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author | vempo <vitaliy.emporopulo@amdocs.com> | 2018-10-17 17:03:50 +0300 |
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committer | Avi Gaffa <avi.gaffa@amdocs.com> | 2018-10-23 06:03:35 +0000 |
commit | a7d3b1dd5d9cc64eceb701085f4252da8a6839fc (patch) | |
tree | d338eb1d46fe5876806bdb582216d0ef41c2da9a /README.md | |
parent | de79fe9116276e768dedcdc4cacfdfdaf53a52e7 (diff) |
Updated README
Change-Id: Iee2caa8ba98030b5e9cb7b362f0d4fb1ba674f85
Issue-ID: SDC-1743
Signed-off-by: vempo <vitaliy.emporopulo@amdocs.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'README.md')
-rw-r--r-- | README.md | 212 |
1 files changed, 182 insertions, 30 deletions
@@ -1,51 +1,203 @@ -# Steps to run the Workflow application on Docker +Introduction +============ -## 1. Initialize Workflow Database +Workflow Designer is a [pluggable SDC designer](https://wiki.onap.org/display/DW/Generic+Designer+Support) that allows +a user to design a workflow, save it, and attach it to a SDC service as an artifact. Workflow Designer also manages +the definitions of activities, which can be later used as parts of the designed workflows. -`docker run -d -e CS_AUTHENTICATE={CS_AUTHENTICATE} -e CS_HOST={HOST} -e CS_PORT={PORT} -e CS_USER={USER} --e CS_PASSWORD={PASSWORD} {INIT_IMAGE}` +Components +========== -This is done only once to initialize the DB schema. +The designer is comprised of the following deployment units: -**Example** +- Designer backend is the core component. It exposes RESTful APIs for managing workflow and activity data. The backend +is agnostic to the type of a workflow artifact — its main concerns are workflow inputs and outputs, and metadata. +One of the APIs enables to attach a certified workflow artifact to a SDC service, therefore the designer must be able +to call an API on SDC. In order to do so, the location of a SDC server, and +[SDC consumer](https://wiki.onap.org/display/DW/Consumer+creation) credentials are required. + +- Designer frontend serves static content of a Web application for creating and managing workflows, and forwards API +requests to the backend. The static content includes JavaScript, images, CSS, etc. A major part of the Web application +is Workflow Composition View — a graphical interface for arranging a workflow sequence. The Web application also produces a +workflow artifact that will be sent to the backend, saved along with other data, and later used by a service. The architecture +allows for different implementations of the frontend component. For example, a different technology can be used for the +Composition View, which will probably also result in a different type of the artifacts (e.g. Bpmn.io vs. Camunda). -running docker with secured Cassandra DB +- Cassandra database is used by the designer backend as the main storage for workflow data. A dedicated instance of +Cassandra can be deployed, or an existing cluster may be used. -`docker run -d -e CS_HOST=10.247.41.19 -e CS_AUTHENTICATE=true -e CS_USER=test -e CS_PASSWORD=secret -e CS_PORT=9160 -onap/workflow-init:latest` +- Database initialization scripts run once per deployment to create the necessary Cassandra keyspaces and tables, pre-populate data, etc. -running docker with unsecured Cassandra DB +Deployment on Docker +==================== -`docker run -d -e CS_HOST=10.247.41.19 -e CS_AUTHENTICATE=false -e CS_PORT=9160 onap/workflow-init:latest` +The procedure below describes manual deployment on plain Docker for development or a demo. -or +## 1. Database -`docker run -d -e CS_HOST=10.247.41.19 -e CS_PORT=9160 onap/workflow-init:latest` +Create a dedicated instance of Cassandra. This step is optional if you already have a Cassandra cluster. +The designer is not expected to have problems working with Cassandra 3.x, but has been tested with 2.1.x because this is the version used by +SDC. -## 2. Start Backend +An easy way to spin up a Cassandra instance is using a Cassandra Docker image as described in the +[official documentation](https://hub.docker.com/_/cassandra/). -`docker run -d -e JAVA_OPTIONS={JAVA_OPTIONS} -e CS_HOSTS={COMMA_SEPARATED_HOSTS} -e CS_PORT={PORT} --e CS_USER={USER} -e CS_PASSWORD={PASSWORD} -p {HOST_PORT}:{APPLICATION_PORT} {BACKEND_IMAGE}` +### Example -or, if Cassandra authentication is not required +`docker run -d --name workflow-cassandra cassandra:2.1` -`docker run -d -e JAVA_OPTIONS={JAVA_OPTIONS} -e CS_HOSTS={COMMA_SEPARATED_HOSTS} -e CS_PORT={PORT} --e CS_AUTHENTICATE=false -p {HOST_PORT}:{APPLICATION_PORT} {BACKEND_IMAGE}` +## 2. Database Initialization -**optional parameters** +**WARNING**: *This step must be executed only once.* -For posting workflow artifact to external API +`docker run -ti -e CS_HOST=<cassandra-host> -e CS_PORT=<cassandra-port> -e CS_AUTHENTICATE=true/false +-e CS_USER=<cassandra-user> -e CS_PASSWORD=<cassandra-password> nexus3.onap.org:10001/onap/workflow-init:latest` -`-e SDC_PROTOCOL={SDC_PROTOCOL} -e SDC_ENDPOINT={SDC_ENDPOINT}` -SDC_PROTOCOL - HTTP\HTTPS -SDC_ENDPOINT - <IP>:<PORT> +### Environment Variables -The server listens on 8080 by default, but it is possible to change the application port by passing -`-e SERVER_PORT={PORT}` to Docker _run_ command. +- CS_HOST — Cassandra hostname or IP address. -To check health information of application you can use option `-e SHOW_HEALTH={always}` +- CS_PORT — Cassandra Thrift client port. If not specified, the default of 9160 will be used. -**Example** +- CS_AUTHENTICATE — whether password authentication must be used to connect to Cassandra. A *false* will be +assumed if this variable is not specified. -`docker run -d -e JAVA_OPTIONS="-Xmx128m -Xms128m -Xss1m" -e CS_HOSTS=10.247.41.19,10.247.41.20 --e CS_PORT=9042 -e CS_AUTHENTICATE=false -p 8080:8080 onap/workflow-backend:latest`
\ No newline at end of file +- CS_USER — Cassandra username if CS_AUTHENTICATE is *true*. + +- CS_PASSWORD — Cassandra password if CS_AUTHENTICATE is *true*. + +### Example + +Assuming you have created a dedicated Cassandra container as described in Database section, and the access to it is not +protected with a password, the following command will initialize the database: + +`docker run -d --name workflow-init +-e CS_HOST=$(docker inspect workflow-cassandra --format={{.NetworkSettings.IPAddress}}) +nexus3.onap.org:10001/onap/workflow-init:latest` + +### Troubleshooting + +In order to see if the Workflow Designer was successfully initialized, make sure the console does not contain error messages. +You can also see the logs of the initialization container using `docker logs workflow-init` command. + +## 3. Backend + +`docker run -d -e SDC_PROTOCL=http/https -e SDC_ENDPOINT=<sdc-host>:<sdc-port> -e SDC_USER=<sdc-username> +-e SDC_PASSWORD=<sdc-password> -e CS_HOSTS=<cassandra-hosts> -e CS_PORT=<cassandra-port> +-e CS_AUTHENTICATE=true/false -e CS_USER=<cassandra-user> -e CS_PASSWORD=<cassandra-password> +-e JAVA_OPTIONS=<jvm-options> -e SHOW_HEALTH=<heathcheck-mode> nexus3.onap.org:10001/onap/workflow-backend:latest` + +### Environment Variables + +- SDC_PROTOCOL — protocol to be used for calling SDC APIs (http or https). + +- SDC_ENDPOINT — the base path of SDC external API, in the format ="10.247.41.20:8080" + +- SDC_USER — Workflow consumer username + +- SDC_PASSWORD — Workflow consumer password + +- CS_HOSTS — comma-separated list of Cassandra hostnames or IP addresses. + +- CS_PORT — CQL native client port. If not specified, the default of 9042 will be used. + +- CS_AUTHENTICATE — whether password authentication must be used to connect to Cassandra. A *false* will be +assumed if this variable is not specified. + +- CS_USER — Cassandra username if CS_AUTHENTICATE is *true*. + +- CS_PASSWORD — Cassandra password if CS_AUTHENTICATE is *true*. + +- JAVA_OPTIONS — optionally, JVM (Java Virtual Machine) arguments. + +- SHOW_HEALTH — how health information will be exposed, as documented in +[Spring Boot](https://docs.spring.io/spring-boot/docs/current/reference/html/production-ready-endpoints.html#production-ready-health) documentation. +The default for Workflow designer is *always*. + +### Example + +Assuming you have a dedicated Cassandra container as described in Database section, and the access to it is not +protected with a password. The following command will start a backend container: + +`docker run -d --name workflow-backend -e SDC_PROTOCOL=http +-e SDC_ENDPOINT=$(docker inspect sdc-BE --format={{.NetworkSettings.IPAddress}}):8080 +-e CS_HOSTS=$(docker inspect workflow-cassandra --format={{.NetworkSettings.IPAddress}}) +-e SDC_USER=workflow -e SDC_PASSWORD=<secret> -e JAVA_OPTIONS="-Xmx128m -Xms128m -Xss1m" +nexus3.onap.org:10001/onap/workflow-backend:latest` + +### Troubleshooting + +In order to verify that the Workflow Designer backend has started successfully, check the logs of the +backend container. For example, by running `docker logs workflow-backend`. The logs must not contain any +error messages. + +Application logs are located in the */var/log/ONAP/workflow-designer/backend* directory of a workflow backend +container. For example, you can view the audit log by running +`docker exec -ti workflow-backend less /var/log/ONAP/workflow-designer/backend/audit.log`. + +## 4. Frontend + +`docker run -d -e BACKEND=http://<backend-host>:<backend-port> -e JAVA_OPTIONS=<jvm-options> +nexus3.onap.org:10001/onap/workflow-frontend:latest` + +- BACKEND — root endpoint of the RESTful APIs exposed by a workflow backend server. + +- JAVA_OPTIONS — optionally, JVM (Java Virtual Machine) arguments. + +### Example + +`docker run -d --name workflow-frontend +-e BACKEND=http://$(docker inspect workflow-backend --format={{.NetworkSettings.IPAddress}}):8080 +-e JAVA_OPTIONS="-Xmx64m -Xms64m -Xss1m" -p 9088:8080 nexus3.onap.org:10001/onap/workflow-frontend:latest` + +Notice that port 8080 of the frontend container has been +[mapped]( https://docs.docker.com/config/containers/container-networking/#published-ports) to port 9088 of the host +machine. This makes the Workflow Designer Web application accessible from the outside world via the host machine's +IP address/hostname. + +### Troubleshooting + +In order to check if the Workflow Designer frontend has successfully started, look at the logs of the +frontend container. For example, by running `docker logs workflow-frontend`. The logs should not contain +error messages. + +Workflow frontend does not have backend logic, therefore there are no application logs. + +SDC Plugin Configuration +======================== + +In order to run as an SDC pluggable designer, Workflow Designer must be added to SDC configuration as described in +[Generic plugin support](https://wiki.onap.org/display/DW/Generic+Designer+Support). + +If you are deploying SDC using a standard procedure (OOM or the +[SDC shell script](https://wiki.onap.org/display/DW/Deploying+SDC+on+a+Linux+VM+for+Development)), +the easiest way to configure the Workflow plugin is to edit the *default_attributes/Plugins/WORKFLOW* +section of *AUTO.json*. + +### Plugin Source + +The main endpoint to load Workflow Designer Web application is defined by `"pluginSourceUrl": "http://<host>:<port>"`. + +Keep in mind that the URL **must be accessible from a user's browser**. In most cases, `<host>` will be the hostname or +IP address of the machine that runs Docker engine, and `<port>` will be a host port to which you have published port +8080 of the Workflow frontend container. + +### Plugin Discovery + +In order to check the availability of a plugin, SDC uses `"pluginDiscoveryUrl"`. For Workflow the value is +`http://<host>:<port>/ping`. + +### Example + +Let's assume that hostname of the machine that runs Docker containers with the Workflow application is +*workflow.example.com*, and port 8080 of the Workflow frontend is mapped to 9088 on the host. In this case the corresponding +section of *AUTO.json* will look like below: + +``` +"Plugins": { + "WORKFLOW": { + "workflow_discovery_url": "http://workflow.example.com:9088/ping", + "workflow_source_url": "http://workflow.example.com:9088" + } +}, +``` |