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-rw-r--r--docs/release/installation/virtual.rst79
1 files changed, 73 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/docs/release/installation/virtual.rst b/docs/release/installation/virtual.rst
index 5682f364..a844d43f 100644
--- a/docs/release/installation/virtual.rst
+++ b/docs/release/installation/virtual.rst
@@ -3,10 +3,23 @@ Installation High-Level Overview - Virtual Deployment
Deploying virtually is an alternative deployment method to bare metal, where
only a single bare metal Jump Host server is required to execute deployment.
-In this deployment type, the Jump Host server will host the undercloud VM along
-with any number of OPNFV overcloud control/compute nodes. This deployment type
-is useful when physical resources are constrained, or there is a desire to
-deploy a temporary sandbox environment.
+This deployment type is useful when physical resources are constrained, or
+there is a desire to deploy a temporary sandbox environment.
+
+With virtual deployments, two deployment options are offered. The first is a
+standard deployment where the Jump Host server will host the undercloud VM along
+with any number of OPNFV overcloud control/compute nodes. This follows the same
+deployment workflow as baremetal, and can take between 1 to 2 hours to complete.
+
+The second option is to use snapshot deployments. Snapshots are saved disk images
+of previously deployed OPNFV upstream. These snapshots are promoted daily and contain
+and already deployed OPNFV environment that has passed a series of tests. The
+advantage of the snapshot is that it deploys in less than 10 minutes. Another
+major advantage is that the snapshots work on both CentOS and Fedora OS. Note:
+Fedora support is only tested via PIP installation at this time and not via RPM.
+
+Standard Deployment Overview
+----------------------------
The virtual deployment operates almost the same way as the bare metal
deployment with a few differences mainly related to power management.
@@ -27,6 +40,23 @@ the power management. Finally, the default network settings file will deploy wi
modification. Customizations are welcome but not needed if a generic set of
network settings are acceptable.
+Snapshot Deployment Overview
+----------------------------
+
+Snapshot deployments use the same ``opnfv-deploy`` CLI as standard deployments.
+The snapshot deployment will use a cache in order to store snapshots that are
+downloaded from the internet at deploy time. This caching avoids re-downloading
+the same artifact between deployments. The snapshot deployment recreates the same
+network and libvirt setup as would have been provisioned by the Standard
+deployment, with the exception that there is no undercloud VM. The snapshot
+deployment will give the location of the RC file to use in order to interact
+with the Overcloud directly from the jump host.
+
+Snapshots come in different topology flavors. One is able to deploy either HA
+(3 Control, 2 Computes, no-HA (1 Control, 2 Computes), or all-in-one
+(1 Control/Compute. The snapshot deployment itself is always done with the
+os-odl-nofeature-* scenario.
+
Installation Guide - Virtual Deployment
=======================================
@@ -57,8 +87,8 @@ Install Jump Host
Follow the instructions in the `Install Bare Metal Jump Host`_ section.
-Running ``opnfv-deploy``
-------------------------
+Running ``opnfv-deploy`` for Standard Deployment
+------------------------------------------------
You are now ready to deploy OPNFV!
``opnfv-deploy`` has virtual deployment capability that includes all of
@@ -96,6 +126,43 @@ Follow the steps below to execute:
3. When the deployment is complete the IP for the undercloud and a url for the
OpenStack dashboard will be displayed
+Running ``opnfv-deploy`` for Snapshot Deployment
+------------------------------------------------
+
+Deploying snapshots requires enough disk space to cache snapshot archives, as well
+as store VM disk images per deployment. The snapshot cache directory can be
+configured at deploy time. Ensure a directory is used on a partition with enough
+space for about 20GB. Additionally, Apex will attempt to detect the default
+libvirt storage pool on the jump host. This is typically '/var/lib/libvirt/images'.
+On default CentOS installations, this path will resolve to the /root partition,
+which is only around 50GB. Therefore, ensure that the path for the default storage
+pool has enough space to hold the VM backing storage (approx 4GB per VM). Note,
+each Overcloud VM disk size is set to 40GB, however Libvirt grows these disks
+dynamically. Due to this only 4GB will show up at initial deployment, but the disk
+may grow from there up to 40GB.
+
+The new arguments to deploy snapshots include:
+
+ - `--snapshot`: Enables snapshot deployments
+ - `--snap-cache`: Indicates the directory to use for caching artifacts
+
+An example deployment command is:
+
+.. code-block::
+
+ opnfv-deploy -d ../config/deploy/os-odl-queens-noha.yaml --snapshot
+ --snap-cache /home/trozet/snap_cache --virtual-computes 0 --no-fetch
+
+In the above example, several of the Standard Deployment arguments are still
+used to deploy snapshots:
+
+ - `-d`: Deploy settings are used to determine OpenStack version of snapshots
+ to use as well as the topology
+ - `--virtual-computes` - When set to 0, it indicates to Apex to use an
+ all-in-one snapshot
+ - `--no-fetch` - Can be used to disable fetching latest snapshot artifact
+ from upstream and use the latest found in `--snap-cache`
+
Verifying the Setup - VMs
-------------------------