diff options
author | Jie Hu <hu.jie@zte.com.cn> | 2016-05-28 17:27:35 +0000 |
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committer | Gerrit Code Review <gerrit@172.30.200.206> | 2016-05-28 17:27:35 +0000 |
commit | b1addcfcf107f9b7d5aafe442b35db6e1dd133fc (patch) | |
tree | d8b9f0756e84a1c9eb731d63953f190b3df4cdd8 /docs/requirements | |
parent | c1c4851e7e1755e62f66c8082e0776d535b235bc (diff) | |
parent | 9ba9270d8373d6d4bb3d34ae6c618e9b5f937d63 (diff) |
Merge "Upgrade duration requirement"
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/requirements')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/requirements/104-Requirements.rst | 210 |
1 files changed, 36 insertions, 174 deletions
diff --git a/docs/requirements/104-Requirements.rst b/docs/requirements/104-Requirements.rst index b6e7f57..3dd66dc 100644 --- a/docs/requirements/104-Requirements.rst +++ b/docs/requirements/104-Requirements.rst @@ -5,180 +5,42 @@ Requirements Upgrade duration ================ -As the OPNFV end-users are primarily Telecom operators, the network -services provided by the VNFs deployed on the NFVI should meet the -requirement of 'Carrier Grade'.:: - - In telecommunication, a "carrier grade" or"carrier class" refers to a - system, or a hardware or software component that is extremely reliable, - well tested and proven in its capabilities. Carrier grade systems are - tested and engineered to meet or exceed "five nines" high availability - standards, and provide very fast fault recovery through redundancy - (normally less than 50 milliseconds). [from wikipedia.org] - -"five nines" means working all the time in ONE YEAR except 5'15". - -:: - - We have learnt that a well prepared upgrade of OpenStack needs 10 - minutes. The major time slot in the outage time is used spent on - synchronizing the database. [from ' Ten minutes OpenStack Upgrade? Done! - ' by Symantec] - -This 10 minutes of downtime of the OpenStack services however did not impact the -users, i.e. the VMs running on the compute nodes. This was the outage of -the control plane only. On the other hand with respect to the -preparations this was a manually tailored upgrade specific to the -particular deployment and the versions of each OpenStack service. - -The project targets to achieve a more generic methodology, which however -requires that the upgrade objects fulfil certain requirements. Since -this is only possible on the long run we target first the upgrade -of the different VIM services from version to version. - -**Questions:** - -1. Can we manage to upgrade OPNFV in only 5 minutes? - -.. <MT> The first question is whether we have the same carrier grade - requirement on the control plane as on the user plane. I.e. how - much control plane outage we can/willing to tolerate? - In the above case probably if the database is only half of the size - we can do the upgrade in 5 minutes, but is that good? It also means - that if the database is twice as much then the outage is 20 - minutes. - For the user plane we should go for less as with two release yearly - that means 10 minutes outage per year. - -.. <Malla> 10 minutes outage per year to the users? Plus, if we take - control plane into the consideration, then total outage will be - more than 10 minute in whole network, right? - -.. <MT> The control plane outage does not have to cause outage to - the users, but it may of course depending on the size of the system - as it's more likely that there's a failure that needs to be handled - by the control plane. - -2. Is it acceptable for end users ? Such as a planed service - interruption will lasting more than ten minutes for software - upgrade. - -.. <MT> For user plane, no it's not acceptable in case of - carrier-grade. The 5' 15" downtime should include unplanned and - planned downtimes. - -.. <Malla> I go agree with Maria, it is not acceptable. - -3. Will any VNFs still working well when VIM is down? - -.. <MT> In case of OpenStack it seems yes. .:) - -The maximum duration of an upgrade -^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ - -The duration of an upgrade is related to and proportional with the -scale and the complexity of the OPNFV platform as well as the -granularity (in function and in space) of the upgrade. - -.. <Malla> Also, if is a partial upgrade like module upgrade, it depends - also on the OPNFV modules and their tight connection entities as well. - -.. <MT> Since the maintenance window is shrinking and becoming non-existent - the duration of the upgrade is secondary to the requirement of smooth upgrade. - But probably we want to be able to put a time constraint on each upgrade - during which it must complete otherwise it is considered failed and the system - should be rolled back. I.e. in case of automatic execution it might not be clear - if an upgrade is long or just hanging. The time constraints may be a function - of the size of the system in terms of the upgrade object(s). - -The maximum duration of a roll back when an upgrade is failed -^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ - -The duration of a roll back is short than the corresponding upgrade. It -depends on the duration of restore the software and configure data from -pre-upgrade backup / snapshot. - -.. <MT> During the upgrade process two types of failure may happen: - In case we can recover from the failure by undoing the upgrade - actions it is possible to roll back the already executed part of the - upgrade in graceful manner introducing no more service outage than - what was introduced during the upgrade. Such a graceful roll back - requires typically the same amount of time as the executed portion of - the upgrade and impose minimal state/data loss. - -.. <MT> Requirement: It should be possible to roll back gracefully the - failed upgrade of stateful services of the control plane. - In case we cannot recover from the failure by just undoing the - upgrade actions, we have to restore the upgraded entities from their - backed up state. In other terms the system falls back to an earlier - state, which is typically a faster recovery procedure than graceful - roll back and depending on the statefulness of the entities involved it - may result in significant state/data loss. - -.. <MT> Two possible types of failures can happen during an upgrade - -.. <MT> We can recover from the failure that occurred in the upgrade process: - In this case, a graceful rolling back of the executed part of the - upgrade may be possible which would "undo" the executed part in a - similar fashion. Thus, such a roll back introduces no more service - outage during an upgrade than the executed part introduced. This - process typically requires the same amount of time as the executed - portion of the upgrade and impose minimal state/data loss. - -.. <MT> We cannot recover from the failure that occurred in the upgrade - process: In this case, the system needs to fall back to an earlier - consistent state by reloading this backed-up state. This is typically - a faster recovery procedure than the graceful roll back, but can cause - state/data loss. The state/data loss usually depends on the - statefulness of the entities whose state is restored from the backup. - -The maximum duration of a VNF interruption (Service outage) -^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ - -Since not the entire process of a smooth upgrade will affect the VNFs, -the duration of the VNF interruption may be shorter than the duration -of the upgrade. In some cases, the VNF running without the control -from of the VIM is acceptable. - -.. <MT> Should require explicitly that the NFVI should be able to - provide its services to the VNFs independent of the control plane? - -.. <MT> Requirement: The upgrade of the control plane must not cause - interruption of the NFVI services provided to the VNFs. - -.. <MT> With respect to carrier-grade the yearly service outage of the - VNF should not exceed 5' 15" regardless whether it is planned or - unplanned outage. Considering the HA requirements TL-9000 requires an - end-to-end service recovery time of 15 seconds based on which the ETSI - GS NFV-REL 001 V1.1.1 (2015-01) document defines three service - availability levels (SAL). The proposed example service recovery times - for these levels are: - -.. <MT> SAL1: 5-6 seconds - -.. <MT> SAL2: 10-15 seconds - -.. <MT> SAL3: 20-25 seconds - -.. <Pva> my comment was actually that the downtime metrics of the - underlying elements, components and services are small fraction of the - total E2E service availability time. No-one on the E2E service path - will get the whole downtime allocation (in this context it includes - upgrade process related outages for the services provided by VIM etc. - elements that are subject to upgrade process). - -.. <MT> So what you are saying is that the upgrade of any entity - (component, service) shouldn't cause even this much service - interruption. This was the reason I brought these figures here as well - that they are posing some kind of upper-upper boundary. Ideally the - interruption is in the millisecond range i.e. no more than a - switch-over or a live migration. - -.. <MT> Requirement: Any interruption caused to the VNF by the upgrade - of the NFVI should be in the sub-second range. - -.. <MT]> In the future we also need to consider the upgrade of the NFVI, - i.e. HW, firmware, hypervisors, host OS etc. +Being a telecom service system, OPNFV shall target at carrier grade availability, +which allows only about 5 minutes of outage in a year. Base on this basic input +and discussions on the current solutions, The following requirements are defined +from the perspective of time constraints: + +- OPNFV platform must be deployed with HA to allow live upgrade possible. Considering of + the scale, complexity, and life cycle of OPNFV system, allocating less than + 5 minutes out of a year for upgrade is in-realistic. Therefore OPNFV should + be deployed with HA, allowing part of system being upgraded, while its + redundant parts continue to serve End-User. This hopefully relieves the time + constraint on upgrade operation to achievable level. + +- VNF service interruption for each switching should be sub-second range. In + HA system, switching from an in-service system/component to the redundant + ones normally cause service interruption. From example live-migrating a + virtual machine from one hypervisor to another typically take the virtual + machine out of service for about 500ms. Summing up all these interruptions in + a year shall be less than 5 minutes in order to fulfill the five-nines carrier + grade availability. In addition, when interruption goes over a second, End-User + experience is likely impacted. This document therefore recommends service + switching should be less than a second. + +- VIM interruption shall not result in NFVI interruption. VIM in general has more + logic built-in, therefore more complicated, and likely less reliable than NFVI. + To minimize the impact from VIM to NFVI, unless VIM explicitly order NFVI stop + functioning, NFVI shall continue working as it should. + +- Total upgrade duration should be less than 2 hours. Even time constraint is + relieved with HA design, the total time for upgrade operation is recommended + to limit in 2 hours. The reason is that upgrade might interfere End-User + unexpectedly, shorter maintenance window is less possible risk. In this + document, upgrade duration is started at the moment that End-User services + are possibly impacted to the moment that upgrade is concluded with either + commit or rollback. Regarding on the scale and complexity of OPNFV system, + this requirements looks challenging, however OPNFV implementations should + target this with introducing novel designs and solutions. Pre-upgrading Environment ========================= |