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+.. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
+
+ONAP Operations Manager Project
+###############################
+
+Introduction
+============
+
+The ONAP Operations Manager (OOM) is responsible for life-cycle
+management of the ONAP platform itself; components such as MSO, SDNC,
+etc. It is not responsible for the management of services, VNFs or
+infrastructure instantiated by ONAP or used by ONAP to host such
+services or VNFs. OOM uses the open-source Kubernetes container
+management system as a means to manage the Docker containers that
+compose ONAP where the containers are hosted either directly on
+bare-metal servers or on VMs hosted by a 3rd party management system.
+OOM ensures that ONAP is easily deployable and maintainable throughout
+its life cycle while using hardware resources efficiently. 
+
+Quick Start Guide
+=================
+
+Once a kubernetes environment is available (check out `ONAP on Kubernetes <file:///C:\display\DW\ONAP+on+Kubernetes>`__ if you're
+getting started) and the deployment artifacts have been customized for your location, ONAP is ready to be installed. 
+
+The first step is to setup
+the \ `/oom/kubernetes/config/onap-parameters.yaml <https://gerrit.onap.org/r/gitweb?p=oom.git;a=blob;f=kubernetes/config/onap-parameters.yaml;h=7ddaf4d4c3dccf2fad515265f0da9c31ec0e64b1;hb=refs/heads/master>`__
+file with key-value pairs specific to your OpenStack environment.  There is a
+`sample <https://gerrit.onap.org/r/gitweb?p=oom.git;a=blob;f=kubernetes/config/onap-parameters-sample.yaml;h=3a74beddbbf7f9f9ec8e5a6abaecb7cb238bd519;hb=refs/heads/master>`__
+that may help you out or even be usable directly if you don't intend to actually use OpenStack resources.
+
+In-order to be able to support multiple ONAP instances within a single kubernetes environment a configuration set is required.
+ The `createConfig.sh <https://gerrit.onap.org/r/gitweb?p=oom.git;a=blob;f=kubernetes/config/createConfig.sh;h=f226ccae47ca6de15c1da49be4b8b6de974895ed;hb=refs/heads/master>`__ script
+is used to do this.::
+
+ > ./createConfig.sh -n onapTrial
+
+The bash script 
+\ `createAll.bash <https://gerrit.onap.org/r/gitweb?p=oom.git;a=blob;f=kubernetes/oneclick/createAll.bash;h=5e5f2dc76ea7739452e757282e750638b4e3e1de;hb=refs/heads/master>`__ is
+used to create an ONAP deployment with kubernetes. It has two primary
+functions:
+
+- Creating the namespaces used to encapsulate the ONAP components, and
+
+- Creating the services, pods and containers within each of these
+ namespaces that provide the core functionality of ONAP.
+
+To deploy the containers and create your ONAP system enter::
+
+ > ./createAll.bash -n onapTrial
+
+Namespaces provide isolation between ONAP components as ONAP release 1.0
+contains duplicate application (e.g. mariadb) and port usage. As
+such createAll.bash requires the user to enter a namespace prefix string
+that can be used to separate multiple deployments of onap. The result
+will be set of 10 namespaces (e.g. onapTrial-sdc, onapTrial-aai,
+onapTrial-mso, onapTrial-message-router, onapTrial-robot, onapTrial-vid,
+onapTrial-sdnc, onapTrial-portal, onapTrial-policy, onapTrial-appc)
+being created within the kubernetes environment.  A prerequisite pod
+config-init (\ `pod-config-init.yaml <https://gerrit.onap.org/r/gitweb?p=oom.git;a=blob;f=kubernetes/config/pod-config-init.yaml;h=b1285ce21d61815c082f6d6aa3c43d00561811c7;hb=refs/heads/master>`__)
+may need editing to match your environment and deployment into the
+default namespace before running createAll.bash.
+
+Demo Video
+----------
+
+If you'd like to see the installation of ONAP by OOM take a look at this
+short video demonstration by Mike Elliott: 
+
+.. raw:: html
+
+ <video controls src="/OOM_Demo.mp4"></video>
+
+
+OOM Architecture and Technical Details
+======================================
+
+OOM uses the \ `Kubernetes  <http://kubernetes.io/>`__\ container
+management system to orchestrate the life cycle of the ONAP
+infrastructure components.  If you'd like to learn more about how this
+works or develop the deployment specifications for a project not already
+managed by OOM look here: \ `OOM User
+Guide <file:///C:\display\DW\OOM+User+Guide>`__.
+
+
+Links to Further Information
+============================
+
+- Configuration data for all of the ONAP sub-projects is distributed by
+ OOM.  For more information on how this is done see: \ `OOM
+ Configuration Management <file:///C:\display\DW\OOM+Configuration+Management>`__.
diff --git a/docs/OOM User Guide/oom_user_guide.rst b/docs/OOM User Guide/oom_user_guide.rst
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..c55ccaa6cc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/docs/OOM User Guide/oom_user_guide.rst
@@ -0,0 +1,982 @@
+.. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
+
+OOM User Guide
+##############
+.. contents::
+ :depth: 3
+..
+
+Introduction
+============
+
+The ONAP Operations Manager (OOM) is responsible for life-cycle
+management of the ONAP platform itself; components such as MSO, SDNC,
+etc. It is not responsible for the management of services, VNFs or
+infrastructure instantiated by ONAP or used by ONAP to host such
+services or VNFs. OOM uses the open-source Kubernetes container
+management system as a means to manage the Docker containers that
+compose ONAP where the containers are hosted either directly on
+bare-metal servers or on VMs hosted by a 3rd party management system.
+OOM ensures that ONAP is easily deployable and maintainable throughout
+its life cycle while using hardware resources efficiently. There are two
+deployment options for OOM:
+
+- A minimal deployment where single instances of the ONAP components
+ are instantiated with no resource reservations, and
+
+- | A production deployment where ONAP components are deployed with
+ redundancy and anti-affinity rules such that single faults do not
+ interrupt ONAP operation.
+ | When deployed as containers directly on bare-metal, the minimal
+ deployment option requires a single host (32GB memory with 12
+ vCPUs) however further optimization should allow this deployment to
+ target a laptop computer. Production deployments will require more
+ resources as determined by anti-affinity and geo-redundancy
+ requirements.
+
+OOM deployments of ONAP provide many benefits:
+
+- Life-cycle Management Kubernetes is a comprehensive system for
+ managing the life-cycle of containerized applications. Its use as a
+ platform manager will ease the deployment of ONAP, provide fault
+ tolerance and horizontal scalability, and enable seamless upgrades.
+
+- Hardware Efficiency ONAP can be deployed on a single host using less
+ than 32GB of memory. As opposed to VMs that require a guest operating
+ system be deployed along with the application, containers provide
+ similar application encapsulation with neither the computing, memory
+ and storage overhead nor the associated long term support costs of
+ those guest operating systems. An informal goal of the project is to
+ be able to create a development deployment of ONAP that can be hosted
+ on a laptop.
+
+- Rapid Deployment With locally cached images ONAP can be deployed from
+ scratch in 7 minutes. Eliminating the guest operating system results
+ in containers coming into service much faster than a VM equivalent.
+ This advantage can be particularly useful for ONAP where rapid
+ reaction to inevitable failures will be critical in production
+ environments.
+
+- Portability OOM takes advantage of Kubernetes' ability to be hosted
+ on multiple hosted cloud solutions like Google Compute Engine, AWS
+ EC2, Microsoft Azure, CenturyLink Cloud, IBM Bluemix and more.
+
+- Minimal Impact As ONAP is already deployed with Docker containers
+ minimal changes are required to the components themselves when
+ deployed with OOM.
+
+Features of OOM:
+
+- Platform Deployment Automated deployment/un-deployment of ONAP
+ instance(s) / Automated deployment/un-deployment of individual
+ platform components using docker containers & kubernetes
+
+- Platform Monitoring & healing Monitor platform state, Platform health
+ checks, fault tolerance and self-healing using docker containers &
+ kubernetes
+
+- Platform Scaling Platform horizontal scalability through using docker
+ containers & kubernetes
+
+- Platform Upgrades Platform upgrades using docker containers &
+ kubernetes
+
+- Platform Configurations Manage overall platform components
+ configurations using docker containers & kubernetes
+
+- | Platform migrations Manage migration of platform components using
+ docker containers & kubernetes
+ | Please note that the ONAP Operations Manager does not provide
+ support for containerization of services or VNFs that are managed
+ by ONAP; the OOM orchestrates the life-cycle of the ONAP platform
+ components themselves.
+
+Container Background
+--------------------
+
+Linux containers allow for an application and all of its operating
+system dependencies to be packaged and deployed as a single unit without
+including a guest operating system as done with virtual machines. The
+most popular container solution
+is \ `Docker <https://www.docker.com/>`__ which provides tools for
+container management like the Docker Host (dockerd) which can create,
+run, stop, move, or delete a container. Docker has a very popular
+registry of containers images that can be used by any Docker system;
+however, in the ONAP context, Docker images are built by the standard
+CI/CD flow and stored
+in \ `Nexus <https://nexus.onap.org/#welcome>`__ repositories. OOM uses
+the "standard" ONAP docker containers and three new ones specifically
+created for OOM.
+
+Containers are isolated from each other primarily via name spaces within
+the Linux kernel without the need for multiple guest operating systems.
+As such, multiple containers can be deployed with little overhead such
+as all of ONAP can be deployed on a single host. With some optimization
+of the ONAP components (e.g. elimination of redundant database
+instances) it may be possible to deploy ONAP on a single laptop
+computer.
+
+Life Cycle Management via Kubernetes
+====================================
+
+As with the VNFs deployed by ONAP, the components of ONAP have their own
+life-cycle where the components are created, run, healed, scaled,
+stopped and deleted. These life-cycle operations are managed by
+the \ `Kubernetes <https://kubernetes.io/>`__ container management
+system which maintains the desired state of the container system as
+described by one or more deployment descriptors - similar in concept to
+OpenStack HEAT Orchestration Templates. The following sections describe
+the fundamental objects managed by Kubernetes, the network these
+components use to communicate with each other and other entities outside
+of ONAP and the templates that describe the configuration and desired
+state of the ONAP components.
+
+ONAP Components to Kubernetes Object Relationships
+--------------------------------------------------
+
+Kubernetes deployments consist of multiple objects:
+
+- nodes - a worker machine - either physical or virtual - that hosts
+ multiple containers managed by kubernetes.
+
+- services - an abstraction of a logical set of pods that provide a
+ micro-service.
+
+- pods - one or more (but typically one) container(s) that provide
+ specific application functionality. 
+
+- persistent volumes - One or more permanent volumes need to be
+ established to hold non-ephemeral configuration and state data.
+
+The relationship between these objects is shown in the following figure:
+
+.. figure:: ../kubernetes_objects.png
+
+OOM uses these kubernetes objects as described in the following
+sections.
+
+Nodes
+~~~~~
+
+OOM works with both physical and virtual worker machines.  
+
+- Virtual Machine Deployments - If ONAP is to be deployed onto a set of
+ virtual machines, the creation of the VMs is outside of the scope of
+ OOM and could be done in many ways, such as:
+
+ - manually, for example by a user using the OpenStack Horizon
+ dashboard or `AWS
+ EC2 <https://wiki.onap.org/display/DW/ONAP+on+AWS#ONAPonAWS-Option0:DeployOOMKubernetestoaspotVM>`__,
+ or
+
+ - automatically, for example with the use of a OpenStack Heat
+ Orchestration Template which builds an ONAP stack, or
+
+ - orchestrated, for example with Cloudify creating the VMs from a
+ TOSCA template and controlling their life cycle for the life of
+ the ONAP deployment.
+
+- Physical Machine Deployments - If ONAP is to be deployed onto
+ physical machines there are several options but the recommendation is
+ to use
+ `Rancher <http://rancher.com/docs/rancher/v1.6/en/quick-start-guide/>`__
+ along with `Helm <https://github.com/kubernetes/helm/releases>`__ to
+ associate hosts with a kubernetes cluster.
+
+Pods
+~~~~
+
+A group of containers with shared storage and networking can be grouped
+together into a kubernetes pod.  All of the containers within a pod are
+co-located and co-scheduled so they operate as a single unit.  Within
+ONAP Amsterdam release, pods are mapped one-to-one to docker containers
+although this may change in the future.  As explained in the Services
+section below the use of Pods within each ONAP component is abstracted
+from other ONAP components.
+
+Services
+~~~~~~~~
+
+OOM uses the kubernetes service 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, the SDNC
+component may introduce OpenDaylight clustering as some point and change
+the number of pods in this component to three or more but this change
+will be isolated from the other ONAP components by the service
+abstraction.  A service can include a load balancer on its ingress to
+distribute traffic between the pods and even react to dynamic changes in
+the number of pods if they are part of a replica set (see the MSO
+example below for a brief explanation of replica sets).
+
+Persistent Volumes
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+As pods and containers are ephemeral, any data that must be persisted
+across pod restart events needs to be stored outside of the pod in a
+persistent volume(s).  Kubernetes supports a wide variety of types of
+persistent volumes such as: Fibre Channel, NFS, iSCSI, CephFS, and
+GlusterFS (for a full list look
+`here <https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/storage/persistent-volumes/#types-of-persistent-volumes>`__)
+so there are many options as to how storage is configured when deploying
+ONAP via OOM.
+
+OOM Networking with Kubernetes
+------------------------------
+
+- DNS
+
+- Ports - Flattening the containers also expose port conflicts between
+ the containers which need to be resolved.
+
+Name Spaces
+~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+Within the namespaces are kubernete's services that provide external
+connectivity to pods that host Docker containers. The following is a
+list of the namespaces and the services within:
+
+- onap-aai
+
+ - aai-service
+
+ - *hbase*
+
+ - model-loader-service
+
+ - aai-resources
+
+ - aai-traversal
+
+ - data-router
+
+ - elasticsearch
+
+ - gremlin
+
+ - search-data-service
+
+ - sparky-be
+
+- onap-appc
+
+ - appc
+
+ - *appc-dbhost*
+
+ - appc-dgbuilder
+
+- clamp
+
+ - clamp
+
+ - clamp-mariadb
+
+
+- onap-dcae
+
+ - cdap0
+
+ - cdap1
+
+ - cdap2
+
+ - dcae-collector-common-event
+
+ - dcae-collector-dmaapbc
+
+ - dcae-controller
+
+ - dcae-pgaas
+
+ - dmaap
+
+ - kafka
+
+ - zookeeper
+
+- onap-message-router
+
+ - dmaap
+
+ - *global-kafka*
+
+ - *zookeeper*
+
+- onap-mso
+
+ - mso
+
+ - *mariadb*
+
+- onap-multicloud
+
+ - multicloud-vio
+
+ - framework
+
+- onap-policy
+
+ - brmsgw
+
+ - drools
+
+ - *mariadb*
+
+ - *nexus*
+
+ - pap
+
+ - pdp
+
+- onap-portal
+
+ - portalapps
+
+ - *portaldb*
+
+ - portalwidgets
+
+ - vnc-portal
+
+- onap-robot
+
+ - robot
+
+- onap-sdc
+
+ - sdc-be
+
+ - *sdc-cs*
+
+ - *sdc-es*
+
+ - sdc-fe
+
+ - *sdc-kb*
+
+- onap-sdnc
+
+ - sdnc
+
+ - *sdnc-dbhost*
+
+ - sdnc-dgbuilder
+
+ - sdnc-portal
+
+- onap-vid
+
+ - *vid-mariadb*
+
+ - vid-server
+
+Note that services listed in \ *italics* are local to the namespace
+itself and not accessible from outside of the namespace.
+
+Kubernetes Deployment Specifications for ONAP
+---------------------------------------------
+
+Each of the ONAP components are deployed as described in a deployment
+specification.  This specification documents key parameters and
+dependencies between the pods of an ONAP components such that kubernetes
+is able to repeatably startup the component.  The components artifacts
+are stored here in the oom/kubernetes repo in \ `ONAP
+gerrit <https://gerrit.onap.org/r/gitweb?p=oom.git;a=tree;f=kubernetes;h=4597d09dbce86d7543174924322435c30cb5b0ee;hb=refs/heads/master>`__.
+The mso project is a relatively simple example, so let's start there.
+
+MSO Example
+~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+Within
+the \ `oom/kubernetes/templates/mso <https://gerrit.onap.org/r/gitweb?p=oom.git;a=tree;f=kubernetes/templates/mso;h=d8b778a16381d6695f635c14b9dcab72fb9fcfcd;hb=refs/heads/master>`__ repo,
+one will find four files in yaml format:
+
+- `all-services.yaml <https://gerrit.onap.org/r/gitweb?p=oom.git;a=blob_plain;f=kubernetes/mso/templates/all-services.yaml;hb=refs/heads/master>`__
+
+- `db-deployment.yaml <https://gerrit.onap.org/r/gitweb?p=oom.git;a=blob_plain;f=kubernetes/mso/templates/db-deployment.yaml;hb=refs/heads/master>`__
+
+- `mso-deployment.yaml <https://gerrit.onap.org/r/gitweb?p=oom.git;a=blob_plain;f=kubernetes/mso/templates/db-deployment.yaml;hb=refs/heads/master>`__
+
+- `mso-pv-pvc.yaml <https://gerrit.onap.org/r/gitweb?p=oom.git;a=blob_plain;f=kubernetes/mso/templates/mso-pv-pvc.yaml;hb=refs/heads/master>`__
+
+The db-deployment.yaml file describes deployment of the database
+component of mso.  Here is the contents:
+
+**db-deployment.yaml**::
+
+ apiVersion: extensions/v1beta1
+ kind: Deployment
+ metadata:
+ name: mariadb
+ namespace: "{{ .Values.nsPrefix }}-mso"
+ spec:
+ replicas: 1
+ selector:
+ matchLabels:
+ app: mariadb
+ template:
+ metadata:
+ labels:
+ app: mariadb
+ name: mariadb
+ spec:
+ hostname: mariadb
+ containers:
+ - args:
+ image: {{ .Values.image.mariadb }}
+ imagePullPolicy: {{ .Values.pullPolicy }}
+ name: "mariadb"
+ env:
+ - name: MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD
+ value: password
+ - name: MARIADB_MAJOR
+ value: "10.1"
+ - name: MARIADB_VERSION
+ value: "10.1.11+maria-1~jessie"
+ volumeMounts:
+ - mountPath: /etc/localtime
+ name: localtime
+ readOnly: true
+ - mountPath: /etc/mysql/conf.d
+ name: mso-mariadb-conf
+ - mountPath: /docker-entrypoint-initdb.d
+ name: mso-mariadb-docker-entrypoint-initdb
+ - mountPath: /var/lib/mysql
+ name: mso-mariadb-data
+ ports:
+ - containerPort: 3306
+ name: mariadb
+ readinessProbe:
+ tcpSocket:
+ port: 3306
+ initialDelaySeconds: 5
+ periodSeconds: 10
+ volumes:
+ - name: localtime
+ hostPath:
+ path: /etc/localtime
+ - name: mso-mariadb-conf
+ hostPath:
+ path: /dockerdata-nfs/{{ .Values.nsPrefix }}/mso/mariadb/conf.d
+ - name: mso-mariadb-docker-entrypoint-initdb
+ hostPath:
+ path: /dockerdata-nfs/{{ .Values.nsPrefix }}/mso/mariadb/docker-entrypoint-initdb.d
+ - name: mso-mariadb-data
+ persistentVolumeClaim:
+ claimName: mso-db
+ imagePullSecrets:
+ - name: "{{ .Values.nsPrefix }}-docker-registry-key"
+
+
+The first part of the yaml file simply states that this is a deployment
+specification for a mariadb pod.
+
+The spec section starts off with 'replicas: 1' which states that only 1
+'replica' will be use here.  If one was to change the number of replicas
+to 3 for example, kubernetes would attempt to ensure that three replicas
+of this pod are operational at all times.  One can see that in a
+clustered environment the number of replicas should probably be more
+than 1 but for simple deployments 1 is sufficient.
+
+The selector label is a grouping primitive of kubernetes but this simple
+example doesn't exercise it's full capabilities.
+
+The template/spec section is where the key information required to start
+this pod is found.
+
+- image: is a reference to the location of the docker image in nexus3
+
+- name: is the name of the docker image
+
+- env is a section supports the creation of operating system
+ environment variables within the container and are specified as a set
+ of key/value pairs.  For example, MYSQL\_ROOT\_PASSWORD is set to
+ "password".
+
+- volumeMounts: allow for the creation of custom mount points
+
+- ports: define the networking ports that will be opened on the
+ container.  Note that further in the all-services.yaml file ports
+ that are defined here can be exposed outside of ONAP component's name
+ space by creating a 'nodePort' - a mechanism used to resolve port
+ duplication.
+
+- readinessProbe: is the mechanism kubernetes uses to determine the
+ state of the container. 
+
+- volumes: a location to define volumes required by the container, in
+ this case configuration and initialization information.
+
+- imagePullSecrets: an key to access the nexus3 repo when pulling
+ docker containers.
+
+As one might image, the mso-deployment.yaml file describes the
+deployment artifacts of the mso application.  Here are the contents:
+
+**mso-deployment.yaml**::
+
+ apiVersion: extensions/v1beta1
+ kind: Deployment
+ metadata:
+ name: mso
+ namespace: "{{ .Values.nsPrefix }}-mso"
+ spec:
+ replicas: 1
+ selector:
+ matchLabels:
+ app: mso
+ template:
+ metadata:
+ labels:
+ app: mso
+ name: mso
+ annotations:
+ pod.beta.kubernetes.io/init-containers: '[
+ {
+ "args": [
+ "--container-name",
+ "mariadb"
+ ],
+ "command": [
+ "/root/ready.py"
+ ],
+ "env": [
+ {
+ "name": "NAMESPACE",
+ "valueFrom": {
+ "fieldRef": {
+ "apiVersion": "v1",
+ "fieldPath": "metadata.namespace"
+ }
+ }
+ }
+ ],
+ "image": "{{ .Values.image.readiness }}",
+ "imagePullPolicy": "{{ .Values.pullPolicy }}",
+ "name": "mso-readiness"
+ }
+ ]'
+ spec:
+ containers:
+ - command:
+ - /docker-files/scripts/start-jboss-server.sh
+ image: {{ .Values.image.mso }}
+ imagePullPolicy: {{ .Values.pullPolicy }}
+ name: mso
+ volumeMounts:
+ - mountPath: /etc/localtime
+ name: localtime
+ readOnly: true
+ - mountPath: /shared
+ name: mso
+ - mountPath: /docker-files
+ name: mso-docker-files
+ env:
+ - name: JBOSS_DEBUG
+ value: "false"
+ ports:
+ - containerPort: 3904
+ - containerPort: 3905
+ - containerPort: 8080
+ - containerPort: 9990
+ - containerPort: 8787
+ readinessProbe:
+ tcpSocket:
+ port: 8080
+ initialDelaySeconds: 5
+ periodSeconds: 10
+ volumes:
+ - name: localtime
+ hostPath:
+ path: /etc/localtime
+ - name: mso
+ hostPath:
+ path: /dockerdata-nfs/{{ .Values.nsPrefix }}/mso/mso
+ - name: mso-docker-files
+ hostPath:
+ path: /dockerdata-nfs/{{ .Values.nsPrefix }}/mso/docker-files
+ imagePullSecrets:
+ - name: "{{ .Values.nsPrefix }}-docker-registry-key"
+
+Much like the db deployment specification the first and last part of
+this yaml file describe meta-data, replicas, images, volumes, etc.  The
+template section has an important new functionality though, a deployment
+specification for a new "initialization" container .  The entire purpose
+of the init-container is to allow dependencies to be resolved in an
+orderly manner such that the entire ONAP system comes up every time.
+Once the dependencies are met and the init-containers job is complete,
+this container will terminate.  Therefore, when OOM starts up ONAP one
+is able to see a number of init-containers start and then disappear as
+the system stabilizes. Note that more than one init-container may be
+specified, each completing before starting the next, if complex startup
+relationships need to be specified.
+
+In this particular init-container, the command '/root/ready.py' will be
+executed to determine when mariadb is ready, but this could be a simple
+bash script. The image/name section describes where and how to get the
+docker image from the init-container.
+
+To ensure that data isn't lost when an ephemeral container undergoes
+life-cycle events (like being restarted), non-volatile or persistent
+volumes can be attached to the service. The following pv-pvc.yaml
+file defines the persistent volume as 2 GB storage claimed by the
+mso namespace.
+
+**pv-pvc.yaml**::
+
+ apiVersion: v1
+ kind: PersistentVolume
+ metadata:
+ name: "{{ .Values.nsPrefix }}-mso-db"
+ namespace: "{{ .Values.nsPrefix }}-mso"
+ labels:
+ name: "{{ .Values.nsPrefix }}-mso-db"
+ spec:
+ capacity:
+ storage: 2Gi
+ accessModes:
+ - ReadWriteMany
+ persistentVolumeReclaimPolicy: Retain
+ hostPath:
+ path: /dockerdata-nfs/{{ .Values.nsPrefix }}/mso/mariadb/data
+ ---
+ kind: PersistentVolumeClaim
+ apiVersion: v1
+ metadata:
+ name: mso-db
+ namespace: "{{ .Values.nsPrefix }}-mso"
+ spec:
+ accessModes:
+ - ReadWriteMany
+ resources:
+ requests:
+ storage: 2Gi
+ selector:
+ matchLabels:
+ name: "{{ .Values.nsPrefix }}-mso-db"
+
+The last of the four files is the all-services.yaml file which defines
+the kubernetes service(s) that will be exposed in this name space. Here
+is the contents of the file:
+
+**all-services.yaml**::
+
+ apiVersion: v1
+ kind: Service
+ metadata:
+ name: mariadb
+ namespace: "{{ .Values.nsPrefix }}-mso"
+ labels:
+ app: mariadb
+ spec:
+ ports:
+ - port: 3306
+ nodePort: {{ .Values.nodePortPrefix }}52
+ selector:
+ app: mariadb
+ type: NodePort
+ ---
+ apiVersion: v1
+ kind: Service
+ metadata:
+ name: mso
+ namespace: "{{ .Values.nsPrefix }}-mso"
+ labels:
+ app: mso
+ annotations:
+ msb.onap.org/service-info: '[
+ {
+ "serviceName": "so",
+ "version": "v1",
+ "url": "/ecomp/mso/infra",
+ "protocol": "REST"
+ "port": "8080",
+ "visualRange":"1"
+ },
+ {
+ "serviceName": "so-deprecated",
+ "version": "v1",
+ "url": "/ecomp/mso/infra",
+ "protocol": "REST"
+ "port": "8080",
+ "visualRange":"1",
+ "path":"/ecomp/mso/infra"
+ }
+ ]'
+ spec:
+ selector:
+ app: mso
+ ports:
+ - name: mso1
+ port: 8080
+ nodePort: {{ .Values.nodePortPrefix }}23
+ - name: mso2
+ port: 3904
+ nodePort: {{ .Values.nodePortPrefix }}25
+ - name: mso3
+ port: 3905
+ nodePort: {{ .Values.nodePortPrefix }}24
+ - name: mso4
+ port: 9990
+ nodePort: {{ .Values.nodePortPrefix }}22
+ - name: mso5
+ port: 8787
+ nodePort: {{ .Values.nodePortPrefix }}50
+ type: NodePort
+
+First of all, note that this file is really two service specification in
+a single file: the mariadb service and the mso service.  In some
+circumstances it may be possible to hide some of the complexity of the
+containers/pods by hiding them behind a single service.
+
+The mariadb service specification is quite simple; other than the name
+the only section of interest is the nodePort specification.  When
+containers require exposing ports to the world outside of a kubernetes
+namespace, there is a potential for port conflict. To resolve this
+potential port conflict kubernetes uses the concept of a nodePort that
+is mapped one-to-one with a port within the namespace.  In this case the
+port 3306 (which was defined in the db-deployment.yaml file) is mapped
+to 30252 externally thus avoiding the conflict that would have arisen
+from deployment multiple mariadb containers.
+
+The mso service definition is largely the same as the mariadb service
+with the exception that the ports are named.
+
+Customizing Deployment Specifications
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+For each ONAP component deployed by OOM, a set of deployment
+specifications are required.  Use fortunately there are many examples to
+use as references such that the previous
+'`mso <https://gerrit.onap.org/r/gitweb?p=oom.git;a=tree;f=kubernetes/mso;h=d8b778a16381d6695f635c14b9dcab72fb9fcfcd;hb=refs/heads/master>`__'
+example, as well as:
+`aai <https://gerrit.onap.org/r/gitweb?p=oom.git;a=tree;f=kubernetes/aai;h=243ff90da714459a07fa33023e6655f5d036bfcd;hb=refs/heads/master>`__,
+`appc <https://gerrit.onap.org/r/gitweb?p=oom.git;a=tree;f=kubernetes/appc;h=d34eaca8a17fc28033a491d3b71aaa1e25673f9e;hb=refs/heads/master>`__,
+`message-router <https://gerrit.onap.org/r/gitweb?p=oom.git;a=tree;f=kubernetes/message-router;h=51fcb23fb7fbbfab277721483d01c6e3f98ca2cc;hb=refs/heads/master>`__,
+`policy <https://gerrit.onap.org/r/gitweb?p=oom.git;a=tree;f=kubernetes/policy;h=8c29597b23876ea2ae17dbf747f4ab1e3b955dd9;hb=refs/heads/master>`__,
+`portal <https://gerrit.onap.org/r/gitweb?p=oom.git;a=tree;f=kubernetes/portal;h=371db03ddef92703daa699014e8c1c9623f7994d;hb=refs/heads/master>`__,
+`robot <https://gerrit.onap.org/r/gitweb?p=oom.git;a=tree;f=kubernetes/robot;h=46445652d43d93dc599c5108f5c10b303a3c777b;hb=refs/heads/master>`__,
+`sdc <https://gerrit.onap.org/r/gitweb?p=oom.git;a=tree;f=kubernetes/sdc;h=1d59f7b5944d4604491e72d0b6def0ff3f10ba4d;hb=refs/heads/master>`__,
+`sdnc <https://gerrit.onap.org/r/gitweb?p=oom.git;a=tree;f=kubernetes/sdnc;h=dbaab2ebd62190edcf489b5a5f1f52992847a73a;hb=refs/heads/master>`__
+and
+`vid <https://gerrit.onap.org/r/gitweb?p=oom.git;a=tree;f=kubernetes/vid;h=e91788c8504f2da12c086e802e1e7e8648418c66;hb=refs/heads/master>`__.
+If your components isn't already deployed by OOM, you can create your
+own set of deployment specifications that can be easily added to OOM.
+
+Development Deployments
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+For the Amsterdam release, the deployment specifications represent a
+simple simplex deployment of ONAP that may not have the robustness
+typically required of a full operational deployment.  Follow on releases
+will enhance these deployment specifications as follows:
+
+- Load Balancers - kubernets has built in support for user defined or
+ simple 'ingress' load balances at the service layer to hide the
+ complexity of multi-pod deployments from other components.
+
+- Horizontal Scaling - replica sets can be used to dynamically scale
+ the number of pods behind a service to that of the offered load.
+
+- Stateless Pods - using concepts such as DBaaS (database as a service)
+ database technologies could be removed (where appropriate) from the
+ services thus moving to the 'cattle' model so common in cloud
+ deployments.
+
+Kubernetes Under-Cloud Deployments
+==================================
+
+The automated ONAP deployment depends on a fully functional kubernetes
+environment being available prior to ONAP installation. Fortunately,
+kubenetes is supported on a wide variety of systems such as Google
+Compute Engine, `AWS
+EC2 <https://wiki.onap.org/display/DW/ONAP+on+AWS#ONAPonAWS-Option0:DeployOOMKubernetestoaspotVM>`__,
+Microsoft Azure, CenturyLink Cloud, IBM Bluemix and more.  If you're
+setting up your own kubernetes environment, please refer to \ `ONAP on
+Kubernetes <file:///C:\display\DW\ONAP+on+Kubernetes>`__ for a walk
+through of how to set this environment up on several platforms.
+
+ONAP 'OneClick' Deployment Walk-though
+======================================
+
+Once a kubernetes environment is available and the deployment artifacts
+have been customized for your location, ONAP is ready to be installed. 
+
+The first step is to setup
+the \ `/oom/kubernetes/config/onap-parameters.yaml <https://gerrit.onap.org/r/gitweb?p=oom.git;a=blob;f=kubernetes/config/onap-parameters.yaml;h=7ddaf4d4c3dccf2fad515265f0da9c31ec0e64b1;hb=refs/heads/master>`__ file
+with key-value pairs specific to your OpenStack environment.  There is
+a \ `sample  <https://gerrit.onap.org/r/gitweb?p=oom.git;a=blob;f=kubernetes/config/onap-parameters-sample.yaml;h=3a74beddbbf7f9f9ec8e5a6abaecb7cb238bd519;hb=refs/heads/master>`__\ that
+may help you out or even be usable directly if you don't intend to
+actually use OpenStack resources.  Here is the contents of this file:
+
+**onap-parameters-sample.yaml**
+
+ .. literalinclude:: https://gerrit.onap.org/r/gitweb?p=oom.git;a=blob_plain;f=kubernetes/config/onap-parameters-sample.yaml;hb=refs/heads/master
+
+OPENSTACK\_UBUNTU\_14\_IMAGE: "Ubuntu\_14.04.5\_LTS"
+
+OPENSTACK\_PUBLIC\_NET\_ID: "e8f51956-00dd-4425-af36-045716781ffc"
+
+OPENSTACK\_OAM\_NETWORK\_ID: "d4769dfb-c9e4-4f72-b3d6-1d18f4ac4ee6"
+
+OPENSTACK\_OAM\_SUBNET\_ID: "191f7580-acf6-4c2b-8ec0-ba7d99b3bc4e"
+
+OPENSTACK\_OAM\_NETWORK\_CIDR: "192.168.30.0/24"
+
+OPENSTACK\_USERNAME: "vnf\_user"
+
+OPENSTACK\_API\_KEY: "vnf\_password"
+
+OPENSTACK\_TENANT\_NAME: "vnfs"
+
+OPENSTACK\_REGION: "RegionOne"
+
+OPENSTACK\_KEYSTONE\_URL: "http://1.2.3.4:5000"
+
+OPENSTACK\_FLAVOUR\_MEDIUM: "m1.medium"
+
+OPENSTACK\_SERVICE\_TENANT\_NAME: "services"
+
+DMAAP\_TOPIC: "AUTO"
+
+DEMO\_ARTIFACTS\_VERSION: "1.1.0-SNAPSHOT"
+
+Note that these values are required or the following steps will fail.
+
+In-order to be able to support multiple ONAP instances within a single
+kubernetes environment a configuration set is required.  The
+`createConfig.sh <https://gerrit.onap.org/r/gitweb?p=oom.git;a=blob;f=kubernetes/config/createConfig.sh;h=f226ccae47ca6de15c1da49be4b8b6de974895ed;hb=refs/heads/master>`__
+script is used to do this.
+
+**createConfig.sh**::
+
+ > ./createConfig.sh -n onapTrial
+
+The bash
+script \ `createAll.bash <https://gerrit.onap.org/r/gitweb?p=oom.git;a=blob;f=kubernetes/oneclick/createAll.bash;h=5e5f2dc76ea7739452e757282e750638b4e3e1de;hb=refs/heads/master>`__ is
+used to create an ONAP deployment with kubernetes. It has two primary
+functions:
+
+- Creating the namespaces used to encapsulate the ONAP components, and
+
+- Creating the services, pods and containers within each of these
+ namespaces that provide the core functionality of ONAP.
+
+**createAll.bash**::
+
+ > ./createAll.bash -n onapTrial
+
+Namespaces provide isolation between ONAP components as ONAP release 1.0
+contains duplicate application (e.g. mariadb) and port usage. As
+such createAll.bash requires the user to enter a namespace prefix string
+that can be used to separate multiple deployments of onap. The result
+will be set of 10 namespaces (e.g. onapTrial-sdc, onapTrial-aai,
+onapTrial-mso, onapTrial-message-router, onapTrial-robot, onapTrial-vid,
+onapTrial-sdnc, onapTrial-portal, onapTrial-policy, onapTrial-appc)
+being created within the kubernetes environment.  A prerequisite pod
+config-init (\ `pod-config-init.yaml <https://gerrit.onap.org/r/gitweb?p=oom.git;a=blob;f=kubernetes/config/pod-config-init.yaml;h=b1285ce21d61815c082f6d6aa3c43d00561811c7;hb=refs/heads/master>`__)
+may editing to match you environment and deployment into the default
+namespace before running createAll.bash.
+
+Integration with MSB
+====================
+
+The \ `Microservices Bus
+Project <file:///C:\display\DW\Microservices+Bus+Project>`__ provides
+facilities to integrate micro-services into ONAP and therefore needs to
+integrate into OOM - primarily through Consul which is the backend of
+MSB service discovery. The following is a brief description of how this
+integration will be done (thanks Huabing):
+
+A registrator to push the service endpoint info to MSB service
+discovery. 
+
+- The needed service endpoint info is put into the kubernetes yaml file
+ as annotation, including service name, Protocol,version, visual
+ range,LB method, IP, Port,etc.
+
+- OOM deploy/start/restart/scale in/scale out/upgrade ONAP components
+
+- Registrator watch the kubernetes event
+
+- When an ONAP component instance has been started/destroyed by OOM,
+ Registrator get the notification from kubernetes
+
+- Registrator parse the service endpoint info from annotation and
+ register/update/unregister it to MSB service discovery
+
+- MSB API Gateway uses the service endpoint info for service routing
+ and load balancing.
+
+Details of the registration service API can be found at \ `Microservice
+Bus API
+Documentation <file:///C:\display\DW\Microservice+Bus+API+Documentation>`__.
+
+How to define the service endpoints using annotation \ `ONAP Services
+List#OOMIntegration <file:///C:\display\DW\ONAP+Services+List#ONAPServicesList-OOMIntegration>`__
+
+A preliminary view of the OOM-MSB integration is as follows:
+
+.. figure:: ../MSB-OOM-Diagram.png
+
+A message sequence chart of the registration process:
+
+.. figure:: ../MSB-OOM-MSC.png
+
+MSB Usage Instructions
+----------------------
+
+**Pull and run MSB docker containers** (Login the ONAP docker registry first:)::
+
+ docker login -u docker -p docker nexus3.onap.org:10001
+
+ sudo docker run -d --net=host --name msb\_consul consul agent -dev
+
+ sudo docker run -d --net=host --name msb\_discovery nexus3.onap.org:10001/onap/msb/msb\_discovery
+
+ sudo docker run -d --net=host -e "ROUTE\_LABELS=visualRange:1" --name msb\_internal\_apigateway nexus3.onap.org:10001/onap/msb/msb\_apigateway
+
+**Register a REST service to MSB via curl**::
+
+ curl -X POST \\
+
+ -H "Content-Type: application/json" \\
+
+ -d '{"serviceName": "aai", "version": "v8", "url":
+ "/aai/v8/","protocol": "REST", "path": "/aai/v8", "nodes": [ {"ip":
+ "10.74.215.65","port": "8443"}]}' \\
+
+ "http://127.0.0.1:10081/api/microservices/v1/services”
+
+**Test the REST Service via the internal API gateway**::
+
+ curl http://127.0.0.1/aai/v8/cloud-infrastructure/cloud-regions
+
+FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions)
+================================
+
+Does OOM enable the deployment of VNFs on containers?
+
+- No. OOM provides a mechanism to instantiate and manage the ONAP
+ components themselves with containers but does not provide a
+ Multi-VIM capability such that VNFs can be deployed into containers.
+  The Multi VIM/Cloud Project may provide this functionality at some point.
+
+Configuration Parameters
+========================
+
+Configuration parameters that are specific to the ONAP deployment, for example
+hard coded IP addresses, are parameterized and stored in a OOM specific
+set of configuration files.
+
+More information about ONAP configuration can be found in the Configuration Management
+section.
+
+References
+==========
+
+- Docker - http://docker.com
+
+- Kubernetes - http://kubernetes.io
+
+- Helm - https://helm.sh
diff --git a/docs/index.rst b/docs/index.rst
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@@ -0,0 +1,9 @@
+.. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
+
+OOM Documentation Repository
+----------------------------
+.. toctree::
+ :maxdepth: 2
+
+ OOM Project Description/oom_project_description.rst
+ OOM User Guide/oom_user_guide.rst
diff --git a/docs/kubernetes_objects.png b/docs/kubernetes_objects.png
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