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Petr Ospalýbe81ab02019-02-14 21:30:31 +01001.. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
2.. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
3.. Copyright 2019 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd.
4
5.. _oooi_installguide:
6
7OOM ONAP Offline Installer - Installation Guide
8===============================================
9
10This document describes the correct offline installation procedure for `OOM ONAP`_, which is done by the ansible based `offline-installer <https://gerrit.onap.org/r/#/admin/projects/oom/offline-installer>`_.
11
12Before you dive into the installation you should prepare the offline installer itself - the installer consists of at least two packages/resources. You can read about it in the `Build Guide`_, which provides the instructions for creating them.
13
Tomáš Levora2a355bb2019-10-10 14:04:08 +020014This current version of the *Installation Guide* supports `El Alto release`_.
Petr Ospalýbe81ab02019-02-14 21:30:31 +010015
16-----
17
18.. _oooi_installguide_preparations:
19
20Part 1. Prerequisites
21---------------------
22
Tomáš Levora2a355bb2019-10-10 14:04:08 +020023OOM ONAP deployment has certain hardware resource requirements - `El Alto requirements`_:
Petr Ospalýbe81ab02019-02-14 21:30:31 +010024
Tomáš Levora2a355bb2019-10-10 14:04:08 +020025Community recommended footprint from `El Alto requirements`_ page is 16 VMs ``224 GB RAM`` and ``112 vCPUs``. We will not follow strictly this setup due to such demanding resource consumption and so we will deploy our installation across four nodes (VMs) instead of sixteen. Our simplified setup is definitively not supported or recommended - you are free to diverge - you can follow the official guidelines or make completely different layout, but the minimal count of nodes should not drop below three - otherwise you may have to do some tweaking to make it work, which is not covered here (there is a pod count limit for a single kubernetes node - you can read more about it in this `discussion <https://lists.onap.org/g/onap-discuss/topic/oom_110_kubernetes_pod/25213556>`_).
Petr Ospalýbe81ab02019-02-14 21:30:31 +010026
27.. _oooi_installguide_preparations_k8s_cluster:
28
29Kubernetes cluster
30~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
31
32The four nodes/VMs will be running these services:
33
34- **infra-node**::
35
36 - nexus
37 - nginx proxy
38 - dns
Michal Ptacek26278df2019-07-09 10:46:26 +000039 - kubernetes-etcd
40 - kubernetes-control-plane
41
42**NOTE:** kubernetes-* roles can be collocated directly with kubernetes nodes and not necessarily on infra node.
Petr Ospalýbe81ab02019-02-14 21:30:31 +010043
44- **kubernetes node 1-3**::
45
Michal Ptacek26278df2019-07-09 10:46:26 +000046 - kubernetes worker
Petr Ospalýbe81ab02019-02-14 21:30:31 +010047
48You don't need to care about these services now - that is the responsibility of the installer (described below). Just start four VMs as seen in this table (or according to your needs as we hinted above):
49
50.. _Overview table of the kubernetes cluster:
51
52Kubernetes cluster overview
53^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
54
Tomáš Levora2a355bb2019-10-10 14:04:08 +020055In El Alto we are using RKE as k8s orchestrator method, however everyone is free to diverge from this example and can set it up in own way omitting our rke playbook execution.
Michal Ptacek26278df2019-07-09 10:46:26 +000056
Tomáš Levora2a355bb2019-10-10 14:04:08 +020057=================== ================== ==================== ============== ============ ===============
58KUBERNETES NODE OS NETWORK CPU RAM STORAGE
59=================== ================== ==================== ============== ============ ===============
60**infra-node** RHEL/CentOS 7.6 ``10.8.8.100/24`` ``8 vCPUs`` ``8 GB`` ``100 GB``
61**kube-node1** RHEL/CentOS 7.6 ``10.8.8.101/24`` ``16 vCPUs`` ``56+ GB`` ``100 GB``
62**kube-node2** RHEL/CentOS 7.6 ``10.8.8.102/24`` ``16 vCPUs`` ``56+ GB`` ``100 GB``
63**kube-node3** RHEL/CentOS 7.6 ``10.8.8.103/24`` ``16 vCPUs`` ``56+ GB`` ``100 GB``
64SUM ``56 vCPUs`` ``176+ GB`` ``400 GB``
65=========================================================== ============== ============ ===============
Petr Ospalýbe81ab02019-02-14 21:30:31 +010066
Tomáš Levora2a355bb2019-10-10 14:04:08 +020067Unfortunately, the offline installer supports only **RHEL 7.x** or **CentOS 7.6** distribution as of now. So, your VMs should be preinstalled with this operating system - the hypervisor and platform can be of your choosing.
Petr Ospalýbe81ab02019-02-14 21:30:31 +010068
69We will expect from now on that you installed four VMs and they are connected to the shared network. All VMs must be reachable from our *install-server* (below), which can be the hypervisor, *infra-node* or completely different machine. But in either of these cases the *install-server* must be able to connect over ssh to all of these nodes.
70
71.. _oooi_installguide_preparations_installserver:
72
73Install-server
74~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
75
76We will use distinct *install-server* and keep it separate from the four-node cluster. But if you wish so, you can use *infra-node* for this goal (if you use the default ``'chroot'`` option of the installer), but in that case double the size of the storage requirement!
77
78Prerequisites for the *install-server*:
79
80- packages described in `Build Guide`_
81- extra ``100 GB`` storage (to have space where to store these packages)
82- installed ``'chroot'`` and/or ``'docker'`` system commands
83- network connection to the nodes - especially functioning ssh client
84
85Our *install-server* will have ip: ``10.8.8.4``.
86
87**NOTE:** All the subsequent commands below, are executed from within this *install-server*.
88
89-----
90
91.. _oooi_installguide_config:
92
93Part 2. Preparation and configuration
94-------------------------------------
95
96We *MUST* do all the following instructions from the *install-server* and also we will be running them as a user ``root``. But that is not necessary - you can without any problem pick and use a regular user. The ssh/ansible connection to the nodes will also expect that we are connecting as a ``root`` - you need to elevate privileges to be able to install on them. Although it can be achieved by other means (sudo), we decided here to keep instructions simple.
97
98.. _oooi_installguide_config_packages:
99
100Installer packages
101~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
102
103As was stated above you must have prepared the installer packages (names will differ - check out the `Build Guide`_):
104
Michal Ptacek26278df2019-07-09 10:46:26 +0000105- sw_package.tar
106- resources_package.tar
107- aux_package.tar
Petr Ospalýbe81ab02019-02-14 21:30:31 +0100108
Michal Ptacek26278df2019-07-09 10:46:26 +0000109**NOTE:** ``'aux_package.tar'`` is optional and if you don't have use for it, you can ignore it.
Petr Ospalýbe81ab02019-02-14 21:30:31 +0100110
111We will store them in the ``/data`` directory on the *install-server* and then we will unpack the ``'sw'`` package to your home directory for example::
112
113 $ mkdir ~/onap-offline-installer
Michal Ptacek26278df2019-07-09 10:46:26 +0000114 $ tar -C ~/onap-offline-installer -xf /data/sw_package.tar
Petr Ospalýbe81ab02019-02-14 21:30:31 +0100115
116.. _oooi_installguide_config_app:
117
118Application directory
119~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
120
121Change the current directory to the ``'ansible'``::
122
123 $ cd ~/onap-offline-installer/ansible
124
125You can see multiple files and directories inside - this is the *offline-installer*. It is implemented as a set of ansible playbooks.
126
Denis Kasanica7702f22019-11-14 12:35:46 +0100127If you created the ``'sw'`` package according to the *Build Guide* then you should have had the *offline-installer* populated with at least the following files:
Petr Ospalýbe81ab02019-02-14 21:30:31 +0100128
Denis Kasanica7702f22019-11-14 12:35:46 +0100129- ``application/application_configuration.yml``
130- ``inventory/hosts.yml``
Petr Ospalýbe81ab02019-02-14 21:30:31 +0100131
Denis Kasanica7702f22019-11-14 12:35:46 +0100132Following paragraphs describe fine-tuning of ``'inventory.yml'`` and ``'application_configuration.yml'`` to reflect your VMs setup.
Petr Ospalýbe81ab02019-02-14 21:30:31 +0100133
134.. _oooi_installguide_config_hosts:
135
136hosts.yml
137~~~~~~~~~
138
139We need to setup the ``'hosts.yml'`` first, the template looks like this::
140
141 ---
142 # This group contains hosts with all resources (binaries, packages, etc.)
143 # in tarball.
144 all:
145 vars:
146 # this key is supposed to be generated during setup.yml playbook execution
147 # change it just when you have better one working for all nodes
148 ansible_ssh_private_key_file: /root/.ssh/offline_ssh_key
149 ansible_ssh_common_args: '-o StrictHostKeyChecking=no'
150
151 children:
152 resources:
153 hosts:
154 resource-host:
155 ansible_host: 10.8.8.5
156
157 # This is group of hosts where nexus, nginx, dns and all other required
158 # services are running.
159 infrastructure:
160 hosts:
161 infrastructure-server:
162 ansible_host: 10.8.8.13
163 #IP used for communication between infra and kubernetes nodes, must be specified.
164 cluster_ip: 10.8.8.13
165
166 # This is group of hosts which are/will be part of Kubernetes cluster.
167 kubernetes:
Michal Zeganf9ef0c12019-06-25 11:05:05 +0200168 children:
169 # This is a group of hosts containing kubernetes worker nodes.
170 kubernetes-node:
171 hosts:
172 kubernetes-node-1:
173 ansible_host: 10.8.8.19
174 #ip of the node that it uses for communication with k8s cluster.
175 cluster_ip: 10.8.8.19
Petr Ospalýbe81ab02019-02-14 21:30:31 +0100176
Michal Zeganf9ef0c12019-06-25 11:05:05 +0200177 # Group of hosts containing etcd cluster nodes.
178 # Defaults to infra.
179 kubernetes-etcd:
180 hosts:
181 infrastructure-server
182
183 # This is a group of hosts that are to be used as kubernetes control plane nodes.
184 # This means they host kubernetes api server, controller manager and scheduler.
185 # This example uses infra for this purpose, however note that any
186 # other host could be used including kubernetes nodes.
187 # cluster_ip needs to be set for hosts used as control planes.
188 kubernetes-control-plane:
189 hosts:
190 infrastructure-server
Bartek Grzybowskicf6797c2019-05-22 14:53:31 +0200191
Petr Ospalýbe81ab02019-02-14 21:30:31 +0100192 nfs-server:
193 hosts:
194 kubernetes-node-1
195
196There is some ssh configuration under the ``'vars'`` section - we will deal with ssh setup a little bit later in the `SSH authentication`_.
197
198We need to first correct the ip addresses and add a couple of kubernetes nodes to match our four-node cluster:
199
200- Under the ``'resource-host'`` set the ``'ansible_host'`` address to the ip of your server, where the packages are stored - it must be reachable by ssh from the *install-server* (for ansible to run playbooks on it) **AND** *infra-node* (to extract resource data from *resource-host* to *infra-node* over ssh). In our scenario the *resource-host* is the same as the *install-server*: ``'10.8.8.4'``
201- Similarly, set the ``'ansible_host'`` to the address of the *infra-node* under the ``'infrastructure-server'``.
202- Copy the whole ``'kubernetes-node-1'`` subsection and paste it twice directly after. Change the numbers to ``'kubernetes-node-2'`` and ``'kubernetes-node-3'`` respectively and fix the addresses in the ``'ansible_host'`` variables again to match *kube-node1*, *kube-node2* and *kube-node3*.
203
204As you can see, there is another ``'cluster_ip'`` variable for each node - this serve as a designated node address in the kubernetes cluster. Make it the same as the respective ``'ansible_host'``.
205
206**NOTE:** In our simple setup we have only one interface per node, but that does not need to be a case for some other deployment - especially if we start to deal with a production usage. Basically, an ``'ansible_host'`` is an entry point for the *install-server's* ansible (*offline-installer*), but the kubernetes cluster can be communicating on a separate network to which *install-server* has no access. That is why we have this distinctive variable, so we can tell the installer that there is a different network, where we want to run the kubernetes traffic and what address each node has on such a network.
207
208After all the changes, the ``'hosts.yml'`` should look similar to this::
209
210 ---
211 # This group contains hosts with all resources (binaries, packages, etc.)
212 # in tarball.
213 all:
214 vars:
215 # this key is supposed to be generated during setup.yml playbook execution
216 # change it just when you have better one working for all nodes
217 ansible_ssh_private_key_file: /root/.ssh/offline_ssh_key
218 ansible_ssh_common_args: '-o StrictHostKeyChecking=no'
219
220 children:
221 resources:
222 hosts:
223 resource-host:
224 ansible_host: 10.8.8.4
225
226 # This is group of hosts where nexus, nginx, dns and all other required
227 # services are running.
228 infrastructure:
229 hosts:
230 infrastructure-server:
Denis Kasanica7702f22019-11-14 12:35:46 +0100231 ansible_host: 10.8.8.100
Petr Ospalýbe81ab02019-02-14 21:30:31 +0100232 #IP used for communication between infra and kubernetes nodes, must be specified.
233 cluster_ip: 10.8.8.100
234
235 # This is group of hosts which are/will be part of Kubernetes cluster.
236 kubernetes:
Michal Zeganf9ef0c12019-06-25 11:05:05 +0200237 children:
238 # This is a group of hosts containing kubernetes worker nodes.
239 kubernetes-node:
240 hosts:
241 kubernetes-node-1:
242 ansible_host: 10.8.8.101
243 #ip of the node that it uses for communication with k8s cluster.
244 cluster_ip: 10.8.8.101
245 kubernetes-node-2:
246 ansible_host: 10.8.8.102
247 #ip of the node that it uses for communication with k8s cluster.
248 cluster_ip: 10.8.8.102
249 kubernetes-node-3:
250 ansible_host: 10.8.8.103
251 #ip of the node that it uses for communication with k8s cluster.
252 cluster_ip: 10.8.8.103
Petr Ospalýbe81ab02019-02-14 21:30:31 +0100253
Michal Zeganf9ef0c12019-06-25 11:05:05 +0200254 # Group of hosts containing etcd cluster nodes.
255 # Defaults to infra.
256 kubernetes-etcd:
257 hosts:
258 infrastructure-server
259
260 # This is a group of hosts that are to be used as kubernetes control plane nodes.
261 # This means they host kubernetes api server, controller manager and scheduler.
262 # This example uses infra for this purpose, however note that any
263 # other host could be used including kubernetes nodes.
264 # cluster_ip needs to be set for hosts used as control planes.
265 kubernetes-control-plane:
266 hosts:
267 infrastructure-server
Bartek Grzybowskicf6797c2019-05-22 14:53:31 +0200268
Petr Ospalýbe81ab02019-02-14 21:30:31 +0100269 nfs-server:
270 hosts:
271 kubernetes-node-1
272
273.. _oooi_installguide_config_appconfig:
274
275application_configuration.yml
276~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
277
278Here, we will be interested in the following variables:
279
280- ``resources_dir``
281- ``resources_filename``
282- ``aux_resources_filename``
283- ``app_data_path``
284- ``aux_data_path``
285- ``app_name``
Bartek Grzybowski30b2cbf2019-03-26 16:10:10 +0100286- ``timesync``
Petr Ospalýbe81ab02019-02-14 21:30:31 +0100287
288``'resource_dir'``, ``'resources_filename'`` and ``'aux_resources_filename'`` must correspond to the file paths on the *resource-host* (variable ``'resource_host'``), which is in our case the *install-server*.
289
Michal Ptacek26278df2019-07-09 10:46:26 +0000290The ``'resource_dir'`` should be set to ``'/data'``, ``'resources_filename'`` to ``'resources_package.tar'`` and ``'aux_resources_filename'`` to ``'aux_package.tar'``. The values should be the same as are in the `Installer packages`_ section.
Petr Ospalýbe81ab02019-02-14 21:30:31 +0100291
Michal Ptacek26278df2019-07-09 10:46:26 +0000292``'app_data_path'`` is the absolute path on the *infra-node* to where the package ``'resources_package.tar'`` will be extracted and similarly ``'aux_data_path'`` is another absolute path for ``'aux_package.tar'``. Both the paths are fully arbitrary, but they should point to the filesystem with enough space - the storage requirement in `Overview table of the kubernetes cluster`_.
Petr Ospalýbe81ab02019-02-14 21:30:31 +0100293
294**NOTE:** As we mentioned in `Installer packages`_ - the auxiliary package is not mandatory and we will not utilize it in here either.
295
Bartek Grzybowski30b2cbf2019-03-26 16:10:10 +0100296The ``'app_name'`` variable should be short and descriptive. We will set it simply to: ``onap``.
Petr Ospalýbe81ab02019-02-14 21:30:31 +0100297
Bartek Grzybowski30b2cbf2019-03-26 16:10:10 +0100298The ``'timesync'`` variable is optional and controls synchronisation of the system clock on hosts. It should be configured only if a custom NTP server is available and needed. Such a time authority should be on a host reachable from all installation nodes. If this setting is not provided then the default behavior is to setup NTP daemon on infra-node and sync all kube-nodes' time with it.
299
300If you wish to provide your own NTP servers configure their IPs as follows::
301
302 timesync:
303 servers:
304 - <ip address of NTP_1>
305 - <...>
306 - <ip address of NTP_N>
307
308Another time adjustment related variables are ``'timesync.slewclock'`` and ``'timesync.timezone'`` .
309First one can have value of ``'true'`` or ``'false'`` (default). It controls whether (in case of big time difference compared to server) time should be adjusted gradually by slowing down or speeding up the clock as required (``'true'``) or in one step (``'false'``)::
310
311 timesync:
312 slewclock: true
313
314Second one controls time zone setting on host. It's value should be time zone name according to tz database names with ``'Universal'`` being the default one::
315
316 timesync.
317 timezone: UTC
318
319``'timesync.servers'``, ``'timesync.slewclock'`` and ``'timesync.timezone'`` settings can be used independently.
320
321Final configuration can resemble the following::
Petr Ospalýbe81ab02019-02-14 21:30:31 +0100322
323 resources_dir: /data
Denis Kasanica7702f22019-11-14 12:35:46 +0100324 resources_filename: resources_package.tar
Petr Ospalýbe81ab02019-02-14 21:30:31 +0100325 app_data_path: /opt/onap
326 app_name: onap
Bartek Grzybowski30b2cbf2019-03-26 16:10:10 +0100327 timesync:
328 servers:
329 - 192.168.0.1
330 - 192.168.0.2
331 slewclock: true
332 timezone: UTC
Petr Ospalýbe81ab02019-02-14 21:30:31 +0100333
Michal Zegana579c982019-04-02 15:33:30 +0200334.. _oooi_installguide_config_appconfig_overrides:
335
336Helm chart value overrides
337^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
338
Tomáš Levora2a355bb2019-10-10 14:04:08 +0200339In El Alto OOM charts are coming with all ONAP components disabled, this setting is also prepackaged within our sw_package.tar. Luckily there are multiple ways supported how to override this setting. It's also necessary for setting-up VIM specific entries and basically to configure any stuff with non default values.
Michal Ptacek26278df2019-07-09 10:46:26 +0000340
341First option is to use ``overrides`` key in ``application_configuration.yml``.
Michal Zegana579c982019-04-02 15:33:30 +0200342These settings will override helm values originally stored in ``values.yaml`` files in helm chart directories.
343
344For example, the following lines could be appended to ``application_configuration.yml`` to set up managed openstack credentials for onap's so component::
345
346 overrides:
347 so:
348 config:
349 openStackUserName: "os_user"
350 openStackRegion: "region_name"
351 openStackKeyStoneUrl: "keystone_url"
352 openStackEncryptedPasswordHere: "encrypted_password"
353
Michal Ptacek26278df2019-07-09 10:46:26 +0000354In addition or alternatively to that one can configure ``helm_override_files`` key, which is new feature implemented in Change-Id: I8b8ded38b39aa9a75e55fc63fa0e11b986556cb8.
355
Petr Ospalýbe81ab02019-02-14 21:30:31 +0100356.. _oooi_installguide_config_ssh:
357
358SSH authentication
359~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
360
361We are almost finished with the configuration and we are close to start the installation, but we need to setup password-less login from *install-server* to the nodes.
362
363You can use the ansible playbook ``'setup.yml'`` like this::
364
Denis Kasanica7702f22019-11-14 12:35:46 +0100365 $ ./run_playbook.sh -i inventory/hosts.yml setup.yml -u root --ask-pass
Petr Ospalýbe81ab02019-02-14 21:30:31 +0100366
367You will be asked for password per each node and the playbook will generate a unprotected ssh key-pair ``'~/.ssh/offline_ssh_key'``, which will be distributed to the nodes.
368
369Another option is to generate a ssh key-pair manually. We strongly advise you to protect it with a passphrase, but for simplicity we will showcase generating of a private key without any such protection::
370
371 $ ssh-keygen -N "" -f ~/.ssh/identity
372
373The next step will be to distribute the public key to these nodes and from that point no password is needed::
374
375 $ for ip in 100 101 102 103 ; do ssh-copy-id -i ~/.ssh/identity.pub root@10.8.8.${ip} ; done
376
377This command behaves almost identically to the ``'setup.yml'`` playbook.
378
379If you generated the ssh key manually then you can now run the ``'setup.yml'`` playbook like this and achieve the same result as in the first execution::
380
Denis Kasanica7702f22019-11-14 12:35:46 +0100381 $ ./run_playbook.sh -i inventory/hosts.yml setup.yml
Petr Ospalýbe81ab02019-02-14 21:30:31 +0100382
383This time it should not ask you for any password - of course this is very redundant, because you just distributed two ssh keys for no good reason.
384
385We can finally edit and finish the configuration of the ``'hosts.yml'``:
386
387- if you used the ``'setup.yml'`` playbook then you can just leave this line as it is::
388
389 ansible_ssh_private_key_file: /root/.ssh/offline_ssh_key
390
391- if you created a ssh key manually then change it like this::
392
393 ansible_ssh_private_key_file: /root/.ssh/identity
394
395-----
396
397.. _oooi_installguide_install:
398
399Part 3. Installation
400--------------------
401
402We should have the configuration complete and be ready to start the installation. The installation is done via ansible playbooks, which are run either inside a **chroot** environment (default) or from the **docker** container. If for some reason you want to run playbooks from the docker instead of chroot then you cannot use *infra-node* or any other *kube-node* as the *install-server* - otherwise you risk that installation will fail due to restarting of the docker service.
403
404If you built your ``'sw'`` package well then there should be the file ``'ansible_chroot.tgz'`` inside the ``'docker'`` directory. If not then you must create it - to learn how to do that and to get more info about the scripts dealing with docker and chroot, go to `Appendix 1. Ansible execution/bootstrap`_
405
406We will use the default chroot option so we don't need any docker service to be running.
407
408Installation is actually very straightforward now::
409
Denis Kasanica7702f22019-11-14 12:35:46 +0100410 $ ./run_playbook.sh -i inventory/hosts.yml -e @application/application_configuration.yml site.yml
Petr Ospalýbe81ab02019-02-14 21:30:31 +0100411
412This will take a while so be patient.
413
414``'site.yml'`` playbook actually runs in the order the following playbooks:
415
416- ``upload_resources.yml``
417- ``infrastructure.yml``
Bartek Grzybowskicf6797c2019-05-22 14:53:31 +0200418- ``rke.yml``
Petr Ospalýbe81ab02019-02-14 21:30:31 +0100419- ``application.yml``
420
Michal Ptacekc424cff2019-03-06 16:25:43 +0000421----
422
423.. _oooi_installguide_postinstall:
424
Bartek Grzybowski32bf2fb2019-05-30 11:52:40 +0200425Part 4. Post-installation and troubleshooting
426---------------------------------------------
Michal Ptacekc424cff2019-03-06 16:25:43 +0000427
Bartek Grzybowski32bf2fb2019-05-30 11:52:40 +0200428After all of the playbooks are run successfully, it will still take a lot of time until all pods are up and running. You can monitor your newly created kubernetes cluster for example like this::
Petr Ospalýbe81ab02019-02-14 21:30:31 +0100429
Denis Kasanica7702f22019-11-14 12:35:46 +0100430 $ ssh -i ~/.ssh/offline_ssh_key root@10.8.8.100 # tailor this command to connect to your infra-node
Petr Ospalýbe81ab02019-02-14 21:30:31 +0100431 $ watch -d -n 5 'kubectl get pods --all-namespaces'
432
Bartek Grzybowski32bf2fb2019-05-30 11:52:40 +0200433Alternatively you can monitor progress with ``helm_deployment_status.py`` script located in offline-installer directory. Transfer it to infra-node and run::
Milan Verespej1a230472019-03-20 13:51:40 +0100434
435 $ python helm_deployment_status.py -n <namespace_name> # namespace defaults to onap
436
Bartek Grzybowski32bf2fb2019-05-30 11:52:40 +0200437To automatically verify functionality with healthchecks after deployment becomes ready or after timeout period expires, append ``-hp`` switch followed by the full path to the healthcheck script and ``--health-mode`` optional switch with appropriate mode supported by that script (``health`` by default, ``--help`` displays available modes)::
Milan Verespej1a230472019-03-20 13:51:40 +0100438
Bartek Grzybowski32bf2fb2019-05-30 11:52:40 +0200439 $ python helm_deployment_status.py -hp <app_data_path>/<app_name>/helm_charts/robot/ete-k8s.sh --health-mode <healthcheck mode>
Milan Verespej1a230472019-03-20 13:51:40 +0100440
Bartek Grzybowski32bf2fb2019-05-30 11:52:40 +0200441It is strongly recommended to tailor ``helm_deployment_status.py`` to your needs since default values might not be what you'd expect. The defaults can be displayed with ``--help`` switch.
Michal Ptacekc424cff2019-03-06 16:25:43 +0000442
443Final result of installation varies based on number of k8s nodes used and distribution of pods. In some dev envs we quite frequently hit problems with not all pods properly deployed. In successful deployments all jobs should be in successful state.
444This can be verified using ::
445
446 $ kubectl get jobs -n <namespace>
447
448If some of the job is hanging in some wrong end-state like ``'BackoffLimitExceeded'`` manual intervention is required to heal this and make also dependent jobs passing. More details about particular job state can be obtained using ::
449
450 $ kubectl describe job -n <namespace> <job_name>
451
452If manual intervention is required, one can remove failing job and retry helm install command directly, which will not launch full deployment but rather check current state of the system and rebuild parts which are not up & running. Exact commands are as follows ::
453
454 $ kubectl delete job -n <namespace> <job_name>
455 $ helm deploy <env_name> <helm_chart_name> --namespace <namespace_name>
456
457 E.g. helm deploy dev local/onap --namespace onap
458
459Once all pods are properly deployed and in running state, one can verify functionality e.g. by running onap healthchecks ::
460
461 $ cd <app_data_path>/<app_name>/helm_charts/robot
462 $ ./ete-k8s.sh onap health
463
464
Petr Ospalýbe81ab02019-02-14 21:30:31 +0100465-----
466
467.. _oooi_installguide_appendix1:
468
469Appendix 1. Ansible execution/bootstrap
470---------------------------------------
471
472There are two ways how to easily run the installer's ansible playbooks:
473
474- If you already have or can install a docker then you can build the provided ``'Dockerfile'`` for the ansible and run playbooks in the docker container.
475- Another way to deploy ansible is via chroot environment which is bundled together within this directory.
476
477(Re)build docker image and/or chroot archive
478~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
479
480Inside the ``'docker'`` directory is the ``'Dockerfile'`` and ``'build_ansible_image.sh'`` script. You can run ``'build_ansible_image.sh'`` script on some machine with the internet connectivity and it will download all required packages needed for building the ansible docker image and for exporting it into a flat chroot environment.
481
482Built image is exported into ``'ansible_chroot.tgz'`` archive in the same (``'docker'``) directory.
483
484This script has two optional arguments:
485
486#. ansible version
487#. docker image name
488
489**Note:** if optional arguments are not used, docker image name will be set to ``'ansible'`` by default.
490
491Launching ansible playbook using chroot environment
492~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
493
494This is the default and preferred way of running ansible playbooks in an offline environment as there is no dependency on docker to be installed on the system. Chroot environment is already provided by included archive ``'ansible_chroot.tgz'``.
495
496It should be available in the ``'docker'`` directory as the end-result of the packaging script or after manual run of the ``'build_ansible_image.sh'`` script referenced above.
497
498All playbooks can be executed via ``'./run_playbook.sh'`` wrapper script.
499
500To get more info about the way how the ``'./run_playbook.sh'`` wrapper script should be used, run::
501
502 $ ./run_playbook.sh
503
504The main purpose of this wrapper script is to provide the ansible framework to a machine where it was bootstrapped without need of installing additional packages. The user can run this to display ``'ansible-playbook'`` command help::
505
506 $ ./run_playbook.sh --help
507
508Developers notes
509~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
510
511* There are two scripts which work in tandem for creating and running chroot
512* First one can convert docker image into chroot directory
513* Second script will automate chrooting (necessary steps for chroot to work and cleanup)
514* Both of them have help - just run::
515
516 $ cd docker
517 $ ./create_docker_chroot.sh help
518 $ ./run_chroot.sh help
519
520Example usage::
521
522 $ sudo su
523 $ docker/create_docker_chroot.sh convert some_docker_image ./new_name_for_chroot
524 $ cat ./new_name_for_chroot/README.md
525 $ docker/run_chroot.sh execute ./new_name_for_chroot cat /etc/os-release 2>/dev/null
526
527Launching ansible playbook using docker container (ALTERNATIVE APPROACH)
528~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
529
530This option is here just to keep support for the older method which relies on a running docker service. For the offline deployment use the chroot option as indicated above.
531
532You will not need ``'ansible_chroot.tgz'`` archive anymore, but the new requirement is a prebuilt docker image of ansible (based on the provided ``'Dockerfile'``). It should be available in your local docker repository (otherwise the default name ``'ansible'`` may fetch unwanted image from default registry!).
533
534To trigger this functionality and to run ``'ansible-playbook'`` inside a docker container instead of the chroot environment, you must first set the ``ANSIBLE_DOCKER_IMAGE`` variable. The value must be a name of the built ansible docker image.
535
536Usage is basically the same as with the default chroot way - the only difference is the existence of the environment variable::
537
538 $ ANSIBLE_DOCKER_IMAGE=ansible ./run_playbook.sh --help
539
540-----
541
542.. _Build Guide: ./BuildGuide.rst
Tomáš Levora2a355bb2019-10-10 14:04:08 +0200543.. _El Alto requirements: https://onap.readthedocs.io/en/elalto/guides/onap-developer/settingup/index.html#installing-onap
544.. _El Alto release: https://docs.onap.org/en/elalto/release/
Petr Ospalýbe81ab02019-02-14 21:30:31 +0100545.. _OOM ONAP: https://wiki.onap.org/display/DW/ONAP+Operations+Manager+Project