;; ANSWER SECTION:
129 host1.dnsdemo.onap.org. 604800 IN A 10.0.100.101
Rene_Robert8f8f27f2019-07-01 15:18:40 +0200130
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400131 ;; AUTHORITY SECTION:
132 dnsdemo.onap.org. 604800 IN NS dnsdemo.onap.org.
Rene_Robert8f8f27f2019-07-01 15:18:40 +0200133
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400134 ;; ADDITIONAL SECTION:
135 dnsdemo.onap.org. 604800 IN A 10.0.100.100
Rene_Robert8f8f27f2019-07-01 15:18:40 +0200136
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400137 ;; Query time: 0 msec
138 ;; SERVER: 192.168.9.111#53(192.168.9.111)
139 ;; WHEN: Fri Nov 10 17:39:12 UTC 2017
140 ;; MSG SIZE rcvd: 97
141
142
143The Scale Out Use Case
144~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Marco Platania93d2ff22020-04-16 16:09:55 -0400145The Scale Out use case shows how users/network operators can add Virtual Network Function Components (VNFCs) as part of a VF Module that has been instantiated in the Service model, in order to increase capacity of the network. ONAP Frankfurt release supports scale out with manual trigger by directly calling SO APIs and closed-loop-enabled automation from Policy. For Frankfurt, the APPC controller is used to demonstrate post-scaling VNF reconfiguration operations. APPC can handle different VNF types, not only the VNF described in this document.
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400146
Marco Platania4b8acc92019-09-16 12:16:54 -0400147The figure below shows all the interactions that take place during scale out operations.
148
149.. figure:: files/scaleout/scaleout.png
150 :align: center
151
152There are four different message flows:
Marco Plataniaccf78702019-10-16 12:10:52 -0400153 - Gray: This communication happens internally to the VNF and it is described in the section above.
Marco Platania4b8acc92019-09-16 12:16:54 -0400154 - Green: Scale out with manual trigger.
155 - Red: Closed-loop enabled scale out.
156 - Black: Orchestration and VNF lifecycle management (LCM) operations.
157
158The numbers in the figure represent the sequence of steps within a given flow. Note that interactions between the components in the picture and AAI, SDNC, and DMaaP are not shown for clarity's sake.
159
mrichommeefb859d2020-03-19 19:02:41 +0100160Scale out with manual trigger (green flow) and closed-loop-enabled scale out (red flow) are mutually exclusive. When the manual trigger is used, VID directly triggers the appropriate workflow in SO (step 1 of the green flow in the figure above). See Section 4 for more details.
Marco Platania4b8acc92019-09-16 12:16:54 -0400161
162When closed-loop enabled scale out is used, Policy triggers the SO workflow. The closed loop starts with the vLB periodically reporting telemetry about traffic patterns to the VES collector in DCAE (step 1 of the red flow). When the amount of traffic exceeds a given threshold (which the user defines during closed loop creation in CLAMP - see Section 1-4), DCAE notifies Policy (step 2), which in turn triggers the appropriate action. For this use case, the action is contacting SO to augment resource capacity in the network (step 3).
163
164At high level, once SO receives a call for scale out actions, it first creates a new VF module (step 1 of the black flow), then calls APPC to trigger some LCM actions (step 2). APPC runs VNF health check and configuration scale out as part of LCM actions (step 3). At this time, the VNF health check only reports the health status of the vLB, while the configuration scale out operation adds a new vDNS instance to the vLB internal state. As a result of configuration scale out, the vLB opens a connection towards the new vDNS instance.
165
166At deeper level, the SO workflow works as depicted below:
167
168.. figure:: files/scaleout/so-blocks.png
169 :align: center
170
Marco Plataniaccf78702019-10-16 12:10:52 -0400171SO first contacts APPC to run VNF health check and proceeds on to the next block of the workflow only if the vLB is healthy (not shown in the previous figure for simplicity's sake). Then, SO assigns resources, instantiates, and activates the new VF module. Finally, SO calls APPC again for configuration scale out and VNF health check. The VNF health check at the end of the workflow validates that the vLB health status hasn't been negatively affected by the scale out operation.
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400172
Rene_Robert8f8f27f2019-07-01 15:18:40 +0200173PART 1 - Service Definition and Onboarding
174------------------------------------------
Marco Plataniac80274e2019-08-15 12:11:31 -0400175This use-case requires operations on several ONAP components to perform service definition and onboarding.
Rene_Robert8f8f27f2019-07-01 15:18:40 +0200176
sebdet0ca9db52020-12-09 13:42:28 +01001771-1 VNF Configuration Modeling and Upload with CDS (Recommended way)
Marco Plataniaccf78702019-10-16 12:10:52 -0400178~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
mrichommeefb859d2020-03-19 19:02:41 +0100179Since Dublin, the scale out use case integrates with the Controller Design Studio (CDS) ONAP component to automate the generation of cloud configuration at VNF instantiation time. The user interested in running the use case only with manual preload can skip this section and start from Section 1-2. The description of the use case with manual preload is provided in Section5.
Marco Plataniaccf78702019-10-16 12:10:52 -0400180
181Users can model this configuration at VNF design time and onboard the blueprint to CDS via the CDS GUI. The blueprint includes naming policies and network configuration details (e.g. IP address families, network names, etc.) that CDS will use during VNF instantiation to generate resource names and assign network configuration to VMs through the cloud orchestrator.
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400182
183Please look at the CDS documentation for details about how to create configuration models, blueprints, and use the CDS tool: https://wiki.onap.org/display/DW/Modeling+Concepts. For running the use case, users can use the standard model package that CDS provides out of the box, which can be found here: https://wiki.onap.org/pages/viewpage.action?pageId=64007442
184
sebdet0ca9db52020-12-09 13:42:28 +0100185::
186
187For the current use case you can also follow these steps (Do not use the SDC flow to deploy the CBA when importing a VSP, this is not going to work anymore since Guilin):
1881. You must first bootstrap CDS by using the query in the POSTMAN collection query named POST "CDS Bootstrap"
1892. You must upload the attached CBA by using the POSTMAN collection named POST "CDS Save without Validation", the CBA zip file can be attached in the POSTMAN query
190Controller Blueprint Archive (to use with CDS) : https://git.onap.org/ccsdk/cds/tree/components/model-catalog/blueprint-model/service-blueprint/vLB_CDS_Kotlin?h=guilin
1913. Create a zip file with the HEAT files located here: https://git.onap.org/demo/tree/heat/vLB_CDS?h=guilin
1924. Create the VSP & Service in the SDC onboarding and SDC Catalog + Distribute the service
193 To know the right values that must be set in the SDC Service properties assignment you must open the CBA zip and look at the TOSCA-Metadata/TOSCA.meta file
194 This file looks like that:
195 TOSCA-Meta-File-Version: 1.0.0
196 CSAR-Version: 1.0
197 Created-By: Seaudi, Abdelmuhaimen <abdelmuhaimen.seaudi@orange.com>
198 Entry-Definitions: Definitions/vLB_CDS.json
199 Template-Tags: vLB_CDS
200 Template-Name: vLB_CDS
201 Template-Version: 1.0.0
202 Template-Type: DEFAULT
203
204 - The sdnc_model_version is the Template-Version
205 - The sdnc_model_name is the Template-Name
206 - The sdnc_artifact_name is the prefix of the file you want to use in the Templates folder, in our CBA example it's vnf (that is supposed to reference the /Templates/vnf-mapping.json file)
207
208 Follow this guide for the VSP onboarding + service creation + properties assignment + distribution part (just skip the CBA attachment part as the CBA should have been pushed manually with the REST command): https://wiki.onap.org/pages/viewpage.action?pageId=64007442
209
210 Note that in case of issues with the AAI distribution, this may help : https://jira.onap.org/browse/AAI-1759
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400211
Marco Plataniaccf78702019-10-16 12:10:52 -04002121-2 VNF Onboarding and Service Creation with SDC
213~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Marco Plataniac80274e2019-08-15 12:11:31 -0400214Once the configuration blueprint is uploaded to CDS, users can define and onboard a service using SDC. SDC requires users to onboard a VNF descriptor that contains the definition of all the resources (private networks, compute nodes, keys, etc.) with their parameters that compose a VNF. The VNF used to demonstrate the scale out use case supports Heat templates as VNF descriptor, and hence requires OpenStack as cloud layer. Users can use the Heat templates linked at the top of the page to create a zip file that can be uploaded to SDC during service creation. To create a zip file, the user must be in the same folder that contains the Heat templates and the Manifest file that describes the content of the package. To create a zip file from command line, type:
215::
216
217 zip ../vLB.zip *
218
mrichommea958b982020-04-13 18:46:35 +0200219For a complete description of service design and creation, please refer to the SDC documentation.
Rene_Robert8f8f27f2019-07-01 15:18:40 +0200220
221During the creation of the service in SDC, there are a few extra steps that need to be executed to make the VNF ready for scale out. These require users to login to the SDC Portal as service designer user (username: cs0008, password: demo123456!).
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400222
223After importing the Vendor Software Package (VSP), as described in the SDC wiki page, users need to set property values in the Property Assignment window, as shown below:
224
Marco Platania9442f8f2019-06-17 09:12:21 -0400225.. figure:: files/scaleout/9.png
226 :align: center
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400227
228These properties include parameters in the Heat template (which will be overridden by CDS and then don't need to be changed) and other parameters that describe the VNF type or are used to link the service to the configuration in the CDS package.
229
Rene_Robert8f8f27f2019-07-01 15:18:40 +0200230Users can search for parameter names starting with "nf" to assign values that describe the VNF type, such as nf_type, nf_function, and nf_role. Users are free to choose the values they like. Users should also set "skip_post_instantiation" to "TRUE", as for Dublin CDS is not used for post-instantiation configuration.
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400231
Marco Platania9442f8f2019-06-17 09:12:21 -0400232.. figure:: files/scaleout/10.png
233 :align: center
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400234
235For CDS parameters, users can search for names starting with "sdnc". These parameters have to match the configuration blueprint in CDS. To use the standard blueprint shipped with CDS, please set the parameters as below. For further details, please refer to the CDS documentation.
236
Marco Platania9442f8f2019-06-17 09:12:21 -0400237.. figure:: files/scaleout/11.png
238 :align: center
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400239
240
Marco Platania93d2ff22020-04-16 16:09:55 -0400241After importing the VSP, users need to onboard the DCAE blueprint used to design closed loops in CLAMP. This step is only required for users that want to run closed loop; users interested in manual scale out only can skip the remainder of the section. Note that since Frankfurt users are not required to upload a Policy model from SDC, as Policy models are now managed by the Policy Engine.
Marco Plataniaccf78702019-10-16 12:10:52 -0400242
Marco Platania93d2ff22020-04-16 16:09:55 -0400243To upload a DCAE blueprint, from the "Composition" tab in the service menu, select the artifact icon on the right, as shown below:
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400244
Marco Platania9442f8f2019-06-17 09:12:21 -0400245.. figure:: files/scaleout/1.png
246 :align: center
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400247
ChrisC94604b82020-12-02 13:32:10 +0100248Upload the DCAE blueprint (choose the one depending on your ONAP release, as the orginal TCA was depecrated in Guilin a new one is available to use) linked at the top of the page using the pop-up window.
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400249
Marco Platania9442f8f2019-06-17 09:12:21 -0400250.. figure:: files/scaleout/2.png
251 :align: center
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400252
253The blueprint will appear in the artifacts section on the right.
254
Marco Platania9442f8f2019-06-17 09:12:21 -0400255.. figure:: files/scaleout/3.png
256 :align: center
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400257
Rene_Robert8f8f27f2019-07-01 15:18:40 +0200258Finally, users need to provide the maximum number of VNF instances that ONAP is allowed to create as part of the scale out use case by setting up deployment properties.
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400259
Marco Platania9442f8f2019-06-17 09:12:21 -0400260.. figure:: files/scaleout/7.png
261 :align: center
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400262
Rene_Robert8f8f27f2019-07-01 15:18:40 +0200263This VNF only supports scaling the vDNS, so users should select the vDNS module from the right panel and then click the "max_vf_module_instance" link. The maximum number of VNF instances to scale can be set to an arbitrary number higher than zero.
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400264
Marco Platania9442f8f2019-06-17 09:12:21 -0400265.. figure:: files/scaleout/8.png
266 :align: center
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400267
Rene_Robert8f8f27f2019-07-01 15:18:40 +0200268At this point, users can complete the service creation in SDC by testing, accepting, and distributing the Service Models as described in the SDC user manual.
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400269
Rene_Robert8f8f27f2019-07-01 15:18:40 +0200270
271
Marco Plataniaccf78702019-10-16 12:10:52 -04002721-3 Deploy Naming Policy
273~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
274This step is only required if CDS is used.
sebdet0ca9db52020-12-09 13:42:28 +0100275Note that in Guilin, the default naming policy is already deployed in policy so this step is optional
Marco Plataniaccf78702019-10-16 12:10:52 -0400276
Marco Platania9442f8f2019-06-17 09:12:21 -0400277In order to instantiate the VNF using CDS features, users need to deploy the naming policy that CDS uses for resource name generation to the Policy Engine. User can copy and run the script at the top of the page from any ONAP pod, for example Robot or Drools. The script uses the Policy endpoint defined in the Kubernetes domain, so the execution has to be triggered from some pod in the Kubernetes space.
278
279::
280
281 kubectl exec -it dev-policy-drools-0
282 ./push_naming_policy.sh
283
sebdet0ca9db52020-12-09 13:42:28 +0100284
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400285
Marco Plataniaccf78702019-10-16 12:10:52 -04002861-4 Closed Loop Design with CLAMP
287~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
sebdet0ca9db52020-12-09 13:42:28 +0100288This step is only required if closed loop is used, for manual scaleout this section can be skipped.
289
290Here are Json examples that can be copy pasted in each policy configuration by clicking on the button EDIT JSON, just replace the value "LOOP_test_vLB_CDS" by your loop ID:
291For TCA config:
292::
293
294 {
295 "tca.policy": {
296 "domain": "measurementsForVfScaling",
297 "metricsPerEventName": [
298 {
299 "policyScope": "DCAE",
300 "thresholds": [
301 {
302 "version": "1.0.2",
303 "severity": "MAJOR",
304 "thresholdValue": 200,
305 "closedLoopEventStatus": "ONSET",
306 "closedLoopControlName": "LOOP_test_vLB_CDS",
307 "direction": "LESS_OR_EQUAL",
308 "fieldPath": "$.event.measurementsForVfScalingFields.vNicPerformanceArray[*].receivedTotalPacketsDelta"
309 }
310 ],
311 "eventName": "vLoadBalancer",
312 "policyVersion": "v0.0.1",
313 "controlLoopSchemaType": "VM",
314 "policyName": "DCAE.Config_tca-hi-lo"
315 }
316 ]
317 }
318 }
319
320For Drools config:
321::
322 {
323 "abatement": false,
324 "operations": [
325 {
326 "failure_retries": "final_failure_retries",
327 "id": "policy-1-vfmodule-create",
328 "failure_timeout": "final_failure_timeout",
329 "failure": "final_failure",
330 "operation": {
331 "payload": {
332 "requestParameters": "{\"usePreload\":false,\"userParams\":[]}",
333 "configurationParameters": "[{\"ip-addr\":\"$.vf-module-topology.vf-module-parameters.param[16].value\",\"oam-ip-addr\":\"$.vf-module-topology.vf-module-parameters.param[30].value\"}]"
334 },
335 "target": {
336 "entityIds": {
337 "resourceID": "Vlbcds..vdns..module-3",
338 "modelInvariantId": "e95a2949-8ba5-433d-a88f-587a6244b4ea",
339 "modelVersionId": "4a6ceddc-147e-471c-ae6f-907a0df76040",
340 "modelName": "Vlbcds..vdns..module-3",
341 "modelVersion": "1",
342 "modelCustomizationId": "7806ed67-a826-4b0e-b474-9ca4fa052a10"
343 },
344 "targetType": "VFMODULE"
345 },
346 "actor": "SO",
347 "operation": "VF Module Create"
348 },
349 "failure_guard": "final_failure_guard",
350 "retries": 1,
351 "timeout": 300,
352 "failure_exception": "final_failure_exception",
353 "description": "test",
354 "success": "final_success"
355 }
356 ],
357 "trigger": "policy-1-vfmodule-create",
358 "timeout": 650,
359 "id": "LOOP_test_vLB_CDS"
360 }
361
362For Frequency Limiter config:
363::
364 {
365 "id": "LOOP_test_vLB_CDS",
366 "actor": "SO",
367 "operation": "VF Module Create",
368 "limit": 1,
369 "timeWindow": 10,
370 "timeUnits": "minute"
371 }
Marco Plataniaccf78702019-10-16 12:10:52 -0400372
xuegaoabd5fcf2020-05-13 15:29:04 +0200373Once the service model is distributed, users can design the closed loop from CLAMP, using the GUI at https://clamp.api.simpledemo.onap.org:30258
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400374
Marco Platania93d2ff22020-04-16 16:09:55 -0400375Use the "Loop Instance" link to create a closed loop using a distributed model.
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400376
Marco Platania93d2ff22020-04-16 16:09:55 -0400377.. figure:: files/scaleout/clamp/1.png
Marco Platania9442f8f2019-06-17 09:12:21 -0400378 :align: center
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400379
Marco Platania93d2ff22020-04-16 16:09:55 -0400380Select the distributed service model.
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400381
Marco Platania93d2ff22020-04-16 16:09:55 -0400382.. figure:: files/scaleout/clamp/2.png
Marco Platania9442f8f2019-06-17 09:12:21 -0400383 :align: center
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400384
385The closed loop main page for TCA microservices is shown below.
386
Marco Platania93d2ff22020-04-16 16:09:55 -0400387.. figure:: files/scaleout/clamp/3.png
Marco Platania9442f8f2019-06-17 09:12:21 -0400388 :align: center
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400389
Marco Platania93d2ff22020-04-16 16:09:55 -0400390Click on the TCA box to create a configuration policy. From the pop-up window, users need to click "Add" to create a new policy and fill it in with specific information, as shown below.
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400391
Marco Platania93d2ff22020-04-16 16:09:55 -0400392.. figure:: files/scaleout/clamp/4.png
Marco Platania9442f8f2019-06-17 09:12:21 -0400393 :align: center
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400394
395For this use case, the control loop schema type is "VM", while the event name has to match the event name reported in the VNF telemetry, which is "vLoadBalancer".
396
397Once the policy item has been created, users can define a threshold that will be used at runtime to evaluate telemetry reported by the vLB. When the specified threshold is crossed, DCAE generates an ONSET event that will tell Policy Engine which closed loop to activate.
398
Marco Platania93d2ff22020-04-16 16:09:55 -0400399.. figure:: files/scaleout/clamp/5.png
Marco Platania9442f8f2019-06-17 09:12:21 -0400400 :align: center
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400401
Marco Platania93d2ff22020-04-16 16:09:55 -0400402Since Frankfurt, users are required to define the PDP group for the configuration policy, as shown in the figure below.
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400403
Marco Platania93d2ff22020-04-16 16:09:55 -0400404.. figure:: files/scaleout/clamp/6.png
Marco Platania9442f8f2019-06-17 09:12:21 -0400405 :align: center
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400406
Marco Platania93d2ff22020-04-16 16:09:55 -0400407After the configuration policy is created, users need to create the operational policy, which the Policy Engine uses to determine which actions and parameters should be used during closed loop. From the "Loop Instance" tab, users can select "Modify" to add a new Policy Model of type Drools:
408
409.. figure:: files/scaleout/clamp/7.png
410 :align: center
411
412Users are required to provide basic closed loop information, like ID, timeout, and trigger, as shown in the example below. The trigger name, in particular, must match the name of the root operational policy created during the next step.
413
414.. figure:: files/scaleout/clamp/8.png
415 :align: center
416
417To create a new operational policy, users can use the "Add" button below, and fill up the fields in the CLAMP GUI as shown in the example below, making sure that the "id" matches the "trigger" field defined before:
418
419.. figure:: files/scaleout/clamp/9.png
420 :align: center
421
422During creation of the operational policy, the user should select "VF Module Create" recipe and "SO" actor. The payload section is a JSON object like below:
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400423
Marco Plataniae5064cd2018-11-28 15:33:47 -0500424::
425
Marco Platania93d2ff22020-04-16 16:09:55 -0400426 {"requestParameters":"{\"usePreload\":true,\"userParams\":[]}",
427 "configurationParameters":"[{\"ip-addr\":\"$.vf-module-topology.vf-module-parameters.param[16]\",\"oam-ip-addr\":\"$.vf-module-topology.vf-module-parameters.param[30]\"}]"}
Marco Plataniae5064cd2018-11-28 15:33:47 -0500428
Marco Platania93d2ff22020-04-16 16:09:55 -0400429Users can use the "Edit JSON" button to upload the payload.
430
431.. figure:: files/scaleout/clamp/10.png
432 :align: center
433
434The Policy Engine passes the payload to SO, which will then use it during VF module instantiation to resolve configuration parameters. The JSON path
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400435
436::
437
Marco Plataniaccf78702019-10-16 12:10:52 -0400438 "ip-addr":"$.vf-module-topology.vf-module-parameters.param[16].value"
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400439
Marco Plataniaccf78702019-10-16 12:10:52 -0400440indicates that resolution for parameter "ip-addr" is available at "$.vf-module-topology.vf-module-parameters.param[16].value" in the JSON object linked by the VF module self-link in AAI. See section 1-7 for an example of how to determine the right path to configuration parameters.
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400441
Marco Platania93d2ff22020-04-16 16:09:55 -0400442The "targetType" tab allows users to select the target type for the closed loop. For this use case, the user should select VF module as target type, as we are scaling a VF module. Please select the vDNS module as target resource ID.
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400443
Marco Platania93d2ff22020-04-16 16:09:55 -0400444.. figure:: files/scaleout/clamp/11.png
Marco Platania9442f8f2019-06-17 09:12:21 -0400445 :align: center
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400446
Marco Platania93d2ff22020-04-16 16:09:55 -0400447As with configuration policy, users need to assign the PDP group to the operational policy.
Marco Plataniaccf78702019-10-16 12:10:52 -0400448
Marco Platania93d2ff22020-04-16 16:09:55 -0400449.. figure:: files/scaleout/clamp/12.png
Marco Plataniaccf78702019-10-16 12:10:52 -0400450 :align: center
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400451
Marco Platania93d2ff22020-04-16 16:09:55 -0400452For what regards guard policies, either "Frequency Limiter", or "MinMax", or both can be used for the scale out use case. They can be added using the "Modify" item in the "Loop Instance" tab.
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400453
Marco Platania93d2ff22020-04-16 16:09:55 -0400454.. figure:: files/scaleout/clamp/13.png
455 :align: center
456
457The example below shows the definition of a "Frequency Limiter" guard policy. Note that some optional fields, such as id and time interval, should be added to the policy using the "Object Properties" button:
458
459.. figure:: files/scaleout/clamp/14.png
460 :align: center
461
462The user needs to manually insert id, actor, and operation so as to match the same fields defined in the operational policy.
463
464.. figure:: files/scaleout/clamp/15.png
465 :align: center
466
467Once the operational policy design is completed, users can submit and then deploy the closed loop clicking the "Submit" and "Deploy" buttons from the "Loop Operations" tab, as shown below.
468
469.. figure:: files/scaleout/clamp/16.png
Marco Platania9442f8f2019-06-17 09:12:21 -0400470 :align: center
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400471
472At this point, the closed loop is deployed to Policy Engine and DCAE, and a new microservice will be deployed to the DCAE platform.
473
474
Marco Plataniaccf78702019-10-16 12:10:52 -04004751-5 Creating a VNF Template with CDT
476~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400477Before running scale out use case, the users need to create a VNF template using the Controller Design Tool (CDT), a design-time tool that allows users to create and on-board VNF templates into APPC. The template describes which control operation can be executed against the VNF (e.g. scale out, health check, modify configuration, etc.), the protocols that the VNF supports, port numbers, VNF APIs, and credentials for authentication. Being VNF agnostic, APPC uses these templates to "learn" about specific VNFs and the supported operations.
Marco Plataniae5064cd2018-11-28 15:33:47 -0500478CDT requires two input:
479
Rene_Robert8f8f27f2019-07-01 15:18:40 +02004801) the list of parameters that APPC will receive (ip-addr, oam-ip-addr, enabled in the example above);
Marco Plataniae5064cd2018-11-28 15:33:47 -0500481
4822) the VNF API that APPC will use to reconfigure the VNF.
Rene_Robert8f8f27f2019-07-01 15:18:40 +0200483
Marco Plataniae5064cd2018-11-28 15:33:47 -0500484Below is an example of the parameters file (yaml format), which we call parameters.yaml:
485::
486
487 version: V1
488 vnf-parameter-list:
489 - name: ip-addr
490 type: null
491 description: null
492 required: "true"
493 default: null
494 source: Manual
495 rule-type: null
496 request-keys: null
497 response-keys: null
498 - name: oam-ip-addr
499 type: null
500 description: null
501 required: "true"
502 default: null
503 source: Manual
504 rule-type: null
505 request-keys: null
506 response-keys: null
507 - name: enabled
508 type: null
509 description: null
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400510 required: "false"
Marco Plataniae5064cd2018-11-28 15:33:47 -0500511 default: null
512 source: Manual
513 rule-type: null
514 request-keys: null
515 response-keys: null
Rene_Robert8f8f27f2019-07-01 15:18:40 +0200516
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400517Here is an example of API for the vLB VNF used for this use case. We name the file after the vnf-type contained in SDNC (i.e. Vloadbalancerms..vdns..module-3):
Marco Plataniae5064cd2018-11-28 15:33:47 -0500518::
519
520 <vlb-business-vnf-onap-plugin xmlns="urn:opendaylight:params:xml:ns:yang:vlb-business-vnf-onap-plugin">
521 <vdns-instances>
522 <vdns-instance>
523 <ip-addr>${ip-addr}</ip-addr>
524 <oam-ip-addr>${oam-ip-addr}</oam-ip-addr>
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400525 <enabled>true</enabled>
Marco Plataniae5064cd2018-11-28 15:33:47 -0500526 </vdns-instance>
527 </vdns-instances>
528 </vlb-business-vnf-onap-plugin>
Rene_Robert8f8f27f2019-07-01 15:18:40 +0200529
Marco Plataniae5064cd2018-11-28 15:33:47 -0500530To create the VNF template in CDT, the following steps are required:
531
mrichommea958b982020-04-13 18:46:35 +0200532- Connect to the CDT GUI: http://ANY_K8S_IP:30289
Marco Plataniae5064cd2018-11-28 15:33:47 -0500533- Click "My VNF" Tab. Create your user ID, if necessary
534- Click "Create new VNF" entering the VNF type as reported in VID or AAI, e.g. vLoadBalancerMS/vLoadBalancerMS 0
535- Select "ConfigScaleOut" action
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400536- Create a new template identifier using the VNF type name in service model as template name, e.g. Vloadbalancerms..vdns..module-3
Marco Plataniae5064cd2018-11-28 15:33:47 -0500537- Select protocol (Netconf-XML), VNF username (admin), and VNF port number (2831 for NETCONF)
538- Click "Parameter Definition" Tab and upload the parameters (.yaml) file
539- Click "Template Tab" and upload API template (.yaml) file
540- Click "Reference Data" Tab
541- Click "Save All to APPC"
Rene_Robert8f8f27f2019-07-01 15:18:40 +0200542
ChrisC94604b82020-12-02 13:32:10 +0100543Note, if a user gets an error when saving to Appc (cannot connect to AppC network), he should open a browser to http://ANY_K8S_IP:30211 to accept AppC proxy certificate
544
Rene_Robert8f8f27f2019-07-01 15:18:40 +0200545For health check operation, we just need to specify the protocol, the port number and username of the VNF (REST, 8183, and "admin" respectively, in the case of vLB/vDNS) and the API. For the vLB/vDNS, the API is:
Marco Plataniae5064cd2018-11-28 15:33:47 -0500546::
547
548 restconf/operational/health-vnf-onap-plugin:health-vnf-onap-plugin-state/health-check
Rene_Robert8f8f27f2019-07-01 15:18:40 +0200549
Marco Plataniae5064cd2018-11-28 15:33:47 -0500550Note that we don't need to create a VNF template for health check, so the "Template" flag can be set to "N". Again, the user has to click "Save All to APPC" to update the APPC database.
551At this time, CDT doesn't allow users to provide VNF password from the GUI. To update the VNF password we need to log into the APPC Maria DB container and change the password manually:
552::
553
554 mysql -u sdnctl -p (type "gamma" when password is prompted)
555 use sdnctl;
Rene_Robert8f8f27f2019-07-01 15:18:40 +0200556 UPDATE DEVICE_AUTHENTICATION SET PASSWORD='admin' WHERE
Marco Plataniae5064cd2018-11-28 15:33:47 -0500557 VNF_TYPE='vLoadBalancerMS/vLoadBalancerMS 0'; (use your VNF type)
Marco Plataniae5064cd2018-11-28 15:33:47 -0500558
Marco Platania54262a92019-02-15 15:06:37 -0500559
Marco Plataniaccf78702019-10-16 12:10:52 -04005601-6 Setting the Controller Type in SO Database
561~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400562Users need to specify which controller to use for the scale out use case. For Dublin, the supported controller is APPC. Users need to create an association between the controller and the VNF type in the SO database.
563
564To do so:
565
566- Connect to one of the replicas of the MariaDB database
567- Type
568
569::
570
571 mysql -ucataloguser -pcatalog123
572
sebdet0ca9db52020-12-09 13:42:28 +0100573- Use catalogdb database
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400574
575::
576
577 use catalogdb;
578
579- Create an association between APPC and the VNF type, for example:
580
581::
582
Marco Platania64105bb2019-07-24 10:17:41 -0400583 INSERT INTO controller_selection_reference (`VNF_TYPE`, `CONTROLLER_NAME`, `ACTION_CATEGORY`) VALUES ('<VNF Type>', 'APPC', 'ConfigScaleOut');
584 INSERT INTO controller_selection_reference (`VNF_TYPE`, `CONTROLLER_NAME`, `ACTION_CATEGORY`) VALUES ('<VNF Type>', 'APPC', 'HealthCheck');
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -0400585
586SO has a default entry for VNF type "vLoadBalancerMS/vLoadBalancerMS 0"
587
588
Marco Plataniaccf78702019-10-16 12:10:52 -04005891-7 Determining VNF reconfiguration parameters
590~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
591The post scale out VNF reconfiguration is VNF-independent but the parameters used for VNF reconfiguration depend on the specific use case. For example, the vLB-vDNS-vPacketGenerator VNF described in this documentation use the vLB as "anchor" point. The vLB maintains the state of the VNF, which, for this use case is the list of active vDNS instances. After creating a new vDNS instance, the vLB needs to know the IP addresses (of the internal private network and management network) of the new vDNS. The reconfiguration action is executed by APPC, which receives those IP addresses from SO during the scale out workflow execution. Note that different VNFs may have different reconfiguration actions. A parameter resolution is expressed as JSON path to the SDNC VF module topology parameter array. For each reconfiguration parameter, the user has to specify the array location that contains the corresponding value (IP address in the specific case). For example, the "configurationParameters" section of the input request to SO during scale out with manual trigger (see Section 4) contains the resolution path to "ip-addr" and "oam-ip-addr" parameters used by the VNF.
592
593::
594
595 "configurationParameters": [
596 {
597 "ip-addr": "$.vf-module-topology.vf-module-parameters.param[16].value",
598 "oam-ip-addr": "$.vf-module-topology.vf-module-parameters.param[30].value"
599 }
600 ]
601
602The same resolution path needs to be provided for the closed-loop enabled use case during the closed loop design phase in CLAMP (see Section 1-4). The reconfiguration parameters and their resolution path will be pushed to the Policy Engine during closed loop deployment. Policy will eventually push them to SO during closed loop execution.
603
604Users can determine the correct location by querying the SDNC topology object. The URL can be obtained from AAI following these steps:
605
6061) Retrieve the list of VNF instances in AAI using the following link:
607
608::
609
610 curl -k -X GET \
611 https://<Any_K8S_Node_IP_Address>:30233/aai/v16/network/generic-vnfs \
612 -H 'Accept: application/json' \
613 -H 'Authorization: Basic QUFJOkFBSQ==' \
614 -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
615 -H 'X-FromAppId: AAI' \
616 -H 'X-TransactionId: get_aai_subscr'
617
6182) From the returned JSON object, search for the generic VNF object related to the VNF of interest (for example by using the VNF name defined during VNF instantiation). Then, select the "vnf-id" value to build a request to AAI to list all the VF modules of that VNF:
619
620::
621
622 curl -k -X GET \
623 https://<Any_K8S_Node_IP_Address>:30233/aai/v16/network/generic-vnfs/generic-vnf/0e905228-c719-489a-9bcc-4470f3254e87/vf-modules \
624 -H 'Accept: application/json' \
625 -H 'Authorization: Basic QUFJOkFBSQ==' \
626 -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
627 -H 'X-FromAppId: AAI' \
628 -H 'X-TransactionId: get_aai_subscr'
629
6303) From the returned list of VF modules, select the "selflink" URL of the VF module type that is target of the scaling action. This object refers to an existing instance of that VF module type, which could have been created either as part of regular VNF instantiation process or scaling action. The selflink points to the topology of that VF module instance in SDNC. A new instance of this VF module type will have a topology of the same form, just different parameter values. As such, the existing topology pointed by the selflink in AAI can be used to determine the resolution path to configuration parameters for future instantiation of that VF module type.
631
632The selflink has the following structure:
633
634::
635
636 restconf/config/GENERIC-RESOURCE-API:services/service/4545562a-cbe3-409a-8227-0b863f5bc34e/service-data/vnfs/vnf/0e905228-c719-489a-9bcc-4470f3254e87/vnf-data/vf-modules/vf-module/793df714-106e-40a6-a28a-746b65f9e247/vf-module-data/vf-module-topology/
637
638The complete URL to access the VF module topology in SDNC becomes:
639
640::
641
642 http://<Any_K8S_Node_IP_Address>:30202/restconf/config/GENERIC-RESOURCE-API:services/service/4545562a-cbe3-409a-8227-0b863f5bc34e/service-data/vnfs/vnf/0e905228-c719-489a-9bcc-4470f3254e87/vnf-data/vf-modules/vf-module/793df714-106e-40a6-a28a-746b65f9e247/vf-module-data/vf-module-topology/
643
644See below an example of VF module topology. It can be stored in SDNC either using CDS (see Section 2) or manual preload (see Section 5).
645
646::
647
648 {
649 "vf-module-topology": {
650 "onap-model-information": {
651 "model-name": "VlbCds..vdns..module-3",
652 "model-invariant-uuid": "b985f371-4c59-45f7-b53e-36f970946469",
653 "model-version": "1",
654 "model-customization-uuid": "613b6877-0231-4ca4-90e4-4aa3374674ef",
655 "model-uuid": "739e4a32-f744-47be-9208-5dcf15772306"
656 },
657 "vf-module-parameters": {
658 "param": [
659 {
660 "name": "vfc_customization_uuid",
661 "value": "770af15f-564d-438c-ba3e-6df318c2b1fe",
662 "resource-resolution-data": {
663 "capability-name": "RA Resolved",
664 "status": "SUCCESS"
665 }
666 },
667 {
668 "name": "key_name",
669 "value": "${key_name}",
670 "resource-resolution-data": {
671 "capability-name": "RA Resolved",
672 "status": "SUCCESS"
673 }
674 },
675 {
676 "name": "vdns_flavor_name",
677 "value": "m1.medium",
678 "resource-resolution-data": {
679 "capability-name": "RA Resolved",
680 "status": "SUCCESS"
681 }
682 },
683 {
684 "name": "cloud_env",
685 "value": "openstack",
686 "resource-resolution-data": {
687 "capability-name": "RA Resolved",
688 "status": "SUCCESS"
689 }
690 },
691 {
692 "name": "vnfc-model-customization-uuid",
693 "value": "770af15f-564d-438c-ba3e-6df318c2b1fe",
694 "resource-resolution-data": {
695 "capability-name": "RA Resolved",
696 "status": "SUCCESS"
697 }
698 },
699 {
700 "name": "vf-module-name",
701 "value": "RegionOne_ONAP-NF_20191010T013003141Z_vdns_Expansion_003",
702 "resource-resolution-data": {
703 "capability-name": "generate-name",
704 "resource-key": [
705 {
706 "name": "VF_MODULE_LABEL",
707 "value": "vdns"
708 },
709 {
710 "name": "resource-name",
711 "value": "vf-module-name"
712 },
713 {
714 "name": "resource-value",
715 "value": "${vf-module-name}"
716 },
717 {
718 "name": "naming-type",
719 "value": "VF-MODULE"
720 },
721 {
722 "name": "VNF_NAME",
723 "value": "RegionOne_ONAP-NF_20191010T013003141Z"
724 },
725 {
726 "name": "external-key",
727 "value": "793df714-106e-40a6-a28a-746b65f9e247_vf-module-name"
728 },
729 {
730 "name": "policy-instance-name",
731 "value": "SDNC_Policy.Config_MS_ONAP_VNF_NAMING_TIMESTAMP"
732 },
733 {
734 "name": "VF_MODULE_TYPE",
735 "value": "Expansion"
736 }
737 ],
738 "status": "SUCCESS"
739 }
740 },
741 {
742 "name": "vnfc-model-version",
743 "value": "1.0",
744 "resource-resolution-data": {
745 "capability-name": "RA Resolved",
746 "status": "SUCCESS"
747 }
748 },
749 {
750 "name": "pktgen_private_net_cidr",
751 "value": "${pktgen_private_net_cidr}",
752 "resource-resolution-data": {
753 "capability-name": "RA Resolved",
754 "status": "SUCCESS"
755 }
756 },
757 {
758 "name": "vnf_model_customization_uuid",
759 "value": "c7be2fca-9a5c-4364-8c32-801e64f90ccd",
760 "resource-resolution-data": {
761 "capability-name": "RA Resolved",
762 "status": "SUCCESS"
763 }
764 },
765 {
766 "name": "service-instance-id",
767 "value": "4545562a-cbe3-409a-8227-0b863f5bc34e",
768 "resource-resolution-data": {
769 "capability-name": "RA Resolved",
770 "status": "SUCCESS"
771 }
772 },
773 {
774 "name": "vlb_private_net_cidr",
775 "value": "192.168.10.0/24",
776 "resource-resolution-data": {
777 "capability-name": "RA Resolved",
778 "status": "SUCCESS"
779 }
780 },
781 {
782 "name": "install_script_version",
783 "value": "1.5.0-SNAPSHOT",
784 "resource-resolution-data": {
785 "capability-name": "RA Resolved",
786 "status": "SUCCESS"
787 }
788 },
789 {
790 "name": "vlb_int_private_ip_0",
791 "value": "192.168.10.50",
792 "resource-resolution-data": {
793 "capability-name": "RA Resolved",
794 "status": "SUCCESS"
795 }
796 },
797 {
798 "name": "vnfc-model-invariant-uuid",
799 "value": "49e70b6f-87e7-4f68-b1ec-958e68c7cbf5",
800 "resource-resolution-data": {
801 "capability-name": "RA Resolved",
802 "status": "SUCCESS"
803 }
804 },
805 {
806 "name": "pub_key",
807 "value": "${pub_key}",
808 "resource-resolution-data": {
809 "capability-name": "RA Resolved",
810 "status": "SUCCESS"
811 }
812 },
813 {
814 "name": "onap_private_net_cidr",
815 "value": "10.0.0.0/8",
816 "resource-resolution-data": {
817 "capability-name": "RA Resolved",
818 "status": "SUCCESS"
819 }
820 },
821 {
822 "name": "vdns_int_private_ip_0",
823 "value": "192.168.10.54",
824 "resource-resolution-data": {
825 "capability-name": "netbox-ip-assign",
826 "resource-key": [
827 {
828 "name": "external_key",
829 "value": "0e905228-c719-489a-9bcc-4470f3254e87-vdns_int_private_ip_0"
830 },
831 {
832 "name": "vnf-id",
833 "value": "0e905228-c719-489a-9bcc-4470f3254e87"
834 },
835 {
836 "name": "service-instance-id",
837 "value": "4545562a-cbe3-409a-8227-0b863f5bc34e"
838 },
839 {
840 "name": "prefix-id",
841 "value": "2"
842 }
843 ],
844 "status": "SUCCESS"
845 }
846 },
847 {
848 "name": "vnf_id",
849 "value": "0e905228-c719-489a-9bcc-4470f3254e87",
850 "resource-resolution-data": {
851 "capability-name": "RA Resolved",
852 "status": "SUCCESS"
853 }
854 },
855 {
856 "name": "nfc-naming-code",
857 "value": "vdns",
858 "resource-resolution-data": {
859 "capability-name": "RA Resolved",
860 "status": "SUCCESS"
861 }
862 },
863 {
864 "name": "onap_private_subnet_id",
865 "value": "oam_network_qXyY",
866 "resource-resolution-data": {
867 "capability-name": "RA Resolved",
868 "status": "SUCCESS"
869 }
870 },
871 {
872 "name": "vf_module_customization_uuid",
873 "value": "613b6877-0231-4ca4-90e4-4aa3374674ef",
874 "resource-resolution-data": {
875 "capability-name": "RA Resolved",
876 "status": "SUCCESS"
877 }
878 },
879 {
880 "name": "vf_module_type",
881 "value": "Expansion",
882 "resource-resolution-data": {
883 "capability-name": "RA Resolved",
884 "status": "SUCCESS"
885 }
886 },
887 {
888 "name": "vlb_onap_private_ip_0",
889 "value": "10.0.101.32",
890 "resource-resolution-data": {
891 "capability-name": "RA Resolved",
892 "status": "SUCCESS"
893 }
894 },
895 {
896 "name": "vf_module_id",
897 "value": "793df714-106e-40a6-a28a-746b65f9e247",
898 "resource-resolution-data": {
899 "capability-name": "RA Resolved",
900 "status": "SUCCESS"
901 }
902 },
903 {
904 "name": "vdns_name_0",
905 "value": "RegionOne_ONAP-NF_20191010T013003141Z_vdns_003",
906 "resource-resolution-data": {
907 "capability-name": "generate-name",
908 "resource-key": [
909 {
910 "name": "resource-name",
911 "value": "vdns_name_0"
912 },
913 {
914 "name": "resource-value",
915 "value": "${vdns_name_0}"
916 },
917 {
918 "name": "naming-type",
919 "value": "VNFC"
920 },
921 {
922 "name": "VNF_NAME",
923 "value": "RegionOne_ONAP-NF_20191010T013003141Z"
924 },
925 {
926 "name": "external-key",
927 "value": "793df714-106e-40a6-a28a-746b65f9e247_vdns_name_0"
928 },
929 {
930 "name": "policy-instance-name",
931 "value": "SDNC_Policy.Config_MS_ONAP_VNF_NAMING_TIMESTAMP"
932 },
933 {
934 "name": "NFC_NAMING_CODE",
935 "value": "vdns"
936 }
937 ],
938 "status": "SUCCESS"
939 }
940 },
941 {
942 "name": "vm-type",
943 "value": "vdns",
944 "resource-resolution-data": {
945 "capability-name": "RA Resolved",
946 "status": "SUCCESS"
947 }
948 },
949 {
950 "name": "vlb_int_pktgen_private_ip_0",
951 "value": "192.168.20.35",
952 "resource-resolution-data": {
953 "capability-name": "RA Resolved",
954 "status": "SUCCESS"
955 }
956 },
957 {
958 "name": "onap_private_net_id",
959 "value": "oam_network_qXyY",
960 "resource-resolution-data": {
961 "capability-name": "RA Resolved",
962 "status": "SUCCESS"
963 }
964 },
965 {
966 "name": "nb_api_version",
967 "value": "1.2.0",
968 "resource-resolution-data": {
969 "capability-name": "RA Resolved",
970 "status": "SUCCESS"
971 }
972 },
973 {
974 "name": "vdns_image_name",
975 "value": "${image_name}",
976 "resource-resolution-data": {
977 "capability-name": "RA Resolved",
978 "status": "SUCCESS"
979 }
980 },
981 {
982 "name": "vdns_onap_private_ip_0",
983 "value": "10.0.101.35",
984 "resource-resolution-data": {
985 "capability-name": "netbox-ip-assign",
986 "resource-key": [
987 {
988 "name": "external_key",
989 "value": "0e905228-c719-489a-9bcc-4470f3254e87-vdns_onap_private_ip_0"
990 },
991 {
992 "name": "vnf-id",
993 "value": "0e905228-c719-489a-9bcc-4470f3254e87"
994 },
995 {
996 "name": "service-instance-id",
997 "value": "4545562a-cbe3-409a-8227-0b863f5bc34e"
998 },
999 {
1000 "name": "prefix-id",
1001 "value": "3"
1002 }
1003 ],
1004 "status": "SUCCESS"
1005 }
1006 },
1007 {
1008 "name": "aai-vf-module-put",
1009 "value": "SUCCESS",
1010 "resource-resolution-data": {
1011 "capability-name": "aai-vf-module-put",
1012 "resource-key": [
1013 {
1014 "name": "vf-module",
1015 "value": "vf-module"
1016 }
1017 ],
1018 "status": "SUCCESS"
1019 }
1020 },
1021 {
1022 "name": "aic-cloud-region",
1023 "value": "${aic-cloud-region}",
1024 "resource-resolution-data": {
1025 "capability-name": "RA Resolved",
1026 "status": "SUCCESS"
1027 }
1028 },
1029 {
1030 "name": "nfc-function",
1031 "value": "${nf-role}",
1032 "resource-resolution-data": {
1033 "capability-name": "RA Resolved",
1034 "status": "SUCCESS"
1035 }
1036 },
1037 {
1038 "name": "sec_group",
1039 "value": "onap_sg_qXyY",
1040 "resource-resolution-data": {
1041 "capability-name": "RA Resolved",
1042 "status": "SUCCESS"
1043 }
1044 },
1045 {
1046 "name": "vnf_name",
1047 "value": "RegionOne_ONAP-NF_20191010T013003141Z",
1048 "resource-resolution-data": {
1049 "capability-name": "RA Resolved",
1050 "status": "SUCCESS"
1051 }
1052 },
1053 {
1054 "name": "nexus_artifact_repo",
1055 "value": "https://nexus.onap.org",
1056 "resource-resolution-data": {
1057 "capability-name": "RA Resolved",
1058 "status": "SUCCESS"
1059 }
1060 },
1061 {
1062 "name": "public_net_id",
1063 "value": "external",
1064 "resource-resolution-data": {
1065 "capability-name": "RA Resolved",
1066 "status": "SUCCESS"
1067 }
1068 }
1069 ]
1070 },
1071 "tenant": "41d6d38489bd40b09ea8a6b6b852dcbd",
1072 "sdnc-generated-cloud-resources": true,
1073 "vf-module-topology-identifier": {
1074 "vf-module-id": "793df714-106e-40a6-a28a-746b65f9e247",
1075 "vf-module-name": "vfModuleName",
1076 "vf-module-type": "VlbCds..vdns..module-3"
1077 },
1078 "aic-cloud-region": "RegionOne"
1079 }}
1080
1081Search for the reconfiguration parameters in the vf-module-topology.vf-module-parameters.param array. The user should count (starting from 0, as in most programming languages) the number of array elements to determine the exact location of the parameters of interest. For the VNF described in this documentation, the parameters of interest are "vdns_int_private_ip_0" and "vdns_onap_private_ip_0", which correspond to "ip-addr" and "onap-ip-addr" in the scale out request, respectively. As the user can see by counting the number of array locations (starting from 0), "vdns_int_private_ip_0" and "vdns_onap_private_ip_0" are stored at locations 16 and 30, respectively. As such, the complete resolution path to reconfiguration parameters for the VNF described in this documentation is:
1082
1083::
1084
1085 [{"ip-addr":"$.vf-module-topology.vf-module-parameters.param[16].value","oam-ip-addr":"$.vf-module-topology.vf-module-parameters.param[30].value"}]
1086
1087In future releases, we plan to leverage CDS to model post scaling VNF reconfiguration, so as to remove the dependency from JSON paths and simplify the overall process.
Rene_Robert8f8f27f2019-07-01 15:18:40 +02001088
1089
Marco Plataniac80274e2019-08-15 12:11:31 -04001090PART 2 - Scale Out Use Case Instantiation
Rene_Robert8f8f27f2019-07-01 15:18:40 +02001091-----------------------------------------
sebdet0ca9db52020-12-09 13:42:28 +01001092Manual queries with POSTMAN
1093~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
ChrisC94604b82020-12-02 13:32:10 +01001094
sebdet0ca9db52020-12-09 13:42:28 +01001095This step is only required if CDS is used, otherwise you can use VID to instantiate the service and the VNF.
1096Note that the POSTMAN collection linked at the top of this page, does provide some level of automatic scripting that will automatically get values between requests and provision the following queries
Rene_Robert8f8f27f2019-07-01 15:18:40 +02001097
sebdet0ca9db52020-12-09 13:42:28 +01001098You must enter in the postman config different variables:
1099- "k8s" -> The k8s loadBalancer cluster node
1100- "cds-service-model" -> The SDC service name distributed
1101- "cds-instance-name" -> A name of your choice for the vnf instance (This must be changed each time you launch the instantiation)
1102
1103These useful requests are:
1104CDS#1 - SDC Catalog Service -> This gets the Sdc service and provision some variables
1105CDS#2 - SO Catalog DB Service VNFs - CDS -> This gets info in SO and provision some variables for the instantiation
1106CDS#3 - SO Self-Serve Service Assign & Activate -> This starts the Service/vnf instantiation
1107Open the body and replace the values like tenantId, Owning entity, region, and all the openstack values everywhere in the payload
1108
1109Note that you may have to add "onap_private_net_cidr":"10.0.0.0/16" in the "instanceParams" array depending of your openstack network configuration.
1110
1111CDS#4 - SO infra Active Request -> Used to get the status of the previous query
1112
1113Manual queries without POSTMAN
1114~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Rene_Robert1d00e972019-07-08 16:03:08 +02001115GET information from SDC catalogdb
1116
1117::
1118
1119 curl -X GET \
1120 'https://{{k8s}}:30204/sdc/v1/catalog/services' \
1121 -H 'Authorization: Basic dmlkOktwOGJKNFNYc3pNMFdYbGhhazNlSGxjc2UyZ0F3ODR2YW9HR21KdlV5MlU=' \
1122 -H 'X-ECOMP-InstanceID: VID' \
1123 -H 'cache-control: no-cache'
1124
1125
1126In the response you should find values for:
1127
1128* service-uuid
1129* service-invariantUUID
1130* service-name
1131
1132
Marco Plataniaccf78702019-10-16 12:10:52 -04001133GET informations from SO catalogdb.
Rene_Robert1d00e972019-07-08 16:03:08 +02001134
1135::
1136
1137 curl -X GET \
1138 'http://{{k8s}}:30744/ecomp/mso/catalog/v2/serviceVnfs?serviceModelName={{service-name}}' \
1139 -H 'Authorization: Basic YnBlbDpwYXNzd29yZDEk' \
1140 -H 'cache-control: no-cache'
1141
1142
1143In the response you should find values for:
1144
1145* vnf-modelinfo-modelname
1146* vnf-modelinfo-modeluuid
1147* vnf-modelinfo-modelinvariantuuid
1148* vnf-modelinfo-modelcustomizationuuid
1149* vnf-modelinfo-modelinstancename
1150* vnf-vfmodule-0-modelinfo-modelname
1151* vnf-vfmodule-0-modelinfo-modeluuid
1152* vnf-vfmodule-0-modelinfo-modelinvariantuuid
1153* vnf-vfmodule-0-modelinfo-modelcustomizationuuid
1154* vnf-vfmodule-1-modelinfo-modelname
1155* vnf-vfmodule-1-modelinfo-modeluuid
1156* vnf-vfmodule-1-modelinfo-modelinvariantuuid
1157* vnf-vfmodule-1-modelinfo-modelcustomizationuuid
1158* vnf-vfmodule-2-modelinfo-modelname
1159* vnf-vfmodule-2-modelinfo-modeluuid
1160* vnf-vfmodule-2-modelinfo-modelinvariantuuid
1161* vnf-vfmodule-2-modelinfo-modelcustomizationuuid
1162* vnf-vfmodule-3-modelinfo-modelname
1163* vnf-vfmodule-3-modelinfo-modeluuid
1164* vnf-vfmodule-3-modelinfo-modelinvariantuuid
1165* vnf-vfmodule-3-modelinfo-modelcustomizationuuid
1166
1167
1168Note : all those informations are also available in the TOSCA service template in the SDC
1169
1170You need after:
1171
Marco Plataniac80274e2019-08-15 12:11:31 -04001172* the SSH public key value that will allow you to connect to the VM.
Rene_Robert1d00e972019-07-08 16:03:08 +02001173* the cloudSite name and TenantId where to deploy the service
1174* the name of the security group that will be used in the tenant for your service
1175* the name of the network that will be used to connect your VM
Marco Plataniac80274e2019-08-15 12:11:31 -04001176* the name of your OpenStack image
1177* the name of your OpenStack VM flavor
Rene_Robert1d00e972019-07-08 16:03:08 +02001178
1179We supposed here that we are using some already declared informations:
1180
1181* customer named "Demonstration"
1182* subscriptionServiceType named "vLB"
1183* projectName named "Project-Demonstration"
1184* owningEntityName named "OE-Demonstration"
1185* platformName named "test"
1186* lineOfBusinessName named "someValue"
1187
Marco Plataniaccf78702019-10-16 12:10:52 -04001188Having all those information, you are now able to build the SO Macro request
Rene_Robert1d00e972019-07-08 16:03:08 +02001189that will instantiate Service, VNF, VF modules and Heat stacks:
1190
1191::
1192
1193 curl -X POST \
1194 'http://{{k8s}}:30277/onap/so/infra/serviceInstantiation/v7/serviceInstances' \
1195 -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
1196 -H 'cache-control: no-cache' \
1197 -d '{
Marco Plataniaccf78702019-10-16 12:10:52 -04001198 "requestDetails":{
1199 "subscriberInfo":{
1200 "globalSubscriberId":"Demonstration"
1201 },
1202 "requestInfo":{
1203 "suppressRollback":false,
1204 "productFamilyId":"a9a77d5a-123e-4ca2-9eb9-0b015d2ee0fb",
1205 "requestorId":"adt",
1206 "instanceName":"{{cds-instance-name}}",
1207 "source":"VID"
1208 },
1209 "cloudConfiguration":{
1210 "lcpCloudRegionId":"RegionOne",
1211 "tenantId":"41d6d38489bd40b09ea8a6b6b852dcbd",
1212 "cloudOwner":"CloudOwner"
1213 },
1214 "requestParameters":{
1215 "subscriptionServiceType":"vLB",
1216 "userParams":[
1217 {
1218 "Homing_Solution":"none"
Rene_Robert1d00e972019-07-08 16:03:08 +02001219 },
Marco Plataniaccf78702019-10-16 12:10:52 -04001220 {
1221 "service":{
1222 "instanceParams":[
1223
1224 ],
1225 "instanceName":"{{cds-instance-name}}",
1226 "resources":{
1227 "vnfs":[
1228 {
1229 "modelInfo":{
1230 "modelName":"{{vnf-modelinfo-modelname}}",
1231 "modelVersionId":"{{vnf-modelinfo-modeluuid}}",
1232 "modelInvariantUuid":"{{vnf-modelinfo-modelinvariantuuid}}",
1233 "modelVersion":"1.0",
1234 "modelCustomizationId":"{{vnf-modelinfo-modelcustomizationuuid}}",
1235 "modelInstanceName":"{{vnf-modelinfo-modelinstancename}}"
1236 },
1237 "cloudConfiguration":{
1238 "lcpCloudRegionId":"RegionOne",
1239 "tenantId":"41d6d38489bd40b09ea8a6b6b852dcbd"
1240 },
1241 "platform":{
1242 "platformName":"test"
1243 },
1244 "lineOfBusiness":{
1245 "lineOfBusinessName":"LOB-Demonstration"
1246 },
1247 "productFamilyId":"a9a77d5a-123e-4ca2-9eb9-0b015d2ee0fb",
1248 "instanceName":"{{vnf-modelinfo-modelinstancename}}",
1249 "instanceParams":[
1250 {
1251 "onap_private_net_id":"oam_network_qXyY",
1252 "dcae_collector_ip":"10.12.5.214",
1253 "onap_private_subnet_id":"oam_network_qXyY",
1254 "pub_key":"ssh-rsa AAAAB3NzaC1yc2EAAAADAQABAAABAQDKXDgoo3+WOqcUG8/5uUbk81+yczgwC4Y8ywTmuQqbNxlY1oQ0YxdMUqUnhitSXs5S/yRuAVOYHwGg2mCs20oAINrP+mxBI544AMIb9itPjCtgqtE2EWo6MmnFGbHB4Sx3XioE7F4VPsh7japsIwzOjbrQe+Mua1TGQ5d4nfEOQaaglXLLPFfuc7WbhbJbK6Q7rHqZfRcOwAMXgDoBqlyqKeiKwnumddo2RyNT8ljYmvB6buz7KnMinzo7qB0uktVT05FH9Rg0CTWH5norlG5qXgP2aukL0gk1ph8iAt7uYLf1ktp+LJI2gaF6L0/qli9EmVCSLr1uJ38Q8CBflhkh",
1255 "sec_group":"onap_sg_qXyY",
1256 "install_script_version":"1.5.0",
1257 "demo_artifacts_version":"1.5.0",
1258 "cloud_env":"openstack",
1259 "flavor_name":"m1.medium",
1260 "public_net_id":"external",
1261 "image_name":"ubuntu-16-04-cloud-amd64"
1262 }
1263 ],
1264 "vfModules":[
1265 {
1266 "modelInfo":{
1267 "modelName":"{{vnf-vfmodule-0-modelinfo-modelname}}",
1268 "modelVersionId":"{{vnf-vfmodule-0-modelinfo-modeluuid}}",
1269 "modelInvariantUuid":"{{vnf-vfmodule-0-modelinfo-modelinvariantuuid}}",
1270 "modelVersion":"1",
1271 "modelCustomizationId":"{{vnf-vfmodule-0-modelinfo-modelcustomizationuuid}}"
1272 },
1273 "instanceName":"{{vnf-vfmodule-0-modelinfo-modelname}}",
1274 "instanceParams":[
1275 {
1276 "sec_group":"onap_sg_imAd",
1277 "public_net_id":"external"
1278 }
1279 ]
1280 },
1281 {
1282 "modelInfo":{
1283 "modelName":"{{vnf-vfmodule-1-modelinfo-modelname}}",
1284 "modelVersionId":"{{vnf-vfmodule-1-modelinfo-modeluuid}}",
1285 "modelInvariantUuid":"{{vnf-vfmodule-1-modelinfo-modelinvariantuuid}}",
1286 "modelVersion":"1",
1287 "modelCustomizationId":"{{vnf-vfmodule-1-modelinfo-modelcustomizationuuid}}"
1288 },
1289 "instanceName":"{{vnf-vfmodule-1-modelinfo-modelname}}",
1290 "instanceParams":[
1291 {
1292 "sec_group":"onap_sg_imAd",
1293 "public_net_id":"external"
1294 }
1295 ]
1296 },
1297 {
1298 "modelInfo":{
1299 "modelName":"{{vnf-vfmodule-2-modelinfo-modelname}}",
1300 "modelVersionId":"{{vnf-vfmodule-2-modelinfo-modeluuid}}",
1301 "modelInvariantUuid":"{{vnf-vfmodule-2-modelinfo-modelinvariantuuid}}",
1302 "modelVersion":"1",
1303 "modelCustomizationId":"{{vnf-vfmodule-2-modelinfo-modelcustomizationuuid}}"
1304 },
1305 "instanceName":"{{vnf-vfmodule-2-modelinfo-modelname}}",
1306 "instanceParams":[
1307 {
1308 "sec_group":"onap_sg_imAd",
1309 "public_net_id":"external"
1310 }
1311 ]
1312 },
1313 {
1314 "modelInfo":{
1315 "modelName":"{{vnf-vfmodule-3-modelinfo-modelname}}",
1316 "modelVersionId":"{{vnf-vfmodule-3-modelinfo-modeluuid}}",
1317 "modelInvariantUuid":"{{vnf-vfmodule-3-modelinfo-modelinvariantuuid}}",
1318 "modelVersion":"1",
1319 "modelCustomizationId":"{{vnf-vfmodule-3-modelinfo-modelcustomizationuuid}}"
1320 },
1321 "instanceName":"{{vnf-vfmodule-3-modelinfo-modelname}}",
1322 "instanceParams":[
1323 {
1324 "sec_group":"onap_sg_imAd",
1325 "public_net_id":"external"
1326 }
1327 ]
1328 }
1329 ]
1330 }
1331 ]
1332 },
1333 "modelInfo":{
1334 "modelVersion":"1.0",
1335 "modelVersionId":"{{service-uuid}}",
1336 "modelInvariantId":"{{service-invariantUUID}}",
1337 "modelName":"{{service-name}}",
1338 "modelType":"service"
1339 }
1340 }
Rene_Robert1d00e972019-07-08 16:03:08 +02001341 }
Marco Plataniaccf78702019-10-16 12:10:52 -04001342 ],
1343 "aLaCarte":false
1344 },
1345 "project":{
1346 "projectName":"Project-Demonstration"
1347 },
1348 "owningEntity":{
mrichommeefb859d2020-03-19 19:02:41 +01001349 "owningEntityId":"6f6c49d0-8a8c-4704-9174-321bcc526cc0",
1350 "owningEntityName":"OE-Demonstration"
Marco Plataniaccf78702019-10-16 12:10:52 -04001351 },
1352 "modelInfo":{
mrichommeefb859d2020-03-19 19:02:41 +01001353 "modelVersion":"1.0",
1354 "modelVersionId":"{{service-uuid}}",
1355 "modelInvariantId":"{{service-invariantUUID}}",
1356 "modelName":"{{service-name}}",
1357 "modelType":"service"}}}'
Rene_Robert1d00e972019-07-08 16:03:08 +02001358
Marco Plataniaccf78702019-10-16 12:10:52 -04001359Note that the "dcae_collector_ip" parameter has to contain the IP address of one of the Kubernetes cluster nodes, 10.12.5.214 in the example above. In the response to the Macro request, the user will obtain a requestId that will be usefulto follow the instantiation request status in the ONAP SO:
Rene_Robert1d00e972019-07-08 16:03:08 +02001360
1361::
1362
1363 curl -X GET \
1364 'http://{{k8s}}:30086/infraActiveRequests/{{requestid}}' \
1365 -H 'cache-control: no-cache'
1366
1367
1368
Rene_Robert8f8f27f2019-07-01 15:18:40 +02001369
1370
Marco Plataniac80274e2019-08-15 12:11:31 -04001371PART 3 - Post Instantiation Operations
1372--------------------------------------
Rene_Robert8f8f27f2019-07-01 15:18:40 +02001373
Marco Plataniaccf78702019-10-16 12:10:52 -040013743-1 Post Instantiation VNF configuration
1375~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
mrichommeefb859d2020-03-19 19:02:41 +01001376CDS executes post-instantiation VNF configuration if the "skip-post-instantiation" flag in the SDC service model is set to false, which is the default behavior. Manual post-instantiation configuration is necessary if the "skip-post-instantiation" flag in the service model is set to true or if the VNF is instantiated using the preload approach, which doesn't include CDS. Regardless, this step is NOT required during scale out operations, as VNF reconfiguration will be triggered by SO and executed by APPC.
Marco Plataniaccf78702019-10-16 12:10:52 -04001377
1378If VNF post instantiation is executed manually, in order to change the state of the vLB the users should run the following REST call, replacing the IP addresses in the VNF endpoint and JSON object to match the private IP addresses of their vDNS instance:
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -04001379
1380::
1381
1382 curl -X PUT \
1383 http://10.12.5.78:8183/restconf/config/vlb-business-vnf-onap-plugin:vlb-business-vnf-onap-plugin/vdns-instances/vdns-instance/192.168.10.59 \
1384 -H 'Accept: application/json' \
1385 -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
1386 -H 'Postman-Token: a708b064-adb1-4804-89a7-ee604f5fe76f' \
1387 -H 'cache-control: no-cache' \
1388 -d '{
1389 "vdns-instance": [
1390 {
1391 "ip-addr": "192.168.10.59",
1392 "oam-ip-addr": "10.0.101.49",
1393 "enabled": true
1394 }
Marco Plataniac80274e2019-08-15 12:11:31 -04001395 ]
1396 }'
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -04001397
Rene_Robert8f8f27f2019-07-01 15:18:40 +02001398At this point, the VNF is fully set up.
1399
1400
Marco Plataniac80274e2019-08-15 12:11:31 -040014013-2 Updating AAI with VNF resources
1402~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Rene_Robert8f8f27f2019-07-01 15:18:40 +02001403To allow automated scale out via closed loop, the users need to inventory the VNF resources in AAI. This is done by running the heatbridge python script in /root/oom/kubernetes/robot in the Rancher VM in the Kubernetes cluster:
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -04001404
1405::
1406
Marco Plataniaba7c0742019-07-30 09:15:35 -04001407 ./demo-k8s.sh onap heatbridge <vLB stack_name in OpenStack> <service_instance_id> vLB vlb_onap_private_ip_0
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -04001408
Marco Plataniaccf78702019-10-16 12:10:52 -04001409Note that "vlb_onap_private_ip_0" used in the heatbridge call is the actual parameter name, not its value (e.g. the actual IP address). Heatbridge is needed for control loops because DCAE and Policy runs queries against AAI using vServer names as key.
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -04001410
Rene_Robert8f8f27f2019-07-01 15:18:40 +02001411
Marco Plataniac80274e2019-08-15 12:11:31 -04001412PART 4 - Triggering Scale Out Manually
1413--------------------------------------
sebdet0ca9db52020-12-09 13:42:28 +01001414For scale out with manual trigger, VID is not supported at this time.
Rene_Robert8f8f27f2019-07-01 15:18:40 +02001415
sebdet0ca9db52020-12-09 13:42:28 +01001416Manual queries with POSTMAN
1417~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1418Note that the POSTMAN collection linked at the top of this page, does provide some level of automatic scripting that will automatically get values between requests and provision the following queries
1419
1420You must enter in the postman config different variables:
1421- "k8s" -> The k8s loadBalancer cluster node
1422- "cds-service-model" -> The SDC service name distributed
1423- "cds-instance-name" -> A name of your choice for the vnf instance (This must be changed each time you launch the instantiation)
1424
1425CDS#5 - SO ScaleOut -> This will initiate a Scaleout manually
1426CDS#7 - SO ScaleIn -> This will initiate a ScaleIn manually
1427
1428Manual queries without POSTMAN
1429~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1430Users can run the use case by directly calling SO APIs:
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -04001431
1432::
1433
1434 curl -X POST \
Marco Plataniac80274e2019-08-15 12:11:31 -04001435 http://<Any_K8S_Node_IP_Address>:30277/onap/so/infra/serviceInstantiation/v7/serviceInstances/7d3ca782-c486-44b3-9fe5-39f322d8ee80/vnfs/9d33cf2d-d6aa-4b9e-a311-460a6be5a7de/vfModules/scaleOut \
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -04001436 -H 'Accept: application/json' \
1437 -H 'Authorization: Basic SW5mcmFQb3J0YWxDbGllbnQ6cGFzc3dvcmQxJA==' \
1438 -H 'Cache-Control: no-cache' \
1439 -H 'Connection: keep-alive' \
1440 -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -04001441 -H 'Postman-Token: 12f2601a-4eb2-402c-a51a-f29502359501,9befda68-b2c9-4e7a-90ca-1be9c24ef664' \
1442 -H 'User-Agent: PostmanRuntime/7.15.0' \
1443 -H 'accept-encoding: gzip, deflate' \
1444 -H 'cache-control: no-cache' \
1445 -H 'content-length: 2422' \
1446 -H 'cookie: JSESSIONID=B3BA24216367F9D39E3DF5E8CBA4BC64' \
1447 -b JSESSIONID=B3BA24216367F9D39E3DF5E8CBA4BC64 \
1448 -d '{
1449 "requestDetails": {
1450 "modelInfo": {
1451 "modelCustomizationName": "VdnsloadbalancerCds..vdns..module-3",
Marco Plataniac80274e2019-08-15 12:11:31 -04001452 "modelCustomizationId": "ded42059-2f35-42d4-848b-16e1ab1ad197",
1453 "modelInvariantId": "2815d321-c6b4-4f21-b7f7-fa5adf8ed7d9",
1454 "modelVersionId": "524e34ed-9789-453e-ab73-8eff30eafef3",
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -04001455 "modelName": "VdnsloadbalancerCds..vdns..module-3",
1456 "modelType": "vfModule",
1457 "modelVersion": "1"
1458 },
1459 "cloudConfiguration": {
1460 "lcpCloudRegionId": "RegionOne",
1461 "tenantId": "d570c718cbc545029f40e50b75eb13df",
1462 "cloudOwner": "CloudOwner"
1463 },
1464 "requestInfo": {
Marco Plataniac80274e2019-08-15 12:11:31 -04001465 "instanceName": "vDNS-VM-02",
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -04001466 "source": "VID",
1467 "suppressRollback": false,
1468 "requestorId": "demo"
1469 },
1470 "requestParameters": {
1471 "userParams": []
1472 },
1473 "relatedInstanceList": [
1474 {
1475 "relatedInstance": {
1476 "instanceId": "7d3ca782-c486-44b3-9fe5-39f322d8ee80",
1477 "modelInfo": {
1478 "modelType": "service",
Marco Plataniac80274e2019-08-15 12:11:31 -04001479 "modelInvariantId": "dfabdcae-cf50-4801-9885-9a3a9cc07e6f",
1480 "modelVersionId": "ee55b537-7be5-4377-93c1-5d92931b6a78",
1481 "modelName": "vLoadBalancerCDS",
1482 "modelVersion": "1.0"
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -04001483 }
1484 }
1485 },
1486 {
1487 "relatedInstance": {
1488 "instanceId": "9d33cf2d-d6aa-4b9e-a311-460a6be5a7de",
1489 "modelInfo": {
1490 "modelType": "vnf",
Marco Plataniac80274e2019-08-15 12:11:31 -04001491 "modelInvariantId": "a77f9280-5c02-46cd-b1fc-855975db9df9",
1492 "modelVersionId": "ff0e99ce-a521-44b5-b11b-da7e07ac83fc",
1493 "modelName": "vLoadBalancerCDS",
1494 "modelVersion": "1.0",
1495 "modelCustomizationId": "b8b8a25d-19de-4581-bb63-f2dc8c0d79a7"
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -04001496 }
1497 }
1498 }
1499 ],
1500 "configurationParameters": [
1501 {
1502 "ip-addr": "$.vf-module-topology.vf-module-parameters.param[17].value",
1503 "oam-ip-addr": "$.vf-module-topology.vf-module-parameters.param[31].value"
1504 }
1505 ]
Marco Plataniac80274e2019-08-15 12:11:31 -04001506 }
1507 }'
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -04001508
1509
Marco Platania4b8acc92019-09-16 12:16:54 -04001510To fill in the JSON object, users need to download the Service Model TOSCA template from the SDC Portal using one of the standard SDC users (for example user: cs0008, password: demo123456!). After logging to SDC, the user should select from the catalog the vLB service that they created, click the "TOSCA Artifacts" link on the left, and finally the download button on the right, as shown in the figure below:
1511
1512.. figure:: files/scaleout/tosca_template_fig.png
1513 :align: center
1514
1515For the example described below, users can refer to the TOSCA template linked at the top of the page. The template contains all the model (invariant/version/customization) IDs of service, VNF, and VF modules that the input request to SO needs.
Marco Plataniac80274e2019-08-15 12:11:31 -04001516
1517The values of modelInvariantId, modelVersionId, and modelName in the relatedInstance item identified by "modelType": "service" in the JSON request to SO have to match invariantUUID, UUID, and name, respectively, in the TOSCA template:
1518::
1519
1520 {
1521 "relatedInstance": {
1522 "instanceId": "7d3ca782-c486-44b3-9fe5-39f322d8ee80",
1523 "modelInfo": {
1524 "modelType": "service",
1525 "modelInvariantId": "dfabdcae-cf50-4801-9885-9a3a9cc07e6f",
1526 "modelVersionId": "ee55b537-7be5-4377-93c1-5d92931b6a78",
1527 "modelName": "vLoadBalancerCDS",
1528 "modelVersion": "1.0"
1529 }
1530 }
1531 }
1532
1533.. figure:: files/scaleout/service.png
1534 :align: center
Marco Plataniab9e219f2019-06-16 16:09:20 -04001535
Marco Plataniae5064cd2018-11-28 15:33:47 -05001536
Marco Plataniac80274e2019-08-15 12:11:31 -04001537The values of modelInvariantId, modelVersionId, modelName, and modelVersion in the relatedInstance item identified by "modelType": "vnf" in the JSON request to SO have to match invariantUUID, UUID, name, and version, respectively, in the TOSCA template:
1538
1539::
1540
1541 {
1542 "relatedInstance": {
1543 "instanceId": "9d33cf2d-d6aa-4b9e-a311-460a6be5a7de",
1544 "modelInfo": {
1545 "modelType": "vnf",
1546 "modelInvariantId": "a77f9280-5c02-46cd-b1fc-855975db9df9",
1547 "modelVersionId": "ff0e99ce-a521-44b5-b11b-da7e07ac83fc",
1548 "modelName": "vLoadBalancerCDS",
1549 "modelVersion": "1.0",
1550 "modelCustomizationId": "b8b8a25d-19de-4581-bb63-f2dc8c0d79a7"
1551 }
1552 }
1553 }
1554
1555.. figure:: files/scaleout/vnf.png
1556 :align: center
Rene_Robert8f8f27f2019-07-01 15:18:40 +02001557
1558
Marco Plataniac80274e2019-08-15 12:11:31 -04001559The modelCustomizationId, modelInvariantId, modelVersionId, modelName, and modelVersion in the modelInfo item identified by "modelType": "vfModule" in the JSON request to SO have to match vfModuleModelCustomizationUUID, vfModuleModelInvariantUUID, vfModuleModelUUID, vfModuleModelName, and vfModuleModelVersion, respectively, in the TOSCA template. The modelCustomizationName parameter in the SO object can be set as the modelName parameter in the same JSON object:
Rene_Robert8f8f27f2019-07-01 15:18:40 +02001560
Marco Plataniac80274e2019-08-15 12:11:31 -04001561::
1562
1563 "modelInfo": {
1564 "modelCustomizationName": "Vloadbalancercds..vdns..module-3",
1565 "modelCustomizationId": "ded42059-2f35-42d4-848b-16e1ab1ad197",
1566 "modelInvariantId": "2815d321-c6b4-4f21-b7f7-fa5adf8ed7d9",
1567 "modelVersionId": "524e34ed-9789-453e-ab73-8eff30eafef3",
1568 "modelName": "Vloadbalancercds..vdns..module-3",
1569 "modelType": "vfModule",
1570 "modelVersion": "1"
1571 }
1572
1573The vLB-vDNS-vPacketGenerator VNF that we use to describe the scale out use case supports the scaling of the vDNS VF module only. As such, in the TOSCA template users should refer to the section identified by "vfModuleModelName": "Vloadbalancercds..vdns..module-3", as highlighted below:
1574
1575.. figure:: files/scaleout/service.png
1576 :align: center
1577
1578
1579Note that both Service and VNF related instances have a field called "instanceId" that represent the Service and VNF instance ID, respectively. These IDs are assigned at Service and VNF instantiation time and can be retrieved from AAI, querying for generic VNF objects:
1580
1581::
1582
1583 curl -k -X GET \
1584 https://<Any_K8S_Node_IP_Address>:30233/aai/v16/network/generic-vnfs \
1585 -H 'Accept: application/json' \
1586 -H 'Authorization: Basic QUFJOkFBSQ==' \
1587 -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
1588 -H 'X-FromAppId: AAI' \
1589 -H 'X-TransactionId: get_aai_subscr'
1590
1591From the list of VNFs reported by AAI, search for the name of the VNF that was previously instantiated, for example "vLB_VNF_01" in the example below:
1592
1593::
1594
1595 {
1596 "vnf-id": "9d33cf2d-d6aa-4b9e-a311-460a6be5a7de",
1597 "vnf-name": "vLB_VNF_01",
1598 "vnf-type": "vLoadBalancer/vLoadBalancer 0",
1599 "prov-status": "ACTIVE",
1600 "equipment-role": "",
1601 "orchestration-status": "Active",
1602 "ipv4-oam-address": "10.0.220.10",
1603 "in-maint": true,
1604 "is-closed-loop-disabled": false,
1605 "resource-version": "1565817789379",
1606 "model-invariant-id": "a77f9280-5c02-46cd-b1fc-855975db9df9",
1607 "model-version-id": "ff0e99ce-a521-44b5-b11b-da7e07ac83fc",
1608 "model-customization-id": "b8b8a25d-19de-4581-bb63-f2dc8c0d79a7",
1609 "selflink": "restconf/config/GENERIC-RESOURCE-API:services/service/7d3ca782-c486-44b3-9fe5-39f322d8ee80/service-data/vnfs/vnf/9d33cf2d-d6aa-4b9e-a311-460a6be5a7de/vnf-data/vnf-topology/",
1610 "relationship-list": {
1611 "relationship": [
1612 {
1613 "related-to": "service-instance",
1614 "relationship-label": "org.onap.relationships.inventory.ComposedOf",
1615 "related-link": "/aai/v16/business/customers/customer/Demonstration/service-subscriptions/service-subscription/vRAR/service-instances/service-instance/7d3ca782-c486-44b3-9fe5-39f322d8ee80",
1616 "relationship-data": [
1617 {
1618 "relationship-key": "customer.global-customer-id",
1619 "relationship-value": "Demonstration"
1620 },
1621 {
1622 "relationship-key": "service-subscription.service-type",
1623 "relationship-value": "vLB"
1624 },
1625 {
1626 "relationship-key": "service-instance.service-instance-id",
1627 "relationship-value": "7d3ca782-c486-44b3-9fe5-39f322d8ee80"
1628 }
1629 ],
1630 "related-to-property": [
1631 {
1632 "property-key": "service-instance.service-instance-name",
1633 "property-value": "vLB-Service-0814-1"
1634 }
1635 ]
1636 }
1637 ...
1638 }
1639
1640To identify the VNF ID, look for the "vnf-id" parameter at the top of the JSON object, while to determine the Service ID, look for the "relationship-value" parameter corresponding to the "relationship-key": "service-instance.service-instance-id" item in the "relationship-data" list. In the example above, the Service instance ID is 7d3ca782-c486-44b3-9fe5-39f322d8ee80, while the VNF ID is 9d33cf2d-d6aa-4b9e-a311-460a6be5a7de.
1641
1642These IDs are also used in the URL request to SO:
1643
1644::
1645
mrichommeefb859d2020-03-19 19:02:41 +01001646 http://<Any_K8S_Node_IP_Address>:30277/onap/so/infra/serviceInstantiation/v7/serviceInstances/7d3ca782-c486-44b3-9fe5-39f322d8ee80/vnfs/9d33cf2d-d6aa-4b9e-a311-460a6be5a7de/vfModules/scaleOut
Marco Plataniac80274e2019-08-15 12:11:31 -04001647
1648
Marco Plataniaccf78702019-10-16 12:10:52 -04001649Finally, the "configurationParameters" section in the JSON request to SO contains the parameters that will be used to reconfigure the VNF after scaling. Please see Section 1-7 for an in-depth description of how to set the parameters correctly.
Marco Plataniac80274e2019-08-15 12:11:31 -04001650
1651::
1652
1653 "configurationParameters": [
1654 {
Marco Plataniaccf78702019-10-16 12:10:52 -04001655 "ip-addr": "$.vf-module-topology.vf-module-parameters.param[16].value",
1656 "oam-ip-addr": "$.vf-module-topology.vf-module-parameters.param[30].value"
Marco Plataniac80274e2019-08-15 12:11:31 -04001657 }
1658 ]
1659
Marco Plataniac80274e2019-08-15 12:11:31 -04001660
1661PART 5 - Running the Scale Out Use Case with Configuration Preload
1662------------------------------------------------------------------
1663
Marco Plataniaccf78702019-10-16 12:10:52 -04001664While CDS can be used to model and automate the generation of cloud configuration for VNF instantiation, the manual preload approach is still supported for scale out with manual trigger (no closed loop). Note that preload operations must be executed before VF modules are created or scaled, as the instantiation process will use the preload to determine the VF module configuration.
Marco Plataniac80274e2019-08-15 12:11:31 -04001665
1666The procedure is similar to one described above, with some minor changes:
1667
16681) **Service Design and Creation**: The heat template used to create a vendor software product in SDC is the same. However, during property assignment (Section 1-2) "sdnc_artifact_name", "sdnc_model_version", "sdnc_model_name" **must be** left blank, as they are used for CDS only.
1669
16702) As closed loop with preload is not supported for scale out, DCAE blueprint and Policy onboarding (Section 1-2), deployment of naming policy (Section 1-3), and closed loop design and deployment from CLAMP (Section 1-4) are not necessary.
1671
16723) **Creation of VNF template with CDT** works as described in Section 1-5.
1673
16744) **Controller type selection** in SO works as described in Section 1-6.
1675
mrichommeefb859d2020-03-19 19:02:41 +010016765) **VNF instantiation from VID**: users can use VID to create the service, the VNF, and instantiate the VF modules. In the VID main page, users should select GR API (this should be the default option).
Marco Plataniaccf78702019-10-16 12:10:52 -04001677
1678.. figure:: files/scaleout/vid.png
1679 :align: center
1680
1681Based on the Heat template structure, there are four VF modules:
Marco Plataniac80274e2019-08-15 12:11:31 -04001682
1683 * module-0: base module that contains resources, such as internal private networks and public key, shared across the VNF elements
1684 * module-1: vLB resource descriptor
1685 * module-2: vPacketGen resource descriptor
1686 * module-3: vDNS resource descriptor
1687
1688These VF modules have to be installed in the following order, so as to satisfy heat dependencies: module-0, module-1, module-2, module-3. The parameters defined in the Heat environment files can be overridden by loading cloud configuration to SDNC before the VF modules are instantiated. See example of preloads below. They need to be customized based on the OpenStack cloud and execution environment in which the VF modules are going to be instantiated.
1689
1690Module-0 Preload
1691~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1692
1693::
1694
1695 curl -X POST \
1696 http://<Any_K8S_Node_IP_Address>:30202/restconf/operations/GENERIC-RESOURCE-API:preload-vf-module-topology-operation \
1697 -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
1698 -H 'Postman-Token: 0a7abc62-9d8f-4f63-8b05-db7cc4c3e28b' \
1699 -H 'cache-control: no-cache' \
1700 -d '{
1701 "input": {
1702 "preload-vf-module-topology-information": {
1703 "vf-module-topology": {
1704 "vf-module-topology-identifier": {
1705 "vf-module-name": "vNetworks-0211-1"
1706 },
1707 "vf-module-parameters": {
1708 "param": [
1709 {
1710 "name": "vlb_private_net_id",
1711 "value": "vLBMS_zdfw1lb01_private_ms"
1712 },
1713 {
1714 "name": "pktgen_private_net_id",
1715 "value": "vLBMS_zdfw1pktgen01_private_ms"
1716 },
1717 {
1718 "name": "vlb_private_net_cidr",
1719 "value": "192.168.10.0/24"
1720 },
1721 {
1722 "name": "pktgen_private_net_cidr",
1723 "value": "192.168.9.0/24"
1724 },
1725 {
1726 "name": "vlb_0_int_pktgen_private_port_0_mac",
1727 "value": "fa:16:3e:00:01:10"
1728 },
1729 {
1730 "name": "vpg_0_int_pktgen_private_port_0_mac",
1731 "value": "fa:16:3e:00:01:20"
1732 },
1733 {
1734 "name": "vnf_id",
1735 "value": "vLoadBalancerMS"
1736 },
1737 {
1738 "name": "vnf_name",
1739 "value": "vLBMS"
1740 },
1741 {
1742 "name": "key_name",
1743 "value": "vlb_key"
1744 },
1745 {
1746 "name": "pub_key",
1747 "value": "ssh-rsa AAAAB3NzaC1yc2EAAAADAQABAAABAQDQXYJYYi3/OUZXUiCYWdtc7K0m5C0dJKVxPG0eI8EWZrEHYdfYe6WoTSDJCww+1qlBSpA5ac/Ba4Wn9vh+lR1vtUKkyIC/nrYb90ReUd385Glkgzrfh5HdR5y5S2cL/Frh86lAn9r6b3iWTJD8wBwXFyoe1S2nMTOIuG4RPNvfmyCTYVh8XTCCE8HPvh3xv2r4egawG1P4Q4UDwk+hDBXThY2KS8M5/8EMyxHV0ImpLbpYCTBA6KYDIRtqmgS6iKyy8v2D1aSY5mc9J0T5t9S2Gv+VZQNWQDDKNFnxqYaAo1uEoq/i1q63XC5AD3ckXb2VT6dp23BQMdDfbHyUWfJN"
1748 }
1749 ]
1750 }
1751 },
1752 "vnf-topology-identifier-structure": {
1753 "vnf-name": "vLoadBalancer-Vnf-0211-1",
1754 "vnf-type": "vLoadBalancer/vLoadBalancer 0"
1755 },
1756 "vnf-resource-assignments": {
1757 "availability-zones": {
1758 "availability-zone": [
1759 "nova"
1760 ],
1761 "max-count": 1
1762 },
1763 "vnf-networks": {
1764 "vnf-network": []
1765 }
1766 }
1767 },
1768 "request-information": {
1769 "request-id": "robot12",
1770 "order-version": "1",
1771 "notification-url": "openecomp.org",
1772 "order-number": "1",
1773 "request-action": "PreloadVfModuleRequest"
1774 },
1775 "sdnc-request-header": {
1776 "svc-request-id": "robot12",
1777 "svc-notification-url": "http://openecomp.org:8080/adapters/rest/SDNCNotify",
1778 "svc-action": "reserve"
1779 }
1780 }
1781 }'
1782
1783
1784Module-1 Preload
1785~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1786
1787::
1788
1789 curl -X POST \
1790 http://<Any_K8S_Node_IP_Address>:30202/restconf/operations/GENERIC-RESOURCE-API:preload-vf-module-topology-operation \
1791 -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
1792 -H 'Postman-Token: 662914ac-29fc-414d-8823-1691fb2c718a' \
1793 -H 'cache-control: no-cache' \
1794 -d '{
1795 "input": {
1796 "preload-vf-module-topology-information": {
1797 "vf-module-topology": {
1798 "vf-module-topology-identifier": {
1799 "vf-module-name": "vLoadBalancer-0211-1"
1800 },
1801 "vf-module-parameters": {
1802 "param": [
1803 {
1804 "name": "vlb_image_name",
1805 "value": "ubuntu-16-04-cloud-amd64"
1806 },
1807 {
1808 "name": "vlb_flavor_name",
1809 "value": "m1.medium"
1810 },
1811 {
1812 "name": "public_net_id",
1813 "value": "public"
1814 },
1815 {
1816 "name": "int_private_net_id",
1817 "value": "vLBMS_zdfw1lb01_private_ms"
1818 },
1819 {
1820 "name": "int_private_subnet_id",
1821 "value": "vLBMS_zdfw1lb01_private_sub_ms"
1822 },
1823 {
1824 "name": "int_pktgen_private_net_id",
1825 "value": "vLBMS_zdfw1pktgen01_private_ms"
1826 },
1827 {
1828 "name": "int_pktgen_private_subnet_id",
1829 "value": "vLBMS_zdfw1pktgen01_private_sub_ms"
1830 },
1831 {
1832 "name": "onap_private_net_id",
1833 "value": "oam_onap_vnf_test"
1834 },
1835 {
1836 "name": "onap_private_subnet_id",
1837 "value": "oam_onap_vnf_test"
1838 },
1839 {
1840 "name": "vlb_private_net_cidr",
1841 "value": "192.168.10.0/24"
1842 },
1843 {
1844 "name": "pktgen_private_net_cidr",
1845 "value": "192.168.9.0/24"
1846 },
1847 {
1848 "name": "onap_private_net_cidr",
1849 "value": "10.0.0.0/16"
1850 },
1851 {
1852 "name": "vlb_int_private_ip_0",
1853 "value": "192.168.10.111"
1854 },
1855 {
1856 "name": "vlb_onap_private_ip_0",
1857 "value": "10.0.150.1"
1858 },
1859 {
1860 "name": "vlb_int_pktgen_private_ip_0",
1861 "value": "192.168.9.111"
1862 },
1863 {
1864 "name": "vdns_int_private_ip_0",
1865 "value": "192.168.10.211"
1866 },
1867 {
1868 "name": "vdns_onap_private_ip_0",
1869 "value": "10.0.150.3"
1870 },
1871 {
1872 "name": "vpg_int_pktgen_private_ip_0",
1873 "value": "192.168.9.110"
1874 },
1875 {
1876 "name": "vpg_onap_private_ip_0",
1877 "value": "10.0.150.2"
1878 },
1879 {
1880 "name": "vlb_name_0",
1881 "value": "vlb-0211-1"
1882 },
1883 {
1884 "name": "vlb_0_mac_address",
1885 "value": "fa:16:3e:00:01:10"
1886 },
1887 {
1888 "name": "vpg_0_mac_address",
1889 "value": "fa:16:3e:00:01:20"
1890 },
1891 {
1892 "name": "vip",
1893 "value": "192.168.9.112"
1894 },
1895 {
1896 "name": "gre_ipaddr",
1897 "value": "192.168.10.112"
1898 },
1899 {
1900 "name": "vnf_id",
1901 "value": "vLoadBalancerMS"
1902 },
1903 {
1904 "name": "vf_module_id",
1905 "value": "vLoadBalancerMS"
1906 },
1907 {
1908 "name": "vnf_name",
1909 "value": "vLBMS"
1910 },
1911 {
1912 "name": "dcae_collector_ip",
1913 "value": "10.12.5.20"
1914 },
1915 {
1916 "name": "dcae_collector_port",
1917 "value": "30235"
1918 },
1919 {
1920 "name": "demo_artifacts_version",
Marco Plataniaf2d8bca2019-10-13 10:47:19 -04001921 "value": "1.6.0-SNAPSHOT"
Marco Plataniac80274e2019-08-15 12:11:31 -04001922 },
1923 {
1924 "name": "install_script_version",
Marco Plataniaf2d8bca2019-10-13 10:47:19 -04001925 "value": "1.6.0-SNAPSHOT"
Marco Plataniac80274e2019-08-15 12:11:31 -04001926 },
1927 {
1928 "name": "nb_api_version",
1929 "value": "1.2.0"
1930 },
1931 {
1932 "name": "keypair",
1933 "value": "vlb_key"
1934 },
1935 {
1936 "name": "cloud_env",
1937 "value": "openstack"
1938 },
1939 {
1940 "name": "nexus_artifact_repo",
1941 "value": "https://nexus.onap.org"
1942 },
1943 {
1944 "name": "sec_group",
1945 "value": "default"
1946 }
1947 ]
1948 }
1949 },
1950 "vnf-topology-identifier-structure": {
1951 "vnf-name": "vLoadBalancer-Vnf-0211-1",
1952 "vnf-type": "vLoadBalancer/vLoadBalancer 0"
1953 },
1954 "vnf-resource-assignments": {
1955 "availability-zones": {
1956 "availability-zone": [
1957 "nova"
1958 ],
1959 "max-count": 1
1960 },
1961 "vnf-networks": {
1962 "vnf-network": []
1963 }
1964 }
1965 },
1966 "request-information": {
1967 "request-id": "robot12",
1968 "order-version": "1",
1969 "notification-url": "openecomp.org",
1970 "order-number": "1",
1971 "request-action": "PreloadVfModuleRequest"
1972 },
1973 "sdnc-request-header": {
1974 "svc-request-id": "robot12",
1975 "svc-notification-url": "http://openecomp.org:8080/adapters/rest/SDNCNotify",
1976 "svc-action": "reserve"
1977 }
1978 }
1979 }'
1980
1981
1982Module-2 Preload
1983~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1984::
1985
1986
1987 curl -X POST \
1988 http://<Any_K8S_Node_IP_Address>:30202/restconf/operations/GENERIC-RESOURCE-API:preload-vf-module-topology-operation \
1989 -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
1990 -H 'Postman-Token: 5f2490b3-6e4a-4512-9a0d-0aa6f6fa0ea8' \
1991 -H 'cache-control: no-cache' \
1992 -d '{
1993 "input": {
1994 "preload-vf-module-topology-information": {
1995 "vf-module-topology": {
1996 "vf-module-topology-identifier": {
1997 "vf-module-name": "vPacketGen-0211-1"
1998 },
1999 "vf-module-parameters": {
2000 "param": [
2001 {
2002 "name": "vpg_image_name",
2003 "value": "ubuntu-16-04-cloud-amd64"
2004 },
2005 {
2006 "name": "vpg_flavor_name",
2007 "value": "m1.medium"
2008 },
2009 {
2010 "name": "public_net_id",
2011 "value": "public"
2012 },
2013 {
2014 "name": "int_pktgen_private_net_id",
2015 "value": "vLBMS_zdfw1pktgen01_private_ms"
2016 },
2017 {
2018 "name": "int_pktgen_private_subnet_id",
2019 "value": "vLBMS_zdfw1pktgen01_private_sub_ms"
2020 },
2021 {
2022 "name": "onap_private_net_id",
2023 "value": "oam_onap_vnf_test"
2024 },
2025 {
2026 "name": "onap_private_subnet_id",
2027 "value": "oam_onap_vnf_test"
2028 },
2029 {
2030 "name": "pktgen_private_net_cidr",
2031 "value": "192.168.9.0/24"
2032 },
2033 {
2034 "name": "onap_private_net_cidr",
2035 "value": "10.0.0.0/16"
2036 },
2037 {
2038 "name": "vlb_int_pktgen_private_ip_0",
2039 "value": "192.168.9.111"
2040 },
2041 {
2042 "name": "vpg_int_pktgen_private_ip_0",
2043 "value": "192.168.9.110"
2044 },
2045 {
2046 "name": "vpg_onap_private_ip_0",
2047 "value": "10.0.150.2"
2048 },
2049 {
2050 "name": "vpg_name_0",
2051 "value": "vpg-0211-1"
2052 },
2053 {
2054 "name": "vlb_0_mac_address",
2055 "value": "fa:16:3e:00:01:10"
2056 },
2057 {
2058 "name": "vpg_0_mac_address",
2059 "value": "fa:16:3e:00:01:20"
2060 },
2061 {
2062 "name": "pg_int",
2063 "value": "192.168.9.109"
2064 },
2065 {
2066 "name": "vnf_id",
2067 "value": "vLoadBalancerMS"
2068 },
2069 {
2070 "name": "vf_module_id",
2071 "value": "vLoadBalancerMS"
2072 },
2073 {
2074 "name": "vnf_name",
2075 "value": "vLBMS"
2076 },
2077 {
2078 "name": "demo_artifacts_version",
Marco Plataniaf2d8bca2019-10-13 10:47:19 -04002079 "value": "1.6.0-SNAPSHOT"
Marco Plataniac80274e2019-08-15 12:11:31 -04002080 },
2081 {
2082 "name": "install_script_version",
Marco Plataniaf2d8bca2019-10-13 10:47:19 -04002083 "value": "1.6.0-SNAPSHOT"
Marco Plataniac80274e2019-08-15 12:11:31 -04002084 },
2085 {
2086 "name": "nb_api_version",
2087 "value": "1.2.0"
2088 },
2089 {
2090 "name": "keypair",
2091 "value": "vlb_key"
2092 },
2093 {
2094 "name": "cloud_env",
2095 "value": "openstack"
2096 },
2097 {
2098 "name": "nexus_artifact_repo",
2099 "value": "https://nexus.onap.org"
2100 },
2101 {
2102 "name": "sec_group",
2103 "value": "default"
2104 }
2105 ]
2106 }
2107 },
2108 "vnf-topology-identifier-structure": {
2109 "vnf-name": "vLoadBalancer-Vnf-0211-1",
2110 "vnf-type": "vLoadBalancer/vLoadBalancer 0"
2111 },
2112 "vnf-resource-assignments": {
2113 "availability-zones": {
2114 "availability-zone": [
2115 "nova"
2116 ],
2117 "max-count": 1
2118 },
2119 "vnf-networks": {
2120 "vnf-network": []
2121 }
2122 }
2123 },
2124 "request-information": {
2125 "request-id": "robot12",
2126 "order-version": "1",
2127 "notification-url": "openecomp.org",
2128 "order-number": "1",
2129 "request-action": "PreloadVfModuleRequest"
2130 },
2131 "sdnc-request-header": {
2132 "svc-request-id": "robot12",
2133 "svc-notification-url": "http://openecomp.org:8080/adapters/rest/SDNCNotify",
2134 "svc-action": "reserve"
2135 }
2136 }
2137 }'
2138
2139
2140Module-3 Preload
2141~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2142
2143::
2144
2145 curl -X POST \
2146 http://<Any_K8S_Node_IP_Address>:30202/restconf/operations/GENERIC-RESOURCE-API:preload-vf-module-topology-operation \
2147 -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
2148 -H 'Postman-Token: fd0a4706-f955-490a-875e-08ddd8fe002e' \
2149 -H 'cache-control: no-cache' \
2150 -d '{
2151 "input": {
2152 "preload-vf-module-topology-information": {
2153 "vf-module-topology": {
2154 "vf-module-topology-identifier": {
2155 "vf-module-name": "vDNS-0125-1"
2156 },
2157 "vf-module-parameters": {
2158 "param": [
2159 {
2160 "name": "vdns_image_name",
2161 "value": "ubuntu-16-04-cloud-amd64"
2162 },
2163 {
2164 "name": "vdns_flavor_name",
2165 "value": "m1.medium"
2166 },
2167 {
2168 "name": "public_net_id",
2169 "value": "public"
2170 },
2171 {
2172 "name": "int_private_net_id",
2173 "value": "vLBMS_zdfw1lb01_private"
2174 },
2175 {
2176 "name": "int_private_subnet_id",
2177 "value": "vLBMS_zdfw1lb01_private_sub_ms"
2178 },
2179 {
2180 "name": "onap_private_net_id",
2181 "value": "oam_onap_vnf_test"
2182 },
2183 {
2184 "name": "onap_private_subnet_id",
2185 "value": "oam_onap_vnf_test"
2186 },
2187 {
2188 "name": "vlb_private_net_cidr",
2189 "value": "192.168.10.0/24"
2190 },
2191 {
2192 "name": "onap_private_net_cidr",
2193 "value": "10.0.0.0/16"
2194 },
2195 {
2196 "name": "vlb_int_private_ip_0",
2197 "value": "192.168.10.111"
2198 },
2199 {
2200 "name": "vlb_onap_private_ip_0",
2201 "value": "10.0.150.1"
2202 },
2203 {
2204 "name": "vlb_int_pktgen_private_ip_0",
2205 "value": "192.168.9.111"
2206 },
2207 {
2208 "name": "vdns_int_private_ip_0",
2209 "value": "192.168.10.212"
2210 },
2211 {
2212 "name": "vdns_onap_private_ip_0",
2213 "value": "10.0.150.4"
2214 },
2215 {
2216 "name": "vdns_name_0",
2217 "value": "vdns-0211-1"
2218 },
2219 {
2220 "name": "vnf_id",
2221 "value": "vLoadBalancerMS"
2222 },
2223 {
2224 "name": "vf_module_id",
2225 "value": "vLoadBalancerMS"
2226 },
2227 {
2228 "name": "vnf_name",
2229 "value": "vLBMS"
2230 },
2231 {
2232 "name": "install_script_version",
Marco Plataniaf2d8bca2019-10-13 10:47:19 -04002233 "value": "1.6.0-SNAPSHOT"
Marco Plataniac80274e2019-08-15 12:11:31 -04002234 },
2235 {
2236 "name": "nb_api_version",
2237 "value": "1.2.0"
2238 },
2239 {
2240 "name": "keypair",
2241 "value": "vlb_key"
2242 },
2243 {
2244 "name": "cloud_env",
2245 "value": "openstack"
2246 },
2247 {
2248 "name": "sec_group",
2249 "value": "default"
2250 },
2251 {
2252 "name": "nexus_artifact_repo",
2253 "value": "https://nexus.onap.org"
2254 }
2255 ]
2256 }
2257 },
2258 "vnf-topology-identifier-structure": {
2259 "vnf-name": "vLoadBalancer-Vnf-0125-1",
2260 "vnf-type": "vLoadBalancer/vLoadBalancer 0"
2261 },
2262 "vnf-resource-assignments": {
2263 "availability-zones": {
2264 "availability-zone": [
2265 "nova"
2266 ],
2267 "max-count": 1
2268 },
2269 "vnf-networks": {
2270 "vnf-network": []
2271 }
2272 }
2273 },
2274 "request-information": {
2275 "request-id": "robot12",
2276 "order-version": "1",
2277 "notification-url": "openecomp.org",
2278 "order-number": "1",
2279 "request-action": "PreloadVfModuleRequest"
2280 },
2281 "sdnc-request-header": {
2282 "svc-request-id": "robot12",
2283 "svc-notification-url": "http://openecomp.org:8080/adapters/rest/SDNCNotify",
2284 "svc-action": "reserve"
2285 }
2286 }
2287 }'
2288
2289The Heat environment files already set many parameters used for VF module instantiation. Those parameters can be reused in the SDNC preload too, while placeholders like "PUT THE IP ADDRESS HERE" or "PUT THE PUBLIC KEY HERE" must be overridden.
2290
2291To instantiate VF modules, please refer to this wiki page: https://wiki.onap.org/display/DW/Tutorial+vIMS%3A+VID+Instantiate+the+VNF using vLB as ServiceType.
2292
22936) **Post Instantiation Actions**: Please refer to Sections 3-1 for vLB configuration and Section 3-2 for resource orchestration with heatbridge.
2294
22957) **Triggering Scale Out Manually**: Please refer to Section 4 to trigger scale out manually with direct API call to SO.
2296
2297
Marco Plataniaccf78702019-10-16 12:10:52 -04002298PART 6 - Known Issues and Resolutions
Marco Plataniac80274e2019-08-15 12:11:31 -04002299-------------------------------------
Marco Plataniae5064cd2018-11-28 15:33:47 -050023001) When running closed loop-enabled scale out, the closed loop designed in CLAMP conflicts with the default closed loop defined for the old vLB/vDNS use case
2301
Marco Platania93d2ff22020-04-16 16:09:55 -04002302Resolution: Change TCA configuration for the old vLB/vDNS use case
Marco Plataniae5064cd2018-11-28 15:33:47 -05002303
Marco Platania93d2ff22020-04-16 16:09:55 -04002304- Connect to Consul: http://ANY_K8S_IP:30270 and click on "Key/Value" → "dcae-tca-analytics"
Marco Plataniae5064cd2018-11-28 15:33:47 -05002305- Change "eventName" in the vLB default policy to something different, for example "vLB" instead of the default value "vLoadBalancer"
Marco Platania93d2ff22020-04-16 16:09:55 -04002306- Change "subscriberConsumerGroup" in the TCA configuration to something different, for example "OpenDCAE-c13" instead of the default value "OpenDCAE-c12"
Rene_Robert8f8f27f2019-07-01 15:18:40 +02002307- Click "UPDATE" to upload the new TCA configuration
ChrisC94604b82020-12-02 13:32:10 +01002308
23092) During Guilin testing, it has been noticed that there is an issue between SO and APPC for Healthcheck queries, this does not prevent the use case to proceed but limit APPC capabilities
2310