commit | 6683e0bd31dc7e1ac1efd56e586d92b389229931 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Andy Bavier <andy@onlab.us> | Wed Sep 13 17:28:03 2017 -0700 |
committer | Andy Bavier <andy@opennetworking.org> | Wed Sep 13 18:11:59 2017 -0700 |
tree | e4c9fbc5cc451162c5b8cc2bc42bdb25eb401f62 | |
parent | 37a119c7989a75ac8763a45b91fe44fc870acf32 [diff] |
CORD-1902 Fix 'make compute-node-refresh' Change-Id: Id483978270b85f9d5fed571e88c834b42f0c4d47 (cherry picked from commit 6d1d6b1c9f1e2486247261f527d03a1ab3e58963)
This is the main entry point for building and installing CORD.
If this is your first encounter with CORD, we suggest you start by bringing up an emulated version called CORD-in-a-Box. It installs CORD on a set of virtual machines running on a single physical server. Just follow our CORD-in-a-Box Guide.
You can also install CORD on a physical POD. This involves first assembling a set of servers and switches, and then pointing the build system at that target hardware. Just follow our Physical POD Guide.
For additional information about the CORD Project, see: