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authorInstrumental <jonathan.gathman@att.com>2019-03-25 09:35:07 -0500
committerInstrumental <jonathan.gathman@att.com>2019-03-25 09:40:32 -0500
commit6e665cbd18279bc2636a25d98c129ad17ccddf31 (patch)
tree2a92ba27831f9fc43e3eda82b632d00ca5d435c5 /docs/sections/configuration
parent382faab29b7e25062b3a7783caf9680970efe50f (diff)
Add more Certficate Local docs
Issue-ID: AAF-795 Change-Id: I6c1eaf1c963cdc6eb67135a74cad474a1e8bb453 Signed-off-by: Instrumental <jonathan.gathman@att.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/sections/configuration')
-rw-r--r--docs/sections/configuration/AAF_4.1_config.rst67
1 files changed, 65 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/docs/sections/configuration/AAF_4.1_config.rst b/docs/sections/configuration/AAF_4.1_config.rst
index bac03317..ff9816a1 100644
--- a/docs/sections/configuration/AAF_4.1_config.rst
+++ b/docs/sections/configuration/AAF_4.1_config.rst
@@ -26,7 +26,10 @@ Prerequisites
* For ONAP TEST, this means
* Windriver VPN
- * include "10.12.6.214 aaf-onap-test.osaaf.org" in your /etc/hosts or DNS
+ * include lastest IP of aaf-onap-test.osaaf.org" in your /etc/hosts or DNS
+
+ * As of Mar 20, 2019, this is 10.12.5.145.
+
* For Writing to Volumes for Docker or K8s
* Docker
@@ -88,6 +91,66 @@ In your chosen directory ::
The Agent will look for "aaf.props", and if it doesn't exist, or is missing information, it will ask for it.
+IMPORTANT: When you are doing "LOCAL", you are creating a CERTIFICATE for your local Machine. Therefore, you need to AUTHORIZE this creation
+by creating an "Artifact" as the OWNER of the Namespace (In ONAP Test, all the NSs are owned by "aaf_admin@people.osaaf.org")
+
+ 1) Copy the out-of-the-box Artifact from the Credentials of your Namespace
+
+ * In ONAP Test, as "aaf_admin", click https://aaf-onap-test.osaaf.org:8200/gui/ns
+ * Select the NS you are need a Certificate for (i.e. org.onap.aai)
+ * Select the Green "Cred Details" button in Credentials area
+ * Select "View All" on credential line
+ * Select the ONAP default FQDN line's "Details" button
+ * Select "Copy Artifact" Radio Button at Bottom, and enter YOUR MACHINE'S FQDN in the entry box that appears.
+ * Click "Copy" button
+ * Click "Artifacts Show" Breadcrumb. You should see your new entry.
+
+ 2) Edit the new Artifact to match your Local Machine
+
+ * Check the SANS. If it does not include the original FQDN, then add it. (Example, add "aai"). This is so this Certificate can be used by aai
+ inside of containers as well.
+ * Change the "Directory" to be the Local Directory you want to put your Local Certs in.
+ * Change the "O/S User" to be the O/S user that needs to access the Certificate (yours)
+ * Click on the Artifact types you want. "file" means PEM format private key and cert. "script" has ready-made O/S crontab and validation scripts
+ for auto-renewal of O/S based Services. We will do something different for containers.
+ * click "Update"
+
+ 3) Be sure to validate this information with a "read" command on your target machine.
+
+<**Instructions**> - Commands you can do with agent.sh local:
+
+Note: There are some command line defaults, relating to ID from aaf.props and FQDN, if your local machine (uname -n) REPORTS the same name as your FQDN.
+If it does not, you will need to explicitly set the command. Examples will use "aai" and local machine "mymachine.myco.com"
+
+ read
+ Prints the Artifact information from Certificate Manager related to command. Generally, it's a good idea to Read to make sure things are setup
+ Example: ``$ bash agent.sh local read aai@aai.onap.org mymachine.myco.com``
+
+ place
+ Actually creates the Certificate Artifacts requested on disk, in the directory requested with the O/S User requested, etc.
+ Depending on what you asked for in the Artifact, you should see:
+ Example: ``$ bash agent.sh local place aai@aai.onap.org mymachine.myco.com``
+
+ | Writing to /private/tmp/onap
+ | Writing file /private/tmp/onap/org.onap.aai.keyfile
+ | Writing file /private/tmp/onap/org.onap.aai.crt
+ | Writing file /private/tmp/onap/org.onap.aai.key
+ | Writing file /private/tmp/onap/org.onap.aai.p12
+ | Writing file /private/tmp/onap/org.onap.aai.trust.jks
+ | Writing file /private/tmp/onap/org.onap.aai.check.sh
+ | Writing file /private/tmp/onap/org.onap.aai.crontab.sh
+ | Creating new /private/tmp/onap/org.onap.aai.cred.props
+ | 2019-03-25T09:14:29.174-0500: Trans Info
+ | REMOTE Place Artifact 2743.9736ms
+ | Reconstitute Private Key 0.212454ms
+ |
+
+ Focus on "Reconstitute Private Key"... if that isn't there, it didn't create
+
+ showpass
+ Shows the passwords generated and used for the various artifacts that need them. Example org.onap.aai. will be generated with a password.
+ Example: ``$ bash agent.sh local showpass aai@aai.onap.org mymachine.myco.com``
+
=======================
'aaf.prop' Properties
=======================
@@ -100,7 +163,7 @@ Query Tag Description
DOCKER REPOSITORY DOCKER_REPOSITORY Defaults to current ONAP Repository
CADI Version VERSION Defaults to current CADI (AAF) version
AAF's FQDN AAF_FQDN PUBLIC Name for AAF. For ONAP Test, it is 'aaf-onap-test.osaaf.org'
-AAF FQDN IP AAF_FQDN_IP If FQDN isn't actually found with DNS, you will have to enter the IP. For 'aaf-onap-test.osaaf.org', it is '10.12.6.214'
+AAF FQDN IP AAF_FQDN_IP If FQDN isn't actually found with DNS, you will have to enter the IP. For 'aaf-onap-test.osaaf.org', as of March 20, 2019, it is '10.12.5.145'
Deployer's FQI DEPLOY_FQI In a REAL system, this would be a person or process. For ONAP Testing, the id is 'deployer@people.osaaf.org'
Deployer's PASSWORD DEPLOY_PASSWORD OPTIONAL!! REAL systems should not store passwords in clear text. For ONAP Testing, the password is 'demo123456!'
App's Root FQDN APP_FQDN This will show up in the Cert Subject, make it the App Acronym. i.e 'clamp'