| .. vim: syntax=rst |
| |
| Aether ROC Developer Guide |
| ========================== |
| |
| Background / Development Environment |
| ------------------------------------ |
| |
| This document assumes familiarity with Kubernetes and Helm, and that a Kubernetes/Helm development |
| environment has already been deployed in the developer’s work environment. |
| This development environment can use any of a number of potential mechanisms -- including KinD, Kubeadm, etc. |
| The Aether-in-a-Box script is one potential way to setup a development environment, but not the only way. |
| As an alternative to the developer’s local machine, a remote environment can be set up, for example on |
| cloud infrastructure such as cloudlab. |
| |
| Installing Prerequisites |
| ------------------------ |
| |
| Atomix and onos-operator must be installed:: |
| |
| # create necessary namespaces |
| kubectl create namespace micro-onos |
| |
| # install atomix |
| helm -n kube-system install atomix-controller atomix/atomix-controller |
| helm -n kube-system install atomix-raft-storage atomix/atomix-raft-storage |
| |
| # install the onos operator |
| helm install -n kube-system onos-operator onosproject/onos-operator |
| |
| |
| Verify that these services were installed properly. |
| You should see pods for *atomix-controller*, *atomix-raft-storage-controller*, |
| *onos-operator-config*, and *onos-operator-topo*. |
| Execute these commands:: |
| |
| kubectl -n kube-system get pods | grep -i atomix |
| kubectl -n kube-system get pods | grep -i onos |
| |
| |
| Create a values-override.yaml |
| ----------------------------- |
| |
| You’ll want to override several of the defaults in the ROC helm charts:: |
| |
| cat > values-override.yaml <<EOF |
| import: |
| onos-gui: |
| enabled: true |
| |
| onos-gui: |
| ingress: |
| enabled: false |
| |
| sdcore-adapter-v3: |
| prometheusEnabled: false |
| |
| sdcore-exporter: |
| prometheusEnabled: false |
| |
| onos-exporter: |
| prometheusEnabled: false |
| |
| aether-roc-gui-v3: |
| ingress: |
| enabled: false |
| EOF |
| |
| Installing the Aether-Roc-Umbrella Helm chart |
| --------------------------------------------- |
| |
| Add the necessary helm repositories:: |
| |
| # obtain username and password from Michelle and/or ONF infra team |
| export repo_user=<username> |
| export repo_password=<password> |
| helm repo add sdran --username "$repo_user" --password "$repo_password" https://sdrancharts.onosproject.org |
| |
| Aether-Roc-Umbrella will bring up the ROC and its services:: |
| |
| helm -n micro-onos install aether-roc-umbrella sdran/aether-roc-umbrella -f values-override.yaml |
| |
| kubectl wait pod -n micro-onos --for=condition=Ready -l type=config --timeout=300s |
| |
| |
| .. _posting-the-mega-patch: |
| |
| Posting the mega-patch |
| ---------------------- |
| |
| The ROC usually comes up in a blank state -- there are no Enterprises, UEs, or other artifacts present in it. |
| The mega-patch is an example patch that populates the ROC with some sample enterprises, UEs, slices, etc. |
| Execute the following:: |
| |
| # launch a port-forward for the API |
| # this will continue to run in the background |
| kubectl -n micro-onos port-forward service/aether-roc-api --address 0.0.0.0 8181:8181 & |
| |
| git clone https://github.com/onosproject/aether-roc-api.git |
| |
| # execute the mega-patch (it will post via CURL to localhost:8181) |
| bash ~/path/to/aether-roc-api/examples/MEGA_Patch.curl |
| |
| |
| You may wish to customize the mega patch. |
| For example, by default the patch configures the sdcore-adapter to push to sdcore-test-dummy. |
| You could configure it to push to a live aether-in-a-box core by doing something like this:: |
| |
| sed -i 's^http://aether-roc-umbrella-sdcore-test-dummy/v1/config/5g^http://webui.omec.svc.cluster.local:9089/config^g' MEGA_Patch.curl |
| |
| #apply the patch |
| ./MEGA_Patch.curl |
| |
| (Note that if your Aether-in-a-Box was installed on a different machine that port-forwarding may be necessary) |
| |
| |
| Expected CURL output from a successful mega-patch post will be a UUID. |
| You can also verify that the mega-patch was successful by going into the aether-roc-gui in a browser |
| (see the section on useful port-forwards below). The GUI may open to a dashboard that is unpopulated -- you |
| can use the dropdown menu (upper-right hand corner of the screen) to select an object such as VCS and you |
| will see a list of VCS. |
| |
| |ROCGUI| |
| |
| Uninstalling the Aether-Roc-Umbrella Helm chart |
| ----------------------------------------------- |
| |
| To tear things back down, usually as part of a developer loop prior to redeploying again, do the following:: |
| |
| helm -n micro-onos del aether-roc-umbrella |
| |
| If the uninstall hangs or if a subsequent reinstall hangs, it could be an issue with some of the CRDs |
| not getting cleaned up. The following may be useful:: |
| |
| # fix stuck finalizers in operator CRDs |
| |
| kubectl -n micro-onos patch entities connectivity-service-v2 --type json --patch='[ { "op": "remove", "path": "/metadata/finalizers" } ]' |
| |
| kubectl -n micro-onos patch entities connectivity-service-v3 --type json --patch='[ { "op": "remove", "path": "/metadata/finalizers" } ]' |
| |
| kubectl -n micro-onos patch kind aether --type json --patch='[ { "op": "remove", "path": "/metadata/finalizers" } ]' |
| |
| Useful port forwards |
| -------------------- |
| |
| Port forwarding is often necessary to allow access to ports inside of Kubernetes pods that use ClusterIP addressing. |
| Note that you typically need to leave a port-forward running (you can put it in the background). |
| Also, If you redeploy the ROC and/or if a pod crashes then you might have to restart a port-forward. |
| The following port-forwards may be useful:: |
| |
| # aether-roc-api |
| |
| kubectl -n micro-onos port-forward service/aether-roc-api --address 0.0.0.0 8181:8181 |
| |
| # aether-roc-gui |
| |
| kubectl -n micro-onos port-forward service/aether-roc-gui --address 0.0.0.0 8183:80 |
| |
| # grafana |
| |
| kubectl -n micro-onos port-forward service/aether-roc-umbrella-grafana --address 0.0.0.0 8187:80 |
| |
| # onos gui |
| |
| kubectl -n micro-onos port-forward service/onos-gui --address 0.0.0.0 8182:80 |
| |
| Aether-roc-api and aether-roc-gui are in our experience the most useful two port-forwards. |
| Aether-roc-api is useful to be able to POST REST API requests. |
| Aether-roc-gui is useful to be able to interactively browse the current configuration. |
| |
| Deploying using custom images |
| ----------------------------- |
| |
| Custom images may be used by editing the values-override.yaml file. |
| For example, to deploy a custom sdcore-adapter:: |
| |
| sdcore-adapter-v3: |
| |
| prometheusEnabled: false |
| |
| image: |
| |
| repository: my-private-repo/sdcore-adapter |
| |
| tag: my-tag |
| |
| pullPolicy: Always |
| |
| The above example assumes you have published a docker images at my-private-repo/sdcore-adapter:my-tag. |
| My particular workflow is to deploy a local-docker registry and push my images to that. |
| Please do not publish ONF images to a public repository unless the image is intended to be public. |
| Several ONF repositories are private, and therefore their docker artifacts should also be private. |
| |
| There are alternatives to using a private docker repository. |
| For example, if you are using kubadm, then you may be able to simply tag the image locally. |
| If you’re using KinD, then you can push a local image to into the kind cluster:: |
| |
| kind load docker-image sdcore-adapter:my-tag |
| |
| Inspecting logs |
| --------------- |
| |
| Most of the relevant Kubernetes pods are in the micro-onos namespace. |
| The names may change from deployment to deployment, so start by getting a list of pods:: |
| |
| kubectl -n micro-onos get pods |
| |
| Then you can inspect a specific pod/container:: |
| |
| kubectl -n micro-onos logs sdcore-adapter-v3-7468cc58dc-ktctz sdcore-adapter-v3 |
| |
| Some exercises to get familiar |
| ------------------------------ |
| |
| 1) Deploy the ROC and POST the mega-patch, go into the aether-roc-GUI and click through the VCS, DeviceGroup, and |
| other objects to see that they were created as expected. |
| |
| 2) Examine the log of the sdcore-adapter-v3 container. |
| It should be attempting to push the mega-patch’s changes. |
| If you don’t have a core available, it may be failing the push, but you should see the attempts. |
| |
| 3) Change an object in the GUI. |
| Watch the sdcore-adapter-v3 log file and see that the adapter attempts to push the change. |
| |
| 4) Try POSTing a change via the API. |
| Observe the sdcore-adapter-v3 log file and see that the adapter attempts to push the change. |
| |
| 5) Deploy a 5G Aether-in-a-Box (See sd-core developer guide), modify the mega-patch to specify the URL for the |
| Aether-in-a-Box webui container, POST the mega-patch, and observe that the changes were correctly pushed via the |
| sdcore-adapter-v3 into the sd-core’s webui container (webui container log will show configuration as it is |
| received) |
| |
| .. |ROCGUI| image:: images/rocgui.png |