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-rw-r--r--docs/installation/docker.rst5
-rw-r--r--docs/installation/oom.rst95
2 files changed, 94 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/docs/installation/docker.rst b/docs/installation/docker.rst
index c64a001a..d9ddd1a1 100644
--- a/docs/installation/docker.rst
+++ b/docs/installation/docker.rst
@@ -105,8 +105,3 @@ In order to run the containers, you can use *docker-compose*. This uses the *doc
**You now have a full standalone ONAP Policy framework up and running!**
-
-
-
-End of Document
-
diff --git a/docs/installation/oom.rst b/docs/installation/oom.rst
index a22d7b7e..1bdaa240 100644
--- a/docs/installation/oom.rst
+++ b/docs/installation/oom.rst
@@ -9,8 +9,101 @@ Policy OOM Installation
.. contents::
:depth: 2
+Policy OOM Charts
+*****************
+The policy K8S charts are located in the `OOM repository <https://gerrit.onap.org/r/gitweb?p=oom.git;a=tree;f=kubernetes/policy;h=78576c7a0d30cb87054e9776326cdde20986e6e3;hb=refs/heads/master>`_.
+Please refer to the OOM documentation on how to install and deploy ONAP.
+Policy Pods
+***********
+To get a listing of the Policy Pods, run the following command:
-End of Document
+.. code-block:: bash
+
+ kubectl get pods | grep policy
+
+ brmsgw ClusterIP 10.43.77.177 <none> 9989/TCP 5d15h app=brmsgw,release=dev-policy
+ drools ClusterIP 10.43.167.154 <none> 6969/TCP,9696/TCP 5d15h app=drools,release=dev-policy
+ nexus ClusterIP 10.43.239.92 <none> 8081/TCP 5d15h app=nexus,release=dev-policy
+ pap NodePort 10.43.207.229 <none> 8443:30219/TCP,9091:30218/TCP 5d15h app=pap,release=dev-policy
+ pdp ClusterIP None <none> 8081/TCP 5d15h app=pdp,release=dev-policy
+ policy-apex-pdp ClusterIP 10.43.226.0 <none> 6969/TCP 5d15h app=policy-apex-pdp,release=dev-policy
+ policy-api ClusterIP 10.43.102.56 <none> 6969/TCP 5d15h app=policy-api,release=dev-policy
+ policy-distribution ClusterIP 10.43.4.211 <none> 6969/TCP 5d15h app=policy-distribution,release=dev-policy
+ policy-pap ClusterIP 10.43.175.164 <none> 6969/TCP 5d15h app=policy-pap,release=dev-policy
+ policy-xacml-pdp ClusterIP 10.43.181.208 <none> 6969/TCP 5d15h app=policy-xacml-pdp,release=dev-policy
+ policydb ClusterIP 10.43.93.233 <none> 3306/TCP 5d15h app=policydb,release=dev-policy
+
+Some of these pods are shared between the legacy components and the latest framework components, while others are not.
+
+.. csv-table::
+ :header: "Policy Pod", "Latest Framework", "Legacy"
+ :widths: 15,10,10
+
+ "brmsgw", "", "yes"
+ "drools", "yes", "yes"
+ "nexus", "yes", "yes"
+ "pap", "", "yes"
+ "pdp", "", "yes"
+ "policy-apex-pdp", "yes", ""
+ "policy-api", "yes", ""
+ "policy-distribution", "yes", "yes"
+ "policy-pap", "yes", ""
+ "policy-xacml-pdp", "yes", ""
+ "policydb", "yes", "yes"
+
+Accessing Policy Containers
+***************************
+Accessing the policy docker containers is the same as for any kubernetes container. Here is an example:
+
+.. code-block:: bash
+
+ kubectl -n onap exec -it dev-policy-policy-xacml-pdp-584844b8cf-9zptx bash
+
+Rebuilding and/or modifying the Policy Charts
+*********************************************
+The assumption is you have cloned the charts from the OOM repository into a local directory.
+
+**Step 1** Go into local copy of OOM charts
+
+From your local copy, edit any of the values.yaml files in the policy tree to make desired changes.
+
+**Step 2** Build the charts
+
+.. code-block:: bash
+
+ make policy
+ make onap
+
+**Step 3** Undeploy Policy
+After undeploying policy, loop on monitoring the policy pods until they go away.
+
+.. code-block:: bash
+
+ helm del --purge dev-policy
+ kubectl get pods -n onap
+
+**Step 4** Delete NFS persisted data for Policy
+Sudo to root if you logged in using another account such as ubuntu.
+
+.. code-block:: bash
+
+ rm -fr /dockerdata-nfs/dev-policy
+
+**Step 5** Re-Deploy Policy pods
+After deploying policy, loop on monitoring the policy pods until they come up.
+
+.. code-block:: bash
+
+ helm deploy dev-policy local/onap --namespace onap
+ kubectl get pods -n onap
+
+Exposing ports
+**************
+For security reasons, the ports for the policy containers are configured as ClusterIP and thus not exposed. If you find you need those ports in a development environment, then the following will expose them.
+
+.. code-block:: bash
+
+ kubectl -n onap expose service policy-api --port=7171 --target-port=6969 --name=api-public --type=NodePort