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|
.. This work is licensed under a
.. Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
.. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
.. _policy-development-tools-label:
Policy Platform Development Tools
#################################
.. contents::
:depth: 3
This article explains how to build the ONAP Policy Framework for development purposes and how to run stability/
performance tests for a variety of components. To start, the developer should consult the latest ONAP Wiki to
familiarize themselves with developer best practices and how-tos to setup their environment,
see `https://wiki.onap.org/display/DW/Developer+Best+Practices`.
This article assumes that:
* You are using a *\*nix* operating system such as linux or macOS.
* You are using a directory called *git* off your home directory *(~/git)* for your git repositories
* Your local maven repository is in the location *~/.m2/repository*
* You have copied the settings.xml from oparent to *~/.m2/* directory
* You have added settings to access the ONAP Nexus to your M2 configuration,
see `Maven Settings Example <https://wiki.onap.org/display/DW/Setting+Up+Your+Development+Environment>`_
(bottom of the linked page)
The procedure documented in this article has been verified to work on a MacBook laptop running macOS Mojave Version
10.14.6 and an Ubuntu 18.06 VM.
Cloning All The Policy Repositories
***********************************
Run a script such as the script below to clone the required modules from the
`ONAP git repository <https://gerrit.onap.org/r/admin/repos/q/filter:policy>`_.
This script clones all the ONAP Policy Framework repositories.
ONAP Policy Framework has dependencies to the ONAP Parent *oparent* module, the ONAP ECOMP SDK *ecompsdkos* module,
and the A&AI Schema module.
.. code-block:: bash
:caption: Typical ONAP Policy Framework Clone Script
:linenos:
#!/usr/bin/env bash
## script name for output
MOD_SCRIPT_NAME=`basename $0`
## the ONAP clone directory, defaults to "onap"
clone_dir="onap"
## the ONAP repos to clone
onap_repos="\
policy/parent \
policy/common \
policy/models \
policy/docker \
policy/api \
policy/pap \
policy/apex-pdp \
policy/drools-pdp \
policy/drools-applications \
policy/xacml-pdp \
policy/distribution \
policy/clamp "
##
## Help screen and exit condition (i.e. too few arguments)
##
Help()
{
echo ""
echo "$MOD_SCRIPT_NAME - clones all required ONAP git repositories"
echo ""
echo " Usage: $MOD_SCRIPT_NAME [-options]"
echo ""
echo " Options"
echo " -d - the ONAP clone directory, defaults to '.'"
echo " -h - this help screen"
echo ""
exit 255;
}
##
## read command line
##
while [ $# -gt 0 ]
do
case $1 in
#-d ONAP clone directory
-d)
shift
if [ -z "$1" ]; then
echo "$MOD_SCRIPT_NAME: no clone directory"
exit 1
fi
clone_dir=$1
shift
;;
#-h prints help and exists
-h)
Help;exit 0;;
*) echo "$MOD_SCRIPT_NAME: undefined CLI option - $1"; exit 255;;
esac
done
if [ -f "$clone_dir" ]; then
echo "$MOD_SCRIPT_NAME: requested clone directory '$clone_dir' exists as file"
exit 2
fi
if [ -d "$clone_dir" ]; then
echo "$MOD_SCRIPT_NAME: requested clone directory '$clone_dir' exists as directory"
exit 2
fi
mkdir $clone_dir
if [ $? != 0 ]
then
echo cannot clone ONAP repositories, could not create directory '"'$clone_dir'"'
exit 3
fi
for repo in $onap_repos
do
repoDir=`dirname "$repo"`
repoName=`basename "$repo"`
if [ ! -z $dirName ]
then
mkdir "$clone_dir/$repoDir"
if [ $? != 0 ]
then
echo cannot clone ONAP repositories, could not create directory '"'$clone_dir/repoDir'"'
exit 4
fi
fi
git clone https://gerrit.onap.org/r/${repo} $clone_dir/$repo
done
echo ONAP has been cloned into '"'$clone_dir'"'
Execution of the script above results in the following directory hierarchy in your *~/git* directory:
* ~/git/onap
* ~/git/onap/policy
* ~/git/onap/policy/parent
* ~/git/onap/policy/common
* ~/git/onap/policy/models
* ~/git/onap/policy/api
* ~/git/onap/policy/pap
* ~/git/onap/policy/docker
* ~/git/onap/policy/drools-applications
* ~/git/onap/policy/drools-pdp
* ~/git/onap/policy/clamp
* ~/git/onap/policy/apex-pdp
* ~/git/onap/policy/xacml-pdp
* ~/git/onap/policy/distribution
Building ONAP Policy Framework Components
*****************************************
**Step 1:** Optionally, for a completely clean build, remove the ONAP built modules from your local repository.
.. code-block:: bash
rm -fr ~/.m2/repository/org/onap
**Step 2:** A pom such as the one below can be used to build the ONAP Policy Framework modules. Create the *pom.xml*
file in the directory *~/git/onap/policy*.
.. code-block:: xml
:caption: Typical pom.xml to build the ONAP Policy Framework
:linenos:
<project xmlns="http://maven.apache.org/POM/4.0.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://maven.apache.org/POM/4.0.0 http://maven.apache.org/xsd/maven-4.0.0.xsd">
<modelVersion>4.0.0</modelVersion>
<groupId>org.onap</groupId>
<artifactId>onap-policy</artifactId>
<version>1.0.0-SNAPSHOT</version>
<packaging>pom</packaging>
<name>${project.artifactId}</name>
<inceptionYear>2017</inceptionYear>
<organization>
<name>ONAP</name>
</organization>
<modules>
<module>parent</module>
<module>common</module>
<module>models</module>
<module>api</module>
<module>pap</module>
<module>apex-pdp</module>
<module>xacml-pdp</module>
<module>drools-pdp</module>
<module>drools-applications</module>
<module>distribution</module>
<module>clamp</module>
</modules>
</project>
**Policy Architecture/API Transition**
In Dublin, a new Policy Architecture was introduced. The legacy architecture runs in parallel with the new
architecture. It will be deprecated after Frankfurt release. If the developer is only interested in working with the
new architecture components, the engine sub-module can be ommitted.
**Step 3:** You can now build the Policy framework.
Java artifacts only:
.. code-block:: bash
cd ~/git/onap
mvn clean install
With docker images:
.. code-block:: bash
cd ~/git/onap
mvn clean install -P docker
Developing and Debugging each Policy Component
**********************************************
Running a MariaDb Instance
++++++++++++++++++++++++++
The Policy Framework requires a MariaDb instance running. The easiest way to do this is to run a docker image locally.
One example on how to do this is to use the scripts used by the policy/api S3P tests.
`Simulator Setup Script Example <https://gerrit.onap.org/r/gitweb?p=policy/api.git;a=tree;f=testsuites/stability/src/main/resources/simulatorsetup;h=9038413f67cff2e2a79d6345f198f96ee0c57de1;hb=refs/heads/master>`_
.. code-block:: bash
cd ~/git/onap/api/testsuites/stability/src/main/resources/simulatorsetup
./setup_components.sh
Another example on how to run the MariaDb is using the docker compose file used by the Policy API CSITs:
`Example Compose Script to run MariaDB <https://gerrit.onap.org/r/gitweb?p=integration/csit.git;a=blob;f=scripts/policy/docker-compose-api.yml;h=e32190f1e6cb6d9b64ddf53a2db2c746723a0c6a;hb=refs/heads/master>`_
Running the API component standalone
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Assuming you have successfully built the codebase using the instructions above. The only requirement for the API
component to run is a running MariaDb database instance. The easiest way to do this is to run the docker image, please
see the mariadb documentation for the latest information on doing so. Once the mariadb is up and running, a
configuration file must be provided to the api in order for it to know how to connect to the mariadb. You can locate
the default configuration file in the packaging of the api component:
`Default Policy API Configuration <https://gerrit.onap.org/r/gitweb?p=policy/api.git;a=blob;f=packages/policy-api-tarball/src/main/resources/etc/apiParameters.yaml;h=2c19199a8a889cb0ab203334182662fe15e1635e;hb=refs/heads/master>`_
You will want to change the fields pertaining to "host", "port" and "databaseUrl" to your local environment settings
and start the policy-api springboot application either using your IDE of choice or using the run goal from Spring Boot
Maven plugin: *mvn spring-boot:run*.
Running the API component using Docker Compose
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
An example of running the api using a docker compose script is located in the Policy Integration CSIT test repository.
`Policy CSIT API Docker Compose <https://gerrit.onap.org/r/gitweb?p=integration/csit.git;a=blob;f=scripts/policy/docker-compose-api.yml;h=e32190f1e6cb6d9b64ddf53a2db2c746723a0c6a;hb=refs/heads/master>`_
Running the PAP component standalone
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Once you have successfully built the PAP codebase, a running MariaDb database and DMaaP instance will also be required
to start up the application. For MariaDb instance, the easiest way is to run the docker image, please see the mariadb
documentation for the latest information on doing so. For DMaaP, the easiest way during development is to run the DMaaP
simulator which is explained in the below sections. Once the mariadb and DMaaP are running, a configuration file must
be provided to the PAP component in order for it to know how to connect to the mariadb and DMaaP along with other
relevant configuration details. You can locate the default configuration file in the packaging of the PAP component:
`Default PAP Configuration <https://gerrit.onap.org/r/gitweb?p=policy/pap.git;a=blob;f=packages/policy-pap-tarball/src/main/resources/etc/papParameters.yaml;h=06dd45f4946fd0a11ed8ef859f8fc5bcf409a3f0;hb=HEAD>`_
Update the fields related to MariaDB, DMaaP and the RestServer for the application as per your local environment settings.
Then to start the application, just run the Spring Boot application using IDE or command line.
Running the Smoke Tests
***********************
The following links contain instructions on how to run the smoke tests. These may be helpful to developers to become
familiar with the Policy Framework components and test any local changes.
.. toctree::
:maxdepth: 1
smoke/db-migrator-smoke.rst
smoke/acm-participants-smoke.rst
smoke/clamp-smoke.rst
smoke/clamp-ac-participant-protocol-smoke.rst
smoke/policy-participant-smoke.rst
smoke/api-smoke.rst
smoke/pap-smoke.rst
smoke/apex-smoke.rst
smoke/drools-smoke.rst
smoke/xacml-smoke.rst
smoke/distribution-smoke.rst
Running the Stability/Performance Tests
***************************************
The following links contain instructions on how to run the S3P Stability and Performance tests. These may be helpful to developers to become
familiar with the Policy Framework components and test any local changes.
.. toctree::
:maxdepth: 2
testing/s3p/run-s3p.rst
testing/s3p/api-s3p.rst
testing/s3p/pap-s3p.rst
testing/s3p/apex-s3p.rst
testing/s3p/drools-s3p.rst
testing/s3p/xacml-s3p.rst
testing/s3p/distribution-s3p.rst
testing/s3p/clamp-s3p.rst
Running the Pairwise Tests
**************************
The following links contain instructions on how to run the pairwise tests. These may be helpful to developers check that
the Policy Framework works in a full ONAP deployment.
.. toctree::
:maxdepth: 1
pairwise/clamp-policy.rst
pairwise/clamp-dcae.rst
pairwise/policy-cds.rst
pairwise/clamp-sdc.rst
..
api-pairwise.rst
..
pap-pairwise.rst
..
apex-pairwise.rst
..
drools-pairwise.rst
..
xacml-pairwise.rst
..
distribution-pairwise.rst
Running Continuous System and Integration Testing suites
********************************************************
.. toctree::
:maxdepth: 1
testing/csit.rst
Testing OpenSuse docker images
******************************
Policy Framework offers docker images in two flavors: Alpine and OpenSuse.
Alpine images are used in OOM for ONAP deployments.
The OpenSuse images are built manually if needed, by running Maven with the -Pdockersuse profile.
To test these images, CSITs will be run.
1. Build the OpenSuse image you want by running Maven with -Pdockersuse:
.. code-block:: bash
cd policy/apex-pdp
mvn clean install -Pdockersuse
The image onap/policy-apex-pdp:latest will be produced.
2. To avoid ambiguity, tag the image as opensuse:
.. code-block:: bash
docker tag onap/policy-apex-pdp:latest onap/policy-apex-pdp:opensuse
3. Clone policy/docker repo.
4. Modify docker/csit/docker-compose.yml to use the tagged OpenSuse image.
Replace:
.. code-block:: yaml
apex-pdp:
image: nexus3.onap.org:10001/onap/policy-apex-pdp:${POLICY_APEX_PDP_VERSION}
with:
.. code-block:: yaml
apex-pdp:
image: onap/policy-apex-pdp:opensuse
5. Run the project CSIT. For apex-pdp:
.. code-block:: bash
cd docker/csit
./run-project-csit.sh apex-pdp
Automated tests will be run, and log files displayed.
Running Policy Components Locally
*********************************
The following page outlines how to run the policy framework components locally using IntelliJ, Eclipse and the Command Line.
.. toctree::
:maxdepth: 1
./installation/local-installation.rst
Running the Policy Framework in Microk8s
****************************************
The following page outlines how to run the policy framework components using microk8s.
.. toctree::
:maxdepth: 1
./installation/microk8s-installation.rst
Generating Swagger Documentation
********************************
1. Accessing Swagger documentation for springboot based policy applications
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Springfox Swagger2 maven dependency aids with auto-generation of Swagger documentation.
Using the Swagger-UI maven dependency Swagger HTML documentation can be accessed at the root url.
- The generated swagger.json can be accessed at: *https://service_IP:service_port/v2/api-docs*
- Swagger UI can be accessed at: *https://service_IP:service_port/swagger-ui/index.html*
Running the DMaaP Simulator during Development
**********************************************
It is sometimes convenient to run the DMaaP simulator during development. You can run it from the command line using Maven or from within your IDE.
Running on the Command Line
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1. Check out the policy models repository
2. Go to the *models-sim/policy-models-simulators* subdirectory in the policy-models repo
3. Run the following Maven command:
.. code-block:: bash
mvn exec:java -Dexec.mainClass=org.onap.policy.models.simulators.Main -Dexec.args="src/test/resources/simParameters.json"
Running in Eclipse
++++++++++++++++++
1. Check out the policy models repository
2. Go to the *models-sim/policy-models-simulators* module in the policy-models repo
3. Specify a run configuration using the class *org.onap.policy.models.simulators.Main* as the main class
4. Specify an argument of *src/test/resources/simParameters.json* to the run configuration
5. Run the configuration
Specifying a local configuration file
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
You may specify a local configuration file instead of *src/test/resources/simParameters.json* on the command line or as an argument in the run configuration in eclipse:
.. code-block:: json
{
"dmaapProvider": {
"name": "DMaaP simulator",
"topicSweepSec": 900
},
"restServers": [
{
"name": "DMaaP simulator",
"providerClass": "org.onap.policy.models.sim.dmaap.rest.DmaapSimRestControllerV1",
"host": "localhost",
"port": 3904,
"https": false
}
]
}
Bringing up Strimzi-Kafka Deploment with Policy Framework
*********************************************************
This page will explain how to setup a local Kubernetes cluster and minimal helm setup to run and deploy Policy Framework on a single host.
This is meant for a development purpose only as we are going to use microk8s in this page
.. toctree::
:maxdepth: 1
strimzi-policy.rst
|