| .. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. |
| .. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 |
| .. Copyright 2018 Amdocs, Bell Canada |
| |
| .. Links |
| .. _Curated applications for Kubernetes: https://github.com/kubernetes/charts |
| .. _Services: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/services-networking/service/ |
| .. _ReplicaSet: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/workloads/controllers/replicaset/ |
| .. _StatefulSet: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/workloads/controllers/statefulset/ |
| .. _Helm Documentation: https://docs.helm.sh/helm/ |
| .. _Helm: https://docs.helm.sh/ |
| .. _Kubernetes: https://Kubernetes.io/ |
| .. _Kubernetes LoadBalancer: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/services-networking/service/#type-loadbalancer |
| .. _user-guide-label: |
| |
| OOM User Guide |
| ############## |
| |
| The ONAP Operations Manager (OOM) provide the ability to manage the entire |
| life-cycle of an ONAP installation, from the initial deployment to final |
| decommissioning. This guide provides instructions for users of ONAP to |
| use the Kubernetes_/Helm_ system as a complete ONAP management system. |
| |
| This guide provides many examples of Helm command line operations. For a |
| complete description of these commands please refer to the `Helm |
| Documentation`_. |
| |
| .. figure:: oomLogoV2-medium.png |
| :align: right |
| |
| The following sections describe the life-cycle operations: |
| |
| - Deploy_ - with built-in component dependency management |
| - Configure_ - unified configuration across all ONAP components |
| - Monitor_ - real-time health monitoring feeding to a Consul UI and Kubernetes |
| - Heal_- failed ONAP containers are recreated automatically |
| - Scale_ - cluster ONAP services to enable seamless scaling |
| - Upgrade_ - change-out containers or configuration with little or no service impact |
| - Delete_ - cleanup individual containers or entire deployments |
| |
| .. figure:: oomLogoV2-Deploy.png |
| :align: right |
| |
| Deploy |
| ====== |
| |
| The OOM team with assistance from the ONAP project teams, have built a |
| comprehensive set of Helm charts, yaml files very similar to TOSCA files, that |
| describe the composition of each of the ONAP components and the relationship |
| within and between components. Using this model Helm is able to deploy all of |
| ONAP with a few simple commands. |
| |
| Pre-requisites |
| -------------- |
| Your environment must have both the Kubernetes `kubectl` and Helm setup as a one time activity. |
| |
| Install Kubectl |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| Enter the following to install kubectl (on Ubuntu, there are slight differences on other O/Ss), the Kubernetes command line interface used to manage a Kubernetes cluster:: |
| |
| > curl -LO https://storage.googleapis.com/kubernetes-release/release/v1.8.10/bin/linux/amd64/kubectl |
| > chmod +x ./kubectl |
| > sudo mv ./kubectl /usr/local/bin/kubectl |
| > mkdir ~/.kube |
| |
| Paste kubectl config from Rancher (see the :ref:`cloud-setup-guide-label` for alternative Kubernetes environment setups) into the `~/.kube/config` file. |
| |
| Verify that the Kubernetes config is correct:: |
| |
| > kubectl get pods --all-namespaces |
| |
| At this point you should see six Kubernetes pods running. |
| |
| Install Helm |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| Helm is used by OOM for package and configuration management. To install Helm, enter the following:: |
| |
| > wget http://storage.googleapis.com/kubernetes-helm/helm-v2.9.1-linux-amd64.tar.gz |
| > tar -zxvf helm-v2.9.1-linux-amd64.tar.gz |
| > sudo mv linux-amd64/helm /usr/local/bin/helm |
| |
| Verify the Helm version with:: |
| |
| > helm version |
| |
| Install the Helm Tiller application and initialize with:: |
| |
| > helm init |
| |
| Install the Helm Repo |
| --------------------- |
| Once kubectl and Helm are setup, one needs to setup a local Helm server to server up the ONAP charts:: |
| |
| > helm install osn/onap |
| |
| .. note:: |
| The osn repo is not currently available so creation of a local repository is |
| required. |
| |
| Helm is able to use charts served up from a repository and comes setup with a |
| default CNCF provided `Curated applications for Kubernetes`_ repository called |
| stable which should be removed to avoid confusion:: |
| |
| > helm repo remove stable |
| |
| .. To setup the Open Source Networking Nexus repository for helm enter:: |
| .. > helm repo add osn 'https://nexus3.onap.org:10001/helm/helm-repo-in-nexus/master/' |
| |
| To prepare your system for an installation of ONAP, you'll need to:: |
| |
| > git clone -b beijing http://gerrit.onap.org/r/oom |
| > cd oom/kubernetes |
| |
| |
| To setup a local Helm server to server up the ONAP charts:: |
| |
| > helm init |
| > helm serve & |
| |
| Note the port number that is listed and use it in the Helm repo add as follows:: |
| |
| > helm repo add local http://127.0.0.1:8879 |
| |
| To get a list of all of the available Helm chart repositories:: |
| |
| > helm repo list |
| NAME URL |
| local http://127.0.0.1:8879 |
| |
| Then build your local Helm repository:: |
| |
| > make all |
| |
| The Helm search command reads through all of the repositories configured on the |
| system, and looks for matches:: |
| |
| > helm search -l |
| NAME VERSION DESCRIPTION |
| local/appc 2.0.0 Application Controller |
| local/clamp 2.0.0 ONAP Clamp |
| local/common 2.0.0 Common templates for inclusion in other charts |
| local/onap 2.0.0 Open Network Automation Platform (ONAP) |
| local/robot 2.0.0 A helm Chart for kubernetes-ONAP Robot |
| local/so 2.0.0 ONAP Service Orchestrator |
| |
| In any case, setup of the Helm repository is a one time activity. |
| |
| Once the repo is setup, installation of ONAP can be done with a single command:: |
| |
| > helm install local/onap --name development |
| |
| This will install ONAP from a local repository in a 'development' Helm release. |
| As described below, to override the default configuration values provided by |
| OOM, an environment file can be provided on the command line as follows:: |
| |
| > helm install local/onap --name development -f onap-development.yaml |
| |
| To get a summary of the status of all of the pods (containers) running in your |
| deployment:: |
| |
| > kubectl get pods --all-namespaces -o=wide |
| |
| .. note:: |
| The Kubernetes namespace concept allows for multiple instances of a component |
| (such as all of ONAP) to co-exist with other components in the same |
| Kubernetes cluster by isolating them entirely. Namespaces share only the |
| hosts that form the cluster thus providing isolation between production and |
| development systems as an example. The OOM deployment of ONAP in Beijing is |
| now done within a single Kubernetes namespace where in Amsterdam a namespace |
| was created for each of the ONAP components. |
| |
| .. note:: |
| The Helm `--name` option refers to a release name and not a Kubernetes namespace. |
| |
| |
| To install a specific version of a single ONAP component (`so` in this example) |
| with the given name enter:: |
| |
| > helm install onap/so --version 2.0.1 -n so |
| |
| To display details of a specific resource or group of resources type:: |
| |
| > kubectl describe pod so-1071802958-6twbl |
| |
| where the pod identifier refers to the auto-generated pod identifier. |
| |
| .. figure:: oomLogoV2-Configure.png |
| :align: right |
| |
| Configure |
| ========= |
| |
| Each project within ONAP has its own configuration data generally consisting |
| of: environment variables, configuration files, and database initial values. |
| Many technologies are used across the projects resulting in significant |
| operational complexity and an inability to apply global parameters across the |
| entire ONAP deployment. OOM solves this problem by introducing a common |
| configuration technology, Helm charts, that provide a hierarchical |
| configuration with the ability to override values with higher |
| level charts or command line options. |
| |
| The structure of the configuration of ONAP is shown in the following diagram. |
| Note that key/value pairs of a parent will always take precedence over those |
| of a child. Also note that values set on the command line have the highest |
| precedence of all. |
| |
| .. graphviz:: |
| |
| digraph config { |
| { |
| node [shape=folder] |
| oValues [label="values.yaml"] |
| demo [label="onap-demo.yaml"] |
| prod [label="onap-production.yaml"] |
| oReq [label="requirements.yaml"] |
| soValues [label="values.yaml"] |
| soReq [label="requirements.yaml"] |
| mdValues [label="values.yaml"] |
| } |
| { |
| oResources [label="resources"] |
| } |
| onap -> oResources |
| onap -> oValues |
| oResources -> environments |
| oResources -> oReq |
| oReq -> so |
| environments -> demo |
| environments -> prod |
| so -> soValues |
| so -> soReq |
| so -> charts |
| charts -> mariadb |
| mariadb -> mdValues |
| |
| } |
| |
| The top level onap/values.yaml file contains the values required to be set |
| before deploying ONAP. Here is the contents of this file: |
| |
| .. include:: onap_values.yaml |
| :code: yaml |
| |
| One may wish to create a value file that is specific to a given deployment such |
| that it can be differentiated from other deployments. For example, a |
| onap-development.yaml file may create a minimal environment for development |
| while onap-production.yaml might describe a production deployment that operates |
| independently of the developer version. |
| |
| For example, if the production OpenStack instance was different from a |
| developer's instance, the onap-production.yaml file may contain a different |
| value for the vnfDeployment/openstack/oam_network_cidr key as shown below. |
| |
| .. code-block:: yaml |
| |
| nsPrefix: onap |
| nodePortPrefix: 302 |
| apps: consul msb mso message-router sdnc vid robot portal policy appc aai |
| sdc dcaegen2 log cli multicloud clamp vnfsdk aaf kube2msb |
| dataRootDir: /dockerdata-nfs |
| |
| # docker repositories |
| repository: |
| onap: nexus3.onap.org:10001 |
| oom: oomk8s |
| aai: aaionap |
| filebeat: docker.elastic.co |
| |
| image: |
| pullPolicy: Never |
| |
| # vnf deployment environment |
| vnfDeployment: |
| openstack: |
| ubuntu_14_image: "Ubuntu_14.04.5_LTS" |
| public_net_id: "e8f51956-00dd-4425-af36-045716781ffc" |
| oam_network_id: "d4769dfb-c9e4-4f72-b3d6-1d18f4ac4ee6" |
| oam_subnet_id: "191f7580-acf6-4c2b-8ec0-ba7d99b3bc4e" |
| oam_network_cidr: "192.168.30.0/24" |
| <...> |
| |
| |
| To deploy ONAP with this environment file, enter:: |
| |
| > helm install local/onap -n beijing -f environments/onap-production.yaml |
| |
| .. include:: environments_onap_demo.yaml |
| :code: yaml |
| |
| When deploying all of ONAP a requirements.yaml file control which and what |
| version of the ONAP components are included. Here is an excerpt of this |
| file: |
| |
| .. code-block:: yaml |
| |
| # Referencing a named repo called 'local'. |
| # Can add this repo by running commands like: |
| # > helm serve |
| # > helm repo add local http://127.0.0.1:8879 |
| dependencies: |
| <...> |
| - name: so |
| version: ~2.0.0 |
| repository: '@local' |
| condition: so.enabled |
| <...> |
| |
| The ~ operator in the `so` version value indicates that the latest "2.X.X" |
| version of `so` shall be used thus allowing the chart to allow for minor |
| upgrades that don't impact the so API; hence, version 2.0.1 will be installed |
| in this case. |
| |
| The onap/resources/environment/onap-dev.yaml (see the excerpt below) enables |
| for fine grained control on what components are included as part of this |
| deployment. By changing this `so` line to `enabled: false` the `so` component |
| will not be deployed. If this change is part of an upgrade the existing `so` |
| component will be shut down. Other `so` parameters and even `so` child values |
| can be modified, for example the `so`'s `liveness` probe could be disabled |
| (which is not recommended as this change would disable auto-healing of `so`). |
| |
| .. code-block:: yaml |
| |
| ################################################################# |
| # Global configuration overrides. |
| # |
| # These overrides will affect all helm charts (ie. applications) |
| # that are listed below and are 'enabled'. |
| ################################################################# |
| global: |
| <...> |
| |
| ################################################################# |
| # Enable/disable and configure helm charts (ie. applications) |
| # to customize the ONAP deployment. |
| ################################################################# |
| aaf: |
| enabled: false |
| <...> |
| so: # Service Orchestrator |
| enabled: true |
| |
| replicaCount: 1 |
| |
| liveness: |
| # necessary to disable liveness probe when setting breakpoints |
| # in debugger so K8s doesn't restart unresponsive container |
| enabled: true |
| |
| <...> |
| |
| Accessing the ONAP Portal using OOM and a Kubernetes Cluster |
| ------------------------------------------------------------ |
| |
| The ONAP deployment created by OOM operates in a private IP network that isn't |
| publicly accessible (i.e. Openstack VMs with private internal network) which |
| blocks access to the ONAP Portal. To enable direct access to this Portal from a |
| user's own environment (a laptop etc.) the portal application's port 8989 is |
| exposed through a `Kubernetes LoadBalancer`_ object. |
| |
| Typically, to be able to access the Kubernetes nodes publicly a public address is |
| assigned. In Openstack this is a floating IP address. |
| |
| When the `portal-app` chart is deployed a Kubernetes service is created that |
| instantiates a load balancer. The LB chooses the private interface of one of |
| the nodes as in the example below (10.0.0.4 is private to the K8s cluster only). |
| Then to be able to access the portal on port 8989 from outside the K8s & |
| Openstack environment, the user needs to assign/get the floating IP address that |
| corresponds to the private IP as follows:: |
| |
| > kubectl -n onap get services|grep "portal-app" |
| portal-app LoadBalancer 10.43.142.201 10.0.0.4 8989:30215/TCP,8006:30213/TCP,8010:30214/TCP 1d app=portal-app,release=dev |
| |
| |
| In this example, use the 10.0.0.4 private address as a key find the |
| corresponding public address which in this example is 10.12.6.155. If you're |
| using OpenStack you'll do the lookup with the horizon GUI or the Openstack CLI |
| for your tenant (openstack server list). That IP is then used in your |
| `/etc/hosts` to map the fixed DNS aliases required by the ONAP Portal as shown |
| below:: |
| |
| 10.12.6.155 portal.api.simpledemo.onap.org |
| 10.12.6.155 vid.api.simpledemo.onap.org |
| 10.12.6.155 sdc.api.fe.simpledemo.onap.org |
| 10.12.6.155 portal-sdk.simpledemo.onap.org |
| 10.12.6.155 policy.api.simpledemo.onap.org |
| 10.12.6.155 aai.api.sparky.simpledemo.onap.org |
| 10.12.6.155 cli.api.simpledemo.onap.org |
| 10.12.6.155 msb.api.discovery.simpledemo.onap.org |
| |
| Ensure you've disabled any proxy settings the browser you are using to access |
| the portal and then simply access the familiar URL: |
| http://portal.api.simpledemo.onap.org:8989/ONAPPORTAL/login.htm |
| |
| |
| .. note:: |
| |
| | Alternatives Considered: |
| |
| - Kubernetes port forwarding was considered but discarded as it would require |
| the end user to run a script that opens up port forwarding tunnels to each of |
| the pods that provides a portal application widget. |
| |
| - Reverting to a VNC server similar to what was deployed in the Amsterdam |
| release was also considered but there were many issues with resolution, lack |
| of volume mount, /etc/hosts dynamic update, file upload that were a tall order |
| to solve in time for the Beijing release. |
| |
| Observations: |
| |
| - If you are not using floating IPs in your Kubernetes deployment and directly attaching |
| a public IP address (i.e. by using your public provider network) to your K8S Node |
| VMs' network interface, then the output of 'kubectl -n onap get services | grep "portal-app"' |
| will show your public IP instead of the private network's IP. Therefore, |
| you can grab this public IP directly (as compared to trying to find the floating |
| IP first) and map this IP in /etc/hosts. |
| |
| .. figure:: oomLogoV2-Monitor.png |
| :align: right |
| |
| Monitor |
| ======= |
| |
| All highly available systems include at least one facility to monitor the |
| health of components within the system. Such health monitors are often used as |
| inputs to distributed coordination systems (such as etcd, zookeeper, or consul) |
| and monitoring systems (such as nagios or zabbix). OOM provides two mechanisms |
| to monitor the real-time health of an ONAP deployment: |
| |
| - a Consul GUI for a human operator or downstream monitoring systems and |
| Kubernetes liveness probes that enable automatic healing of failed |
| containers, and |
| - a set of liveness probes which feed into the Kubernetes manager which |
| are described in the Heal section. |
| |
| Within ONAP, Consul is the monitoring system of choice and deployed by OOM in two parts: |
| |
| - a three-way, centralized Consul server cluster is deployed as a highly |
| available monitor of all of the ONAP components, and |
| - a number of Consul agents. |
| |
| The Consul server provides a user interface that allows a user to graphically |
| view the current health status of all of the ONAP components for which agents |
| have been created - a sample from the ONAP Integration labs follows: |
| |
| .. figure:: consulHealth.png |
| :align: center |
| |
| To see the real-time health of a deployment go to: http://<kubernetes IP>:30270/ui/ |
| where a GUI much like the following will be found: |
| |
| |
| .. figure:: oomLogoV2-Heal.png |
| :align: right |
| |
| Heal |
| ==== |
| |
| The ONAP deployment is defined by Helm charts as mentioned earlier. These Helm |
| charts are also used to implement automatic recoverability of ONAP components |
| when individual components fail. Once ONAP is deployed, a "liveness" probe |
| starts checking the health of the components after a specified startup time. |
| |
| Should a liveness probe indicate a failed container it will be terminated and a |
| replacement will be started in its place - containers are ephemeral. Should the |
| deployment specification indicate that there are one or more dependencies to |
| this container or component (for example a dependency on a database) the |
| dependency will be satisfied before the replacement container/component is |
| started. This mechanism ensures that, after a failure, all of the ONAP |
| components restart successfully. |
| |
| To test healing, the following command can be used to delete a pod:: |
| |
| > kubectl delete pod [pod name] -n [pod namespace] |
| |
| One could then use the following command to monitor the pods and observe the |
| pod being terminated and the service being automatically healed with the |
| creation of a replacement pod:: |
| |
| > kubectl get pods --all-namespaces -o=wide |
| |
| .. figure:: oomLogoV2-Scale.png |
| :align: right |
| |
| Scale |
| ===== |
| |
| Many of the ONAP components are horizontally scalable which allows them to |
| adapt to expected offered load. During the Beijing release scaling is static, |
| that is during deployment or upgrade a cluster size is defined and this cluster |
| will be maintained even in the presence of faults. The parameter that controls |
| the cluster size of a given component is found in the values.yaml file for that |
| component. Here is an excerpt that shows this parameter: |
| |
| .. code-block:: yaml |
| |
| # default number of instances |
| replicaCount: 1 |
| |
| In order to change the size of a cluster, an operator could use a helm upgrade |
| (described in detail in the next section) as follows:: |
| |
| > helm upgrade --set replicaCount=3 onap/so/mariadb |
| |
| The ONAP components use Kubernetes provided facilities to build clustered, |
| highly available systems including: Services_ with load-balancers, ReplicaSet_, |
| and StatefulSet_. Some of the open-source projects used by the ONAP components |
| directly support clustered configurations, for example ODL and MariaDB Galera. |
| |
| The Kubernetes Services_ abstraction to provide a consistent access point for |
| each of the ONAP components, independent of the pod or container architecture |
| of that component. For example, SDN-C uses OpenDaylight clustering with a |
| default cluster size of three but uses a Kubernetes service to and change the |
| number of pods in this abstract this cluster from the other ONAP components |
| such that the cluster could change size and this change is isolated from the |
| other ONAP components by the load-balancer implemented in the ODL service |
| abstraction. |
| |
| A ReplicaSet_ is a construct that is used to describe the desired state of the |
| cluster. For example 'replicas: 3' indicates to Kubernetes that a cluster of 3 |
| instances is the desired state. Should one of the members of the cluster fail, |
| a new member will be automatically started to replace it. |
| |
| Some of the ONAP components many need a more deterministic deployment; for |
| example to enable intra-cluster communication. For these applications the |
| component can be deployed as a Kubernetes StatefulSet_ which will maintain a |
| persistent identifier for the pods and thus a stable network id for the pods. |
| For example: the pod names might be web-0, web-1, web-{N-1} for N 'web' pods |
| with corresponding DNS entries such that intra service communication is simple |
| even if the pods are physically distributed across multiple nodes. An example |
| of how these capabilities can be used is described in the Running Consul on |
| Kubernetes tutorial. |
| |
| .. figure:: oomLogoV2-Upgrade.png |
| :align: right |
| |
| Upgrade |
| ======= |
| |
| Helm has built-in capabilities to enable the upgrade of pods without causing a |
| loss of the service being provided by that pod or pods (if configured as a |
| cluster). As described in the OOM Developer's Guide, ONAP components provide |
| an abstracted 'service' end point with the pods or containers providing this |
| service hidden from other ONAP components by a load balancer. This capability |
| is used during upgrades to allow a pod with a new image to be added to the |
| service before removing the pod with the old image. This 'make before break' |
| capability ensures minimal downtime. |
| |
| Prior to doing an upgrade, determine of the status of the deployed charts:: |
| |
| > helm list |
| NAME REVISION UPDATED STATUS CHART NAMESPACE |
| so 1 Mon Feb 5 10:05:22 2018 DEPLOYED so-2.0.1 default |
| |
| When upgrading a cluster a parameter controls the minimum size of the cluster |
| during the upgrade while another parameter controls the maximum number of nodes |
| in the cluster. For example, SNDC configured as a 3-way ODL cluster might |
| require that during the upgrade no fewer than 2 pods are available at all times |
| to provide service while no more than 5 pods are ever deployed across the two |
| versions at any one time to avoid depleting the cluster of resources. In this |
| scenario, the SDNC cluster would start with 3 old pods then Kubernetes may add |
| a new pod (3 old, 1 new), delete one old (2 old, 1 new), add two new pods (2 |
| old, 3 new) and finally delete the 2 old pods (3 new). During this sequence |
| the constraints of the minimum of two pods and maximum of five would be |
| maintained while providing service the whole time. |
| |
| Initiation of an upgrade is triggered by changes in the Helm charts. For |
| example, if the image specified for one of the pods in the SDNC deployment |
| specification were to change (i.e. point to a new Docker image in the nexus3 |
| repository - commonly through the change of a deployment variable), the |
| sequence of events described in the previous paragraph would be initiated. |
| |
| For example, to upgrade a container by changing configuration, specifically an |
| environment value:: |
| |
| > helm upgrade beijing onap/so --version 2.0.1 --set enableDebug=true |
| |
| Issuing this command will result in the appropriate container being stopped by |
| Kubernetes and replaced with a new container with the new environment value. |
| |
| To upgrade a component to a new version with a new configuration file enter:: |
| |
| > helm upgrade beijing onap/so --version 2.0.2 -f environments/demo.yaml |
| |
| To fetch release history enter:: |
| |
| > helm history so |
| REVISION UPDATED STATUS CHART DESCRIPTION |
| 1 Mon Feb 5 10:05:22 2018 SUPERSEDED so-2.0.1 Install complete |
| 2 Mon Feb 5 10:10:55 2018 DEPLOYED so-2.0.2 Upgrade complete |
| |
| Unfortunately, not all upgrades are successful. In recognition of this the |
| lineup of pods within an ONAP deployment is tagged such that an administrator |
| may force the ONAP deployment back to the previously tagged configuration or to |
| a specific configuration, say to jump back two steps if an incompatibility |
| between two ONAP components is discovered after the two individual upgrades |
| succeeded. |
| |
| This rollback functionality gives the administrator confidence that in the |
| unfortunate circumstance of a failed upgrade the system can be rapidly brought |
| back to a known good state. This process of rolling upgrades while under |
| service is illustrated in this short YouTube video showing a Zero Downtime |
| Upgrade of a web application while under a 10 million transaction per second |
| load. |
| |
| For example, to roll-back back to previous system revision enter:: |
| |
| > helm rollback so 1 |
| |
| > helm history so |
| REVISION UPDATED STATUS CHART DESCRIPTION |
| 1 Mon Feb 5 10:05:22 2018 SUPERSEDED so-2.0.1 Install complete |
| 2 Mon Feb 5 10:10:55 2018 SUPERSEDED so-2.0.2 Upgrade complete |
| 3 Mon Feb 5 10:14:32 2018 DEPLOYED so-2.0.1 Rollback to 1 |
| |
| .. note:: |
| |
| The description field can be overridden to document actions taken or include |
| tracking numbers. |
| |
| Many of the ONAP components contain their own databases which are used to |
| record configuration or state information. The schemas of these databases may |
| change from version to version in such a way that data stored within the |
| database needs to be migrated between versions. If such a migration script is |
| available it can be invoked during the upgrade (or rollback) by Container |
| Lifecycle Hooks. Two such hooks are available, PostStart and PreStop, which |
| containers can access by registering a handler against one or both. Note that |
| it is the responsibility of the ONAP component owners to implement the hook |
| handlers - which could be a shell script or a call to a specific container HTTP |
| endpoint - following the guidelines listed on the Kubernetes site. Lifecycle |
| hooks are not restricted to database migration or even upgrades but can be used |
| anywhere specific operations need to be taken during lifecycle operations. |
| |
| OOM uses Helm K8S package manager to deploy ONAP components. Each component is |
| arranged in a packaging format called a chart - a collection of files that |
| describe a set of k8s resources. Helm allows for rolling upgrades of the ONAP |
| component deployed. To upgrade a component Helm release you will need an |
| updated Helm chart. The chart might have modified, deleted or added values, |
| deployment yamls, and more. To get the release name use:: |
| |
| > helm ls |
| |
| To easily upgrade the release use:: |
| |
| > helm upgrade [RELEASE] [CHART] |
| |
| To roll back to a previous release version use:: |
| |
| > helm rollback [flags] [RELEASE] [REVISION] |
| |
| For example, to upgrade the onap-so helm release to the latest SO container |
| release v1.1.2: |
| |
| - Edit so values.yaml which is part of the chart |
| - Change "so: nexus3.onap.org:10001/openecomp/so:v1.1.1" to |
| "so: nexus3.onap.org:10001/openecomp/so:v1.1.2" |
| - From the chart location run:: |
| |
| > helm upgrade onap-so |
| |
| The previous so pod will be terminated and a new so pod with an updated so |
| container will be created. |
| |
| .. figure:: oomLogoV2-Delete.png |
| :align: right |
| |
| Delete |
| ====== |
| |
| Existing deployments can be partially or fully removed once they are no longer |
| needed. To minimize errors it is recommended that before deleting components |
| from a running deployment the operator perform a 'dry-run' to display exactly |
| what will happen with a given command prior to actually deleting anything. For |
| example:: |
| |
| > helm delete --dry-run beijing |
| |
| will display the outcome of deleting the 'beijing' release from the deployment. |
| To completely delete a release and remove it from the internal store enter:: |
| |
| > helm delete --purge beijing |
| |
| One can also remove individual components from a deployment by changing the |
| ONAP configuration values. For example, to remove `so` from a running |
| deployment enter:: |
| |
| > helm upgrade beijing osn/onap --set so.enabled=false |
| |
| will remove `so` as the configuration indicates it's no longer part of the |
| deployment. This might be useful if a one wanted to replace just `so` by |
| installing a custom version. |