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diff --git a/docs/drools/guardpdp.rst b/docs/drools/guardpdp.rst new file mode 100644 index 00000000..797557fc --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/drools/guardpdp.rst @@ -0,0 +1,153 @@ + +.. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. +.. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 + +************************ +Using guard in the PDP-D +************************ + +.. contents:: + :depth: 2 + +This guide will help configure and test guard connection from PDP-D to PDP-X. This guide assumes that the PDP-D is installed and running policy properly with other properties being set properly. + +Configuration +^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +Prerequisites +------------- + +Stop Policy, open, and verify the config: + +- Stop policy with *policy stop* +- Open *$POLICY_HOME/config/controlloop.properties.environment* +- Make sure the *sql.db.host*, *sql.db.username* and *sql.db.password* are set correctly + + +Guard Properties +---------------- + +**guard.url** - URL endpoint of the PDP-X which will receive the request. + - For example, *http://pdp:8081/pdp/api/getDecision* will connect to the localhost PDP-X. + - This request requires some configuration for PDP-X properties below. + - For testing this URL before running policy, see Verification below. + +**guard.jdbc.url** - URL of the database location to which the operations history will be written. + - For example, *jdbc:mariadb://mariadb:3306/onap_sdk*. + - Note that the port is included. + - Note that at the end, the database name is used. + +**guard.disabled** - For enabling / disabling guard functionality. + - For example, to enable set it to false. + - When this is set to true, the previous two properties will be ignored. + - If guard is enabled, then the following PDP-X properties must also be set. + + +PDP-X Properties +---------------- + +For testing these properties before running policy, see Verification below. + +**pdpx.host** - URL of the PDP-X + - For example, pdp can be used when PDP-X is on localhost. + +**pdpx.username** - User to authenticate + +**pdpx.password** - User Password + +**pdpx.environment** - Environment making requests + - For example, TEST + +**pdpx.client.username** - Client to authenticate + +**pdpx.client.password** - Client password + + + +Verification +^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +It is recommended to test using CLI tools before running since changing bash command parameters are faster than restarting policy. + +Logs Verification +----------------- +Checking the logs is straight forward. Check the *$POLICY_HOME/logs/error.log* file for the word "*callRESTfulPDP*" for any exceptions thrown. If they are thrown then there was a problem with the connection. +You can also check the *$POLICY_HOME/logs/network.log* file for the word "*Indeterminate*" which implies the connection failed or got a non 200 response code. + +CLI Verification +---------------- + +It can be helpful to test the PDP-X connection using bash commands to make sure that the PDP-X properties are correct and the guard.url property is correct before running policy. + +**Method 1: httpie - CLI, cURL-like tool for humans** + + Using the http command we can make a request directly to PDP-X from the command line. Use the following form: + + .. code-block:: bash + + http + POST pdp:8081/pdp/api/getDecision + Authorization:<yourAuth> ClientAuth:<yourClientAuth> + Environment:<environment> Content-Type:application/json < guard_request.json + + | where: + | *<yourAuth>* is the string generated from user:pass converted to base64 encoding + | (a conversion tool is available at https://www.base64encode.org/) + | *<yourClientAuth>* is generated the same way but from the client user and pass. + | *<environment>* is the context of the request. For example: TEST + | *pdp* is the host of the PDP-X + + + The guard_request.json should be in the form of the following: + + .. code-block:: json + :caption: guard_request.json + + { + "decisionAttributes": { + "actor": "APPC", + "recipe": "Restart", + "target": "test13", + "clname" : "piptest" + }, + "onapName": "PDPD" + } + + * This request uses Basic Access Authentication. + * This request will need further configuration if you are using a proxy. + + + You know a successful connection is set when a response containing a “PERMIT” or “DENY” in uppercase is returned as follows: + + .. code-block:: json + :caption: Response + + { + "decision": "PERMIT", + "details": "Decision Permit. OK!" + } + +**Method 2: curl** + + This method does the same as the http command but uses the alternate command of curl. The command should have the following form: + + .. code-block:: bash + + curl -u <user>:<pass> -H "Content-Type: application/json" -H "ClientAuth:<yourClientAuth>" + -H "Environment:<environment>" -X POST -d @guard_req.json pdp:8081/pdp/api/getDecision + + * Note that <user> and <pass> are in plain text, while the other headers follow the same form as in Method 1 above. + * This request will need further configuration if you are using a proxy + * The response is the same as in Method 1. + + +**Note on Proxies** + + * JVM system properties should be set if a proxy is being used to make the connection work with policy. + * The connection may succeed but have response code 401 or 403 with improper proxy authentication, which leads to "Indeterminate" + * Additionally, the CLI tools have specific proxy configuration. See their respective manual pages for more info. + + +End of Document + +.. SSNote: Wiki page ref. https://wiki.onap.org/display/DW/Using+guard+in+the+PDP-D |