From 3cde8c1c51e3a785ecf229dfec8467096a5a2a3c Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: guanwenyao Date: Thu, 26 Oct 2017 13:39:30 +0800 Subject: commit bug fix vnfrqts-128,129 Issue-id:VNFRQTS-128 Change-Id: I6882a59b0ecdda616e360abeb14a6a1f1a90770a Signed-off-by: guanwenyao --- docs/vnf_guidelines/vnf_guidelines.rst | 29 ++++++++++++++++------------- 1 file changed, 16 insertions(+), 13 deletions(-) diff --git a/docs/vnf_guidelines/vnf_guidelines.rst b/docs/vnf_guidelines/vnf_guidelines.rst index 9ad5e5c..ab8c3ca 100644 --- a/docs/vnf_guidelines/vnf_guidelines.rst +++ b/docs/vnf_guidelines/vnf_guidelines.rst @@ -722,8 +722,11 @@ ONAP Project. We anticipate an ongoing project within the ONAP community to maintain similar guidance for VNF developers to ONAP.Comments on these guidelines should be discussed there. -Appendix A - Glossary -===================== +**7. Appendix** +=============== + +a. Glossary +------------- +-------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ | Heat | Heat is a service to orchestrate composite cloud applications using a declarative template format through an OpenStack-native REST API. | @@ -748,13 +751,13 @@ Appendix A - Glossary | | |image2| | +-------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ -Appendix B - References -======================= +b. References +--------------- 1. VNF Requirements -Appendix C - Comparison between VNF Guidelines and ETSI GS NFV-SWA 001 -====================================================================== +c. Comparison between VNF Guidelines and ETSI GS NFV-SWA 001 +-------------------------------------------------------------- The VNF guidelines presented in this document (VNF Guidelines) overlap with the ETSI GS NFV-SWA 001 (Network Functions Virtualization (NFV); @@ -779,7 +782,7 @@ This appendix will describe the differences between these two documents indexed on the SWA 001 sections. Section 4 Overview of VNF in the NFV Architecture -------------------------------------------------- +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ This section provides an overview of the ETSI NFVI architecture and how it interfaces with the VNF architecture. Because of the differences @@ -790,7 +793,7 @@ A high level view of the differences in architecture can be found in the main body of this document. Section 5 VNF Design Patterns and Properties --------------------------------------------- +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ This section of the SWA 001 document gives a broad view of all the possible design patterns of VNFs. The VNF Guidelines do not generally @@ -798,7 +801,7 @@ differ from this section. The VNF Guidelines address a more specific scope than what is allowed in the SWA 001 document. Section 5.1 VNF Design Patterns -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The following are differences between the VNF Guidelines and SWA-001: @@ -817,7 +820,7 @@ The following are differences between the VNF Guidelines and SWA-001: ONAP. Section 5.2 VNF Update and Upgrade -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ - 5.2.2 - ONAP will orchestrate updates and upgrades. The preferred method for updates and upgrades is to build a new instance @@ -825,7 +828,7 @@ Section 5.2 VNF Update and Upgrade and kill the old instance. Section 5.3 VNF Properties -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The following are differences between the VNF Guidelines and SWA-001: @@ -850,7 +853,7 @@ The following are differences between the VNF Guidelines and SWA-001: VNFCs but it encourages the minimization of stateful VNFCs. Section 5.4 Attributes describing VNF Requirements -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Attributes described in the VNF Guidelines and reference documents include those attributes defined in this section of the SWA 001 document @@ -893,7 +896,7 @@ but also include additional attributes. .. [10] “Architectural Framework”, ETSI GS NFV 002 (v1.1.1) Oct. 2013) -.. |image0| image:: VNF_Control_Loop.jpg +.. |image0| image:: ONAP_VNF_Control_Loop.jpg :width: 6.56250in :height: 3.69167in .. |image1| image:: VNF_Lifecycle.jpg -- cgit 1.2.3-korg