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.. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0
.. International License.
.. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
.. Copyright 2018-2020 Amdocs, Bell Canada, Orange, Samsung
.. Modification copyright (C) 2022 Nordix Foundation
.. _oom_project_description:
ONAP Operations Manager Project
###############################
.. warning::
THIS PAGE PROB NEEDS A REWRITE AS IT IS OUTDATED
The ONAP Operations Manager (OOM) is responsible for life-cycle management of
the ONAP platform itself; components such as SO, 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.
.. figure:: resources/images/oom_logo/oomLogoV2-medium.png
:align: right
In summary OOM provides the following capabilities:
- **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
OOM supports a wide variety of Kubernetes private clouds - built with Rancher,
Kubeadm or Cloudify - and public cloud infrastructures such as: Microsoft
Azure, Amazon AWS, Google GCD, VMware VIO, and OpenStack.
The OOM documentation is broken into four different areas each targeted at a
different user:
- :ref:`oom_dev_guide` - a guide for developers of OOM
- :ref:`oom_infra_guide` - a guide for those setting up the environments that OOM will use
- :ref:`oom_deploy_guide` - a guide for those deploying OOM on an existing cloud
- :ref:`oom_user_guide` - a guide for operators of an OOM instance
- :ref:`oom_access_info_guide` - a guide for operators who require access to OOM applications
The :ref:`release_notes` for OOM describe the incremental features per release.
Component Orchestration Overview
================================
Multiple technologies, templates, and extensible plug-in frameworks are used in
ONAP to orchestrate platform instances of software component artifacts. A few
standard configurations are provide that may be suitable for test, development,
and some production deployments by substitution of local or platform wide
parameters. Larger and more automated deployments may require integration the
component technologies, templates, and frameworks with a higher level of
automated orchestration and control software. Design guidelines are provided to
insure the component level templates and frameworks can be easily integrated
and maintained. The following diagram provides an overview of these with links
to examples and templates for describing new ones.
.. graphviz::
digraph COO {
rankdir="LR";
{
node [shape=folder]
oValues [label="values"]
cValues [label="values"]
comValues [label="values"]
sValues [label="values"]
oCharts [label="charts"]
cCharts [label="charts"]
comCharts [label="charts"]
sCharts [label="charts"]
blueprint [label="TOSCA blueprint"]
}
{oom [label="ONAP Operations Manager"]}
{hlo [label="High Level Orchestrator"]}
hlo -> blueprint
hlo -> oom
oom -> oValues
oom -> oCharts
oom -> component
oom -> common
common -> comValues
common -> comCharts
component -> cValues
component -> cCharts
component -> subcomponent
subcomponent -> sValues
subcomponent -> sCharts
blueprint -> component
}
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