aboutsummaryrefslogtreecommitdiffstats
path: root/docs/oom_user_guide.rst
blob: b8e5d1bb9db57f7d2f4e2892b3c740f14c4b202b (plain)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
511
512
513
514
515
516
517
518
519
520
521
522
523
524
525
526
527
528
529
530
531
532
533
534
535
536
537
538
539
540
541
542
543
544
545
546
547
548
549
550
551
552
553
554
555
556
557
558
559
560
561
562
563
564
565
566
567
568
569
570
571
572
573
574
575
576
577
578
579
580
581
.. 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/

.. _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 this simple command::

  > 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 http://gerrit.onap.org/r/oom
  > cd kubernetes

Then build your local Helm repository::

  > make all

To setup a local Helm server to server up the ONAP charts::

  > 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

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 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

  <...>

.. 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 mechanims
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.