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-rw-r--r--docs/requirements/000-Contributors.rst16
-rw-r--r--docs/requirements/101-Scope.rst45
-rw-r--r--docs/requirements/102-Terminologies.rst129
-rw-r--r--docs/requirements/103-Background.rst226
-rw-r--r--docs/requirements/104-Requirements.rst478
-rw-r--r--docs/requirements/105-Use_Cases.rst213
-rw-r--r--docs/requirements/106-Reference.rst18
-rw-r--r--docs/requirements/1A1-Requirements_from_other_Projects.rst34
-rw-r--r--docs/requirements/1A2-Questionnaire_of_Escalator.rst11
-rw-r--r--docs/requirements/300-Gap_Analysis_Report.rst50
-rw-r--r--docs/requirements/etc/conf.py34
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-rw-r--r--docs/requirements/index.rst37
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diff --git a/docs/requirements/000-Contributors.rst b/docs/requirements/000-Contributors.rst
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+============
+Contributors
+============
+
+| Jie Hu (ZTE, hu.jie@zte.com.cn)
+| Qiao Fu (China Mobile, fuqiao@chinamobile.com)
+| Ulrich Kleber (Huawei, Ulrich.Kleber@huawei.com)
+| Maria Toeroe (Ericsson, maria.toeroe@ericsson.com)
+| Sama, Malla Reddy (DOCOMO, sama@docomolab-euro.com)
+| Zhong Chao (ZTE, chao.zhong@zte.com.cn)
+| Julien Zhang (ZTE, zhang.jun3g@zte.com.cn)
+| Yuri Yuan (ZTE, yuan.yue@zte.com.cn)
+| Zhipeng Huang (Huawei, huangzhipeng@huawei.com)
+| Jia Meng (ZTE, meng.jia@zte.com.cn)
+| Liyi Meng (Ericsson, liyi.meng@ericsson.com)
+| Pasi Vaananen (Stratus, pasi.vaananen@stratus.com)
diff --git a/docs/requirements/101-Scope.rst b/docs/requirements/101-Scope.rst
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+=====
+Scope
+=====
+
+This document describes the user requirements on the smooth upgrade
+function of the NFVI and VIM with respect to the upgrades of the OPNFV
+platform from one version to another. Smooth upgrade means that the
+upgrade results in no service outage for the end-users. This requires
+that the process of the upgrade is automatically carried out by a tool
+(code name: Escalator) with pre-configured data. The upgrade process
+includes preparation, validation, execution, monitoring and
+conclusion.
+
+.. <MT> While it is good to have a tool for the entire upgrade process,
+ but it is a challenging task, so maybe we shouldn't require automation
+ for the entire process right away. Automation is essential at
+ execution.
+
+.. <hujie> Maybe we can analysis information flows of the upgrade tool,
+ abstract the basic / essential actions from the tool (or tools), and
+ map them to a command set of NFVI / VIM's interfaces.
+
+The requirements are defined in a stepwise approach, i.e. in the first
+phase focusing on the upgrade of the VIM then widening the scope to the
+NFVI.
+
+The requirements may apply to different NFV functions (NFVI, or VIM, or
+both of them). They will be classified in the Appendix of this
+document.
+
+The objects being upgraded described in this document are software modules covered by
+red box in the picture below which includes: VIM and NFVI.
+
+The target of the upgrade is to reduce the impact on the applications in the
+blue box below as much as possible.
+
+Please keep in mind that the upgrade tool does not take Vi-Vnfm and Or-Vi into
+consideration. In other words, these two interfaces may not provided service normally
+during upgrade procedure.
+
+
+.. figure:: images/figure1.png
+ :name: figure1
+ :width: 100%
+
diff --git a/docs/requirements/102-Terminologies.rst b/docs/requirements/102-Terminologies.rst
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+===========
+Terminology
+===========
+
+Terminologies
+=============
+
+Operator
+ The term refers to network service providers and Virtual Network
+ Function (VNF) providers.
+
+End-User
+ The term refers to a subscriber of the Operator's services.
+
+Network Service
+ The term refers to a service provided by an Operator to its
+ end-users using a set of (virtualized) Network Functions
+
+Infrastructure Services
+ The term refers to services provided by the NFV Infrastructure to the VNFs
+ as required by the Management & Orchestration functions and especially the VIM.
+ I.e. these are the virtual resources as perceived by the VNFs.
+
+Smooth Upgrade
+ The term refers to an upgrade that results in no service outage
+ for the end-users.
+
+Rolling Upgrade
+ The term refers to an upgrade strategy, which upgrades a node or a subset
+ of nodes at a time in a wave style rolling through the data centre. It
+ is a popular upgrade strategy to maintain service availability.
+
+Parallel Universe Upgrade
+ The term refers to an upgrade strategy, which creates and deploys
+ a new universe - a system with the new configuration - while the old
+ system continues running. The state of the old system is transferred
+ to the new system after sufficient testing of the new system.
+
+Infrastructure Resource Model
+ The term refers to the representation of infrastructure resources,
+ namely: the physical resources, the virtualization
+ facility resources and the virtual resources.
+
+Physical Resource
+ The term refers to a piece of hardware in the NFV infrastructure that may
+ also include firmware enabling this piece of hardware.
+
+Virtual Resource
+ The term refers to a resource, which is provided as services built on top
+ of the physical resources via the virtualization facilities; in particular,
+ virtual resources are the resources on which VNFs are deployed. Examples of
+ virtual resources are: VMs, virtual switches, virtual routers, virtual disks.
+
+Visualization Facility
+ The term refers to a resource that enables the creation
+ of virtual environments on top of the physical resources, e.g.
+ hypervisor, OpenStack, etc.
+
+Upgrade Campaign
+ The term refers to a choreography that describes how the upgrade should
+ be performed in terms of its targets (i.e. upgrade objects), the
+ steps/actions required of upgrading each, and the coordination of these
+ steps so that service availability can be maintained. It is an input to an
+ upgrade tool (Escalator) to carry out the upgrade.
+
+Upgrade Duration
+ The duration of an upgrade characterized by the time elapsed between its
+ initiation and its completion. E.g. from the moment the execution of an
+ upgrade campaign has started until it has been committed. Depending on
+ the upgrade strategy, the state of the configuration and the upgrade target
+ some parts of the system may be in a more vulnerable state with respect to
+ service availbility.
+
+Outage
+ The period of time during which a given service is not provided is referred
+ as the outage of that given service. If a subsystem or the entire system
+ does not provide any service, it is the outage of the given subsystem or the
+ system. Smooth upgrade means upgrade with no outage for the user plane, i.e.
+ no VNF should experience service outage.
+
+Rollback
+ The term refers to a failure handling strategy that reverts the changes
+ done by a potentially failed upgrade execution one by one in a reverse order.
+ I.e. it is like undoing the changes done by the upgrade.
+
+Backup
+ The term refers to data persisted to a storage, so that it can be used to
+ restore the system or a given part of it in the same state as it was when the
+ backup was created assuming a cold restart. Changes made to the system from
+ the moment the backup was created till the moment it is used to restore the
+ (sub)system are lost in the restoration process.
+
+Restore
+ The term refers to a failure handling strategy that reverts the changes
+ done, for example, by an upgrade by restoring the system from some backup
+ data. This results in the loss of any change and data persisted after the
+ backup was been taken. To recover those additional measures need to be taken
+ if necessary (e.g. rollforward).
+
+Rollforward
+ The term refers to a failure handling strategy applied after a restore
+ (from a backup) opertaion to recover any loss of data persisted between
+ the time the backup has been taken and the moment it is restored. Rollforward
+ requires that data that needs to survive the restore operation is logged at
+ a location not impacted by the restore so that it can be re-applied to the
+ system after its restoration from the backup.
+
+Downgrade
+ The term refers to an upgrade in which an earlier version of the software
+ is restored through the upgrade procedure. A system can be downgraded to any
+ earlier version and the compatibility of the versions will determine the
+ applicable upgrade strategies and whether service outage can be avoided.
+ In particular any data conversion needs special attention.
+
+Abbreviations
+=============
+
+NFVI
+ The term is an abbreviation for Network Function Virtualization
+ Infrastructure; sometimes it is also referred as data plane in this
+ document. The NFVI provides the virtual resources to the virtual
+ network functions under the control of the VIM.
+
+VIM
+ The term is an abbreviation for Virtual Infrastructure Manager;
+ sometimes it is also referred as control plane in this document.
+ The VIM controls and manages the NFVI compute, network and storage
+ resources to provide the required virtual resources to the VNFs.
+
diff --git a/docs/requirements/103-Background.rst b/docs/requirements/103-Background.rst
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+==========
+Background
+==========
+
+Upgrade Objects
+===============
+
+Physical Resource
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+
+Most cloud infrastructures support the dynamic addition and removal of
+hardware. Accordingly a hardware upgrade could be done by adding the new
+piece of hardware and removing the old one. From the persepctive of smooth
+upgrade the orchestration/scheduling of these actions is the primary concern.
+
+Upgrading a physical resource may involve as well the upgrade of its firmware
+and/or modifying its configuration data. This may require the restart of the
+hardware.
+
+Virtual Resources
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+
+Addition and removal of virtual resources may be initiated by the users or be
+a result of an elasticity action. Users may also request the upgrade of their
+virtual resources using a new VM image.
+
+.. Needs to be moved to requirement section: Escalator should facilitate such an
+ option and allow for a smooth upgrade.
+
+On the other hand changes in the infrastructure, namely, in the hardware and/or
+the virtualization facility resources may result in the upgrade of the virtual
+resources. For example if by some reason the hypervisor is changed and
+the current VMs cannot be migrated to the new hypervisor - they are
+incompatible - then the VMs need to be upgraded too. This is not
+something the NFVI user (i.e. VNFs ) would know about.
+
+
+Virtualization Facility Resources
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+
+Based on the functionality they provide, virtualization facility
+resources could be divided into computing node, networking node,
+storage node and management node.
+
+The possible upgrade objects in these nodes are considered below:
+(Note: hardware based virtualization may be considered as virtualization
+facility resource, but from escalator perspective, it is better to
+consider it as part of the hardware upgrade. )
+
+**Computing node**
+
+1. OS Kernel
+
+2. Hypvervisor and virtual switch
+
+3. Other kernel modules, like drivers
+
+4. User space software packages, like nova-compute agents and other
+ control plane programs.
+
+Updating 1 and 2 will cause the loss of virtualzation functionality of
+the compute node, which may lead to the interruption of data plane services
+if the virtual resource is not redudant.
+
+Updating 3 might have the same result.
+
+Updating 4 might lead to control plane services interruption if not an
+HA deployment.
+
+.. <MT> I'm not sure why would 4 cause control plane interruption on a
+ compute node. My understanding is that simply the node cannot be managed.
+ Redundancy won't help in that either.
+
+
+**Networking node**
+
+1. OS kernel, optional, not all switches/routers allow the upgrade their
+ OS since it is more like a firmware than a generic OS.
+
+2. User space software package, like neutron agents and other control
+ plane programs
+
+Updating 1 if allowed will cause a node reboot and therefore leads to
+data plane service interruption if the virtual resource is not
+redundant.
+
+Updating 2 might lead to control plane services interruption if not an
+HA deployment.
+
+**Storage node**
+
+1. OS kernel, optional, not all storage nodes allow the upgrade their OS
+ since it is more like a firmware than a generic OS.
+
+2. Kernel modules
+
+3. User space software packages, control plane programs
+
+Updating 1 if allowed will cause a node reboot and therefore leads to
+data plane services interruption if the virtual resource is not
+redundant.
+
+Update 2 might result in the same.
+
+Updating 3 might lead to control plane services interruption if not an
+HA deployment.
+
+**Management node**
+
+1. OS Kernel
+
+2. Kernel modules, like driver
+
+3. User space software packages, like database, message queue and
+ control plane programs.
+
+Updating 1 will cause a node reboot and therefore leads to control
+plane services interruption if not an HA deployment. Updating 2 might
+result in the same.
+
+Updating 3 might lead to control plane services interruption if not an
+HA deployment.
+
+Upgrade Granularity
+===================
+
+The granularity of an upgrade can be characterized from two perspective:
+- the physical dimension and
+- the software dimension
+
+Physical Dimension
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+
+The physical dimension characterizes the number of similar upgrade objects
+targeted by the upgrade, i.e. whether it is full / partial upgrade of a
+data centre, cluster, zone.
+Because of the upgrade of a data centre or a zone, it may be divided into
+several batches. Thus there is a need for efficiency in the execution of
+upgrades of potentially huge number of upgrade objects while still maintain
+availability to fulfill the requirement of smooth upgrade.
+
+The upgrade of a cloud environment (cluster) may also
+be partial. For example, in one cloud environment running a number of
+VNFs, we may just try to upgrade one of them to check the stability and
+performance, before we upgrade all of them.
+Thus there is a need for proper organization of the artifacts associated with
+the different upgrade objects. Also the different versions should be able
+to coextist beyond the upgrade period.
+
+From this perspective special attention may be needed when upgrading
+objects that are collaborating in a redundancy schema as in this case
+different versions not only need to coexist but also collaborate. This
+puts requirement on the upgrade objects primarily. If this is not possible
+the upgrade campaign should be designed in such a way that the proper
+isolation is ensured.
+
+Software Dimension
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+
+The software dimension of the upgrade characterizes the upgrade object
+type targeted and the combination in which they are upgraded together.
+
+Even though the upgrade may
+initially target only one type of upgrade object, e.g. the hypervisor
+the dependency of other upgrade objects on this initial target object may
+require their upgrade as well. I.e. the upgrades need to be combined. From this
+perspective the main concern is compatibility of the dependent and
+sponsor objects. To take into consideration of these dependencies
+they need to be described together with the version compatility information.
+Breaking dependencies is the major cause of outages during upgrades.
+
+In other cases it is more efficient to upgrade a combination of upgrade
+objects than to do it one by one. One aspect of the combination is how
+the upgrade packages can be combined, whether a new image can be created for
+them before hand or the different packages can be installed during the upgrade
+independently, but activated together.
+
+The combination of upgrade objects may span across
+layers (e.g. software stack in the host and the VM of the VNF).
+Thus, it may require additional coordination between the management layers.
+
+With respect to each upgrade object type and even stacks we can
+distingush major and minor upgrades:
+
+**Major Upgrade**
+
+Upgrades between major releases may introducing significant changes in
+function, configuration and data, such as the upgrade of OPNFV from
+Arno to Brahmaputra.
+
+**Minor Upgrade**
+
+Upgrades inside one major releases which would not leads to changing
+the structure of the platform and may not infect the schema of the
+system data.
+
+Scope of Impact
+===============
+
+Considering availability and therefore smooth upgrade, one of the major
+concerns is the predictability and control of the outcome of the different
+upgrade operations. Ideally an upgrade can be performed without impacting any
+entity in the system, which means none of the operations change or potentially
+change the behaviour of any entity in the system in an uncotrolled manner.
+Accordingly the operations of such an upgrade can be performed any time while
+the system is running, while all the entities are online. No entity needs to be
+taken offline to avoid such adverse effects. Hence such upgrade operations
+are referred as online operations. The effects of the upgrade might be activated
+next time it is used, or may require a special activation action such as a
+restart. Note that the activation action provides more control and predictability.
+
+If an entity's behavior in the system may change due to the upgrade it may
+be better to take it offline for the time of the relevant upgrade operations.
+The main question is however considering the hosting relation of an upgrade
+object what hosted entities are impacted. Accordingly we can identify a scope
+which is impacted by taking the given upgrade object offline. The entities
+that are in the scope of impact may need to be taken offline or moved out of
+this scope i.e. migrated.
+
+If the impacted entity is in a different layer managed by another manager
+this may require coordination because taking out of service some
+infrastructure resources for the time of their upgrade which support virtual
+resources used by VNFs that should not experience outages. The hosted VNFs
+may or may not allow for the hot migration of their VMs. In case of migration
+the VMs placement policy should be considered.
+
diff --git a/docs/requirements/104-Requirements.rst b/docs/requirements/104-Requirements.rst
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+============
+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.
+
+Pre-upgrading Environment
+=========================
+
+System is running normally. If there are any faults before the upgrade,
+it is difficult to distinguish between upgrade introduced and the environment
+itself.
+
+The environment should have the redundant resources. Because the upgrade
+process is based on the business migration, in the absence of resource
+redundancy,it is impossible to realize the business migration, as well as to
+achieve a smooth upgrade.
+
+Resource redundancy in two levels:
+
+NFVI level: This level is mainly the compute nodes resource redundancy.
+During the upgrade, the virtual machine on business can be migrated to another
+free compute node.
+
+VNF level: This level depends on HA mechanism in VNF, such as:
+active-standby, load balance. In this case, as long as business of the target
+node on VMs is migrated to other free nodes, the migration of VM might not be
+necessary.
+
+The way of redundancy to be used is subject to the specific environment.
+Generally speaking, During the upgrade, the VNF's service level availability
+mechanism should be used in higher priority than the NFVI's. This will help
+us to reduce the service outage.
+
+Release version of software components
+======================================
+
+This is primarily a compatibility requirement. You can refer to Linux/Python
+Compatible Semantic Versioning 3.0.0:
+
+Given a version number MAJOR.MINOR.PATCH, increment the:
+
+MAJOR version when you make incompatible API changes,
+
+MINOR version when you add functionality in a backwards-compatible manner,
+
+PATCH version when you make backwards-compatible bug fixes.
+
+Some internal interfaces of OpenStack will be used by Escalator indirectly,
+such as VM migration related interface between VIM and NFVI. So it is required
+to be backward compatible on these interfaces. Refer to "Interface" chapter
+for details.
+
+Work Flows
+==========
+
+Describes the different types of requirements. To have a table to label the source of
+the requirements, e.g. Doctor, Multi-site, etc.
+
+Basic Actions
+=============
+
+This section describes the basic functions may required by Escalator.
+
+Preparation (offline)
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+
+This is the design phase when the upgrade plan (or upgrade campaign) is
+being designed so that it can be executed automatically with minimal
+service outage. It may include the following work:
+
+1. Check the dependencies of the software modules and their impact,
+ backward compatibilities to figure out the appropriate upgrade method
+ and ordering.
+2. Find out if a rolling upgrade could be planned with several rolling
+ steps to avoid any service outage due to the upgrade some
+ parts/services at the same time.
+3. Collect the proper version files and check the integration for
+ upgrading.
+4. The preparation step should produce an output (i.e. upgrade
+ campaign/plan), which is executable automatically in an NFV Framework
+ and which can be validated before execution.
+
+ - The upgrade campaign should not be referring to scalable entities
+ directly, but allow for adaptation to the system configuration and
+ state at any given moment.
+ - The upgrade campaign should describe the ordering of the upgrade
+ of different entities so that dependencies, redundancies can be
+ maintained during the upgrade execution
+ - The upgrade campaign should provide information about the
+ applicable recovery procedures and their ordering.
+ - The upgrade campaign should consider information about the
+ verification/testing procedures to be performed during the upgrade
+ so that upgrade failures can be detected as soon as possible and
+ the appropriate recovery procedure can be identified and applied.
+ - The upgrade campaign should provide information on the expected
+ execution time so that hanging execution can be identified
+ - The upgrade campaign should indicate any point in the upgrade when
+ coordination with the users (VNFs) is required.
+
+.. <hujie> Depends on the attributes of the object being upgraded, the
+ upgrade plan may be slitted into step(s) and/or sub-plan(s), and even
+ more small sub-plans in design phase. The plan(s) or sub-plan(s) my
+ include step(s) or sub-plan(s).
+
+Validation the upgrade plan / Checking the pre-requisites of System( offline / online)
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+
+The upgrade plan should be validated before the execution by testing
+it in a test environment which is similar to the product environment.
+
+.. <MT> However it could also mean that we can identify some properties
+ that it should satisfy e.g. what operations can or cannot be executed
+ simultaneously like never take out two VMs of the same VNF.
+
+.. <MT> Another question is if it requires that the system is in a particular
+ state when the upgrade is applied. I.e. if there's certain amount of
+ redundancy in the system, migration is enabled for VMs, when the NFVI
+ is upgraded the VIM is healthy, when the VIM is upgraded the NFVI is
+ healthy, etc.
+
+.. <MT> I'm not sure what online validation means: Is it the validation of the
+ upgrade plan/campaign or the validation of the system that it is in a
+ state that the upgrade can be performed without too much risk?==
+
+Before the upgrade plan being executed, the system healthy of the
+online product environment should be checked and confirmed to satisfy
+the requirements which were described in the upgrade plan. The
+sysinfo, e.g. which included system alarms, performance statistics and
+diagnostic logs, will be collected and analogized. It is required to
+resolve all of the system faults or exclude the unhealthy part before
+executing the upgrade plan.
+
+
+Backup/Snapshot (online)
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+
+For avoid loss of data when a unsuccessful upgrade was encountered, the
+data should be back-upped and the system state snapshot should be taken
+before the execution of upgrade plan. This would be considered in the
+upgrade plan.
+
+Several backups/Snapshots may be generated and stored before the single
+steps of changes. The following data/files are required to be
+considered:
+
+1. running version files for each node.
+2. system components' configuration file and database.
+3. image and storage, if it is necessary.
+
+.. <MT> Does 3 imply VNF image and storage? I.e. VNF state and data?==
+
+.. <hujie> The following text is derived from previous "4. Negotiate
+ with the VNF if it's ready for the upgrade"
+
+Although the upper layer, which include VNFs and VNFMs, is out of the
+scope of Escalator, but it is still recommended to let it ready for a
+smooth system upgrade. The escalator could not guarantee the safe of
+VNFs. The upper layer should have some safe guard mechanism in design,
+and ready for avoiding failure in system upgrade.
+
+Execution (online)
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+
+The execution of upgrade plan should be a dynamical procedure which is
+ controlled by Escalator.
+
+.. <hujie> Revised text to be general.==
+
+1. It is required to supporting execution ether in sequence or in
+ parallel.
+2. It is required to check the result of the execution and take the
+ action according the situation and the policies in the upgrade plan.
+3. It is required to execute properly on various configurations of
+ system object. I.e. stand-alone, HA, etc.
+4. It is required to execute on the designated different parts of the
+ system. I.e. physical server, virtualized server, rack, chassis,
+ cluster, even different geographical places.
+
+Testing (online)
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+
+The testing after upgrade the whole system or parts of system to make
+sure the upgraded system(object) is working normally.
+
+.. <hujie> Revised text to be general.
+
+1. It is recommended to run the prepared test cases to see if the
+ functionalities are available without any problem.
+2. It is recommended to check the sysinfo, e.g. system alarms,
+ performance statistics and diagnostic logs to see if there are any
+ abnormal.
+
+Restore/Roll-back (online)
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+
+When upgrade is failure unfortunately, a quick system restore or system
+roll-back should be taken to recovery the system and the services.
+
+.. <hujie> Revised text to be general.
+
+1. It is recommend to support system restore from backup when upgrade
+ was failed.
+2. It is recommend to support graceful roll-back with reverse order
+ steps if possible.
+
+Monitoring (online)
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+
+Escalator should continually monitor the process of upgrade. It is
+keeping update status of each module, each node, each cluster into a
+status table during upgrade.
+
+.. <hujie> Revised text to be general.
+
+1. It is required to collect the status of every objects being upgraded
+ and sending abnormal alarms during the upgrade.
+2. It is recommend to reuse the existing monitoring system, like alarm.
+3. It is recommend to support pro-actively query.
+4. It is recommend to support passively wait for notification.
+
+**Two possible ways for monitoring:**
+
+**Pro-Actively Query** requires NFVI/VIM provides proper API or CLI
+interface. If Escalator serves as a service, it should pass on these
+interfaces.
+
+**Passively Wait for Notification** requires Escalator provides
+callback interface, which could be used by NFVI/VIM systems or upgrade
+agent to send back notification.
+
+.. <hujie> I am not sure why not to subscribe the notification.
+
+Logging (online)
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+
+Record the information generated by escalator into log files. The log
+file is used for manual diagnostic of exceptions.
+
+1. It is required to support logging.
+2. It is recommended to include time stamp, object id, action name,
+ error code, etc.
+
+Administrative Control (online)
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+
+Administrative Control is used for control the privilege to start any
+escalator's actions for avoiding unauthorized operations.
+
+#. It is required to support administrative control mechanism
+#. It is recommend to reuse the system's own secure system.
+#. It is required to avoid conflicts when the system's own secure system
+ being upgraded.
+
+Requirements on Object being upgraded
+=====================================
+
+.. <hujie> We can develop BPs in future from requirements of this section and
+ gap analysis for upper stream projects
+
+Escalator focus on smooth upgrade. In practical implementation, it
+might be combined with installer/deplorer, or act as an independent
+tool/service. In either way, it requires targeting systems(NFVI and
+VIM) are developed/deployed in a way that Escalator could perform
+upgrade on them.
+
+On NFVI system, live-migration is likely used to maintain availability
+because OPNFV would like to make HA transparent from end user. This
+requires VIM system being able to put compute node into maintenance mode
+and then isolated from normal service. Otherwise, new NFVI instances
+might risk at being schedule into the upgrading node.
+
+On VIM system, availability is likely achieved by redundancy. This
+impose less requirements on system/services being upgrade (see PVA
+comments in early version). However, there should be a way to put the
+target system into standby mode. Because starting upgrade on the
+master node in a cluster is likely a bad idea.
+
+.. <hujie>Revised text to be general.
+
+1. It is required for NFVI/VIM to support **service handover** mechanism
+ that minimize interruption to 0.001%(i.e. 99.999% service
+ availability). Possible implementations are live-migration, redundant
+ deployment, etc, (Note: for VIM, interruption could be less
+ restrictive)
+
+2. It is required for NFVI/VIM to restore the early version in a efficient
+ way, such as **snapshot**.
+
+3. It is required for NFVI/VIM to **migration data** efficiently between
+ base and upgraded system.
+
+4. It is recommend for NFV/VIM's interface to support upgrade
+ orchestration, e.g. reading/setting system state.
+
+Functional Requirements
+=======================
+
+Availability mechanism, etc.
+
+Non-functional Requirements
+===========================
diff --git a/docs/requirements/105-Use_Cases.rst b/docs/requirements/105-Use_Cases.rst
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9f13110
--- /dev/null
+++ b/docs/requirements/105-Use_Cases.rst
@@ -0,0 +1,213 @@
+=========
+Use Cases
+=========
+
+This section describes the use cases in different system configuration
+to verify the requirements of Escalator.
+
+System Configurations
+=====================
+
+HA configuration
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+
+A HA configuration system is very popular in the operator's data centre.
+It is a typical product environment. It is always running 7\*24 with VNFs
+running on it to provide services to the end users.
+
+
+Non-HA configuration
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+
+A non-HA configuration system is normally deployed for experimental or
+development usages, such as a Vagrant/VM environment.
+
+Escalator supports the upgrade system in this configuration, but it may
+not guarantee a smooth upgrade.
+
+Use cases
+=========
+
+Use case #1: Smooth upgrade in a HA configuration
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+For a system with HA configuration, the operator can use Escalator to
+smooth-upgrade NFVI/VIM components into a new version without any service
+outage.
+
+When a compute node being upgraded, the VMs on the node may need to be migrated
+to other compute nodes to avoid service outage, so it is requred that there are
+enough redundant resources to migrate VMs on this compute node.
+
+Before upgrade, the operator can use Escalator to check whether smooth upgrade
+conditions are all satisfied. These conditions include whether there are enough
+idle resources to migrate VMs during updrading, and whether the new version is
+compatible with the current one, etc. If there are some conditions not
+satisfied, Escalator will show them. Escalator can also provide the solutions if
+there is any, such as the number and configuration of spare compute nodes which
+are needed.
+
+When upgrade starts, Escalator will also automatically check whether smooth
+upgrade conditions are all satisfied. If some smooth upgrade conditions are not
+satisfied, Escalator will show the failure of smooth upgrade.
+
+- Pre-Conditions
+
+ 1. The system is running as normal.
+ 2. The VNFs are providing services as usual.
+
+- Upgrading steps
+
+ 1. The VNFs are continually providing services during the upgrade.
+ 2. The operator successfully logged in the GUI of Escalator to select the
+ software packages including Linux OS, Hypervisor, OpenStack, ODL and other
+ OPNFV components, ect. (All or part of components could be selected.)
+ 3. Select the nodes to be upgraded. i.e. controller node, network node,
+ storage node and compute node, etc.
+ 4. Select "Disable Scale-up". It will limit the scale-up operation when
+ upgrade is in progress to prevent failures due to the shortage of
+ resources.
+ 5. Select "Check Smooth Upgrade Conditions". If Escalator shows that there are
+ some conditions not satisfied, try to resolve them according to the
+ solutions provided.
+ 6. Select "Smooth Upgrade", then apply the upgrade operation.
+ 7. Select "Restore Scale-up" after the upgrade. It will restore scale-up to
+ the original enabled/disabled state before upgrade.
+
+- Post-Conditions
+
+ 1. The system is upgraded successfully.
+ 2. There is no service outage during the upgrade.
+ 3. The VNFs are providing services as usual after the upgrade.
+
+Use case #2: Roll-back after a failed smooth upgrade in a HA configuration
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+For a system with HA configuration, if the upgrade fails when the operator is
+smooth-upgrading NFVI/VIM components into a new version using Escalator, the
+operator can roll-back the system without any service outage.
+
+- Pre-Conditions
+
+ 1. The system is running as normal.
+ 2. The VNFs are providing services as usual.
+ 3. Scale-up operation is disabled.
+ 4. Smooth upgrade failed.
+
+- Roll-back steps
+
+ 1. Escalator concludes that the upgrade has failed and provides the operator
+ with the reason.
+ 2. Select the "Roll-back" operation.
+ 3. If the roll-back is successful, go to step 4, otherwise the operator can
+ select "Restore Backup" to restore the system from the backup data.
+ 4. Select "Restore Scale-up" after the roll-back. It will restore scale-up to
+ the original enabled/disabled state before upgrade.
+
+- Post-Conditions
+
+ 1. The system is rolled-back successfully when the upgrade failed.
+ 2. There is no service outage during the roll-back.
+ 3. The VNFs are providing services as usual after the roll-back.
+
+Use case #3: Roll-back after a successful smooth upgrade in a HA configuration
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+When a smooth upgrade in a HA configuration is successful, the operator may want
+to roll-back for some reasons, such as performance issues.
+Escalator supports roll-back after a successful smooth upgrade without any
+service outage.
+
+- Pre-Conditions
+
+ 1. The system is running as normal.
+ 2. The VNFs are providing services as usual.
+ 3. Smooth upgrade succeeded.
+
+- Roll-back steps
+
+ 1. Select "Disable Scale-up". It will limit the scale-up operation when roll-
+ back is in progress to prevent failures due to the shortage of resources.
+ 2. Select "Check Smooth Roll-back Conditions". If Escalator shows that there
+ are some conditions not satisfied, try to resolve them according to the
+ solutions provided.
+ 3. Select "Roll-back", then apply the roll-back operation.
+ 4. If the roll-back is successful, go to step 5, otherwise the operator can
+ select "Restore Backup" to restore the system from the backup data.
+ 5. Select "Restore Scale-up" after the roll-back. It will restore scale-up to
+ the original enabled/disabled state before roll-back.
+
+- Post-Conditions
+
+ 1. The system is rolled-back successfully.
+ 2. There is no service outage during the roll-back.
+ 3. The VNFs are providing services as usual after the roll-back.
+
+Use case #4: Non-smooth upgrade in a non-HA/HA configuration
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+For a system with non-HA configuration, the operator can also use Escalator to
+upgrade NFVI/VIM components into a new version. In this case, the upgrade may
+result in service outage. In other words, the upgrade is non-smooth.
+For a system with HA configuration, if the service outage is acceptable or
+inevitable, the operator can also use Escalator to non-smoothly upgrade the
+system.
+
+- Pre-Conditions
+
+ 1. The system is running as normal.
+
+- Upgrading steps
+
+ 1. The operator successfully logged in the GUI of Escalator to select the
+ software packages including Linux OS, Hypervisor, OpenStack, ODL and other
+ OPNFV components, ect. (All or part of components could be selected.)
+ 2. Select the nodes to be upgraded. i.e. controller node, network node,
+ storage node and compute node, etc.
+ 3. Select "Non-Smooth Upgrade", then apply the upgrade operation.
+
+- Post-Conditions
+
+ 1. The system is upgraded successfully.
+
+Use case #5: Roll-back after a failed non-smooth upgrade in a non-HA/HA configuration
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+For a system with non-HA/HA configuration, if the upgrade fails when the
+operator is non-smoothly upgrading NFVI/VIM components into a new version using
+Escalator, the operator can roll-back the system. In this case, the roll-back
+may result in service outage.
+
+- Pre-Conditions
+
+ 1. The system is running as normal.
+ 2. Non-smooth upgrade failed.
+
+- Roll-back steps
+
+ 1. Escalator concludes that the upgrade has failed and provides the operator
+ with the reason.
+ 2. Select the "Roll-back" operation.
+ 3. If the roll-back fails, the operator can select "Restore Backup" to restore
+ the system from the backup data.
+
+- Post-Conditions
+
+ 1. The system is rolled-back successfully when the upgrade failed.
+
+Use case #6: Roll-back after a successful non-smooth upgrade in a non-HA/HA configuration
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+When a non-smooth upgrade in a non-HA/HA configuration is successful, the
+operator may want to roll-back for some reasons, such as performance issues.
+Escalator supports roll-back after a successful non-smooth upgrade. In this
+case,the roll-back may result in service outage.
+
+- Pre-Conditions
+
+ 1. The system is running as normal.
+ 2. Non-smooth upgrade succeeded.
+
+- Roll-back steps
+
+ 1. Select the "Roll-back" operation.
+ 2. If the roll-back fails, the operator can select "Restore Backup" to restore
+ the system from the backup data.
+
+- Post-Conditions
+
+ 1. The system is rolled-back successfully when the upgrade failed.
diff --git a/docs/requirements/106-Reference.rst b/docs/requirements/106-Reference.rst
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ff087fa
--- /dev/null
+++ b/docs/requirements/106-Reference.rst
@@ -0,0 +1,18 @@
+=========
+Reference
+=========
+
+[1] ETSI GS NFV 002 (V1.1.1): “Architectural Framework”
+
+[2] ETSI GS NFV 003 (V1.1.1): "Terminology for Main Concepts in NFV"
+
+[3] ETSI GS NFV-SWA001:“Virtual Network Function Architecture”
+
+[4] ETSI GS NFV-MAN001:“Management and Orchestration”
+
+[5] ETSI GS NFV-REL001:"Resiliency Requirements"
+
+[6] QuEST Forum TL-9000:"Quality Management System Requirement
+Handbook"
+
+[7] Service Availability Forum AIS:"Software Management Framework"
diff --git a/docs/requirements/1A1-Requirements_from_other_Projects.rst b/docs/requirements/1A1-Requirements_from_other_Projects.rst
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..a62405d
--- /dev/null
+++ b/docs/requirements/1A1-Requirements_from_other_Projects.rst
@@ -0,0 +1,34 @@
+================================
+Requirements from other Projects
+================================
+
+Doctor Project
+==============
+
+.. <Malla> This scenario could be out of scope in Escalator project, but
+ having the option to support this should be better to align with
+ Doctor requirements.
+
+The scope of Doctor project also covers maintenance scenario in which
+
+1. The VIM administrator requests host maintenance to VIM.
+
+2. VIM will notify it to consumer such as VNFM to trigger application level
+ migration or switching active-standby nodes.
+
+3. VIM waits response from the consumer for a short while.
+
+- VIM should send out notification of VM migration to consumer (VNFM)
+ as abstracted message like "maintenance".
+
+- VIM could wait VM migration until it receives "VM ready to
+ maintenance" message from the owner (VNFM)
+
+HA Project
+==========
+
+Multi-site Project
+==================
+
+- Escalator upgrade one site should at least not lead to the other site
+ API token validation failed.
diff --git a/docs/requirements/1A2-Questionnaire_of_Escalator.rst b/docs/requirements/1A2-Questionnaire_of_Escalator.rst
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..c92a391
--- /dev/null
+++ b/docs/requirements/1A2-Questionnaire_of_Escalator.rst
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+==========================
+Questionnaire of Escalator
+==========================
+
+A Questionnaire was created for collecting requirements from other projects.
+
+Escalator Questionnaire:
+https://wiki.opnfv.org/_media/wiki/opnfv_escalator_questionnaire_20150723.pptx
+
+Answer the questionnaire: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/11o1mt15zcq0WBtXYK0n6lKF8XuIzQTwvv8ePTjmcoF0/viewform?usp=send_form
+
diff --git a/docs/requirements/300-Gap_Analysis_Report.rst b/docs/requirements/300-Gap_Analysis_Report.rst
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..1f1d3fe
--- /dev/null
+++ b/docs/requirements/300-Gap_Analysis_Report.rst
@@ -0,0 +1,50 @@
+===================
+Gap Analysis Report
+===================
+
+Impact Analysis
+===============
+
+Upgrading the different software modules may cause different impact on
+the availability of the infrastructure resources and even on the service
+continuity of the vNFs.
+
+**Software modules in the computing nodes**
+
+#. Host OS patch
+
+#. Hypervisor, such as KVM, QEMU, XEN, libvirt
+#. Openstack agent in computing nodes (like Nova agent, Ceilometer
+ agent...)
+
+.. <MT> As SW module, we should list the host OS and maybe its
+ drivers as well. From upgrade perspective do we limit host OS
+ upgrades to patches only?
+
+**Software modules in network nodes**
+
+#. Neutron L2/L3 agent
+#. OVS, SR-IOV Driver
+
+**Software modules storage nodes**
+
+#. Ceph
+
+The table below analyses such an impact - considering a single instance
+of each software module - from the following aspects:
+
+- the function which will be lost during upgrade,
+- the duration of the loss of this specific function,
+- if this causes the loss of the vNF function,
+- if it causes incompatibility in the different parts of the software,
+- what should be backed up before the upgrade,
+- the duration of restoration time if the upgrade fails
+
+These values provided come from internal testing and based on some
+assumptions, they may vary depending on the deployment techniques.
+Please feel free to add if you find more efficient values during your
+testing.
+
+https://wiki.opnfv.org/_media/upgrade_analysis_v0.5.xlsx
+
+Note that no redundancy of the software modules is considered in the table.
diff --git a/docs/requirements/etc/conf.py b/docs/requirements/etc/conf.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..0066035
--- /dev/null
+++ b/docs/requirements/etc/conf.py
@@ -0,0 +1,34 @@
+import datetime
+import sys
+import os
+
+try:
+ __import__('imp').find_module('sphinx.ext.numfig')
+ extensions = ['sphinx.ext.numfig']
+except ImportError:
+ # 'pip install sphinx_numfig'
+ extensions = ['sphinx_numfig']
+
+# numfig:
+number_figures = True
+figure_caption_prefix = "Fig."
+
+source_suffix = '.rst'
+master_doc = 'index'
+pygments_style = 'sphinx'
+html_use_index = False
+
+pdf_documents = [('index', u'OPNFV', u'OPNFV Project', u'OPNFV')]
+pdf_fit_mode = "shrink"
+pdf_stylesheets = ['sphinx','kerning','a4']
+#latex_domain_indices = False
+#latex_use_modindex = False
+
+latex_elements = {
+ 'printindex': '',
+}
+
+project = u'OPNFV: Template documentation config'
+copyright = u'%s, OPNFV' % datetime.date.today().year
+version = u'1.0.0'
+release = u'1.0.0'
diff --git a/docs/requirements/etc/opnfv-logo.png b/docs/requirements/etc/opnfv-logo.png
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..1519503
--- /dev/null
+++ b/docs/requirements/etc/opnfv-logo.png
Binary files differ
diff --git a/docs/requirements/images/figure1.png b/docs/requirements/images/figure1.png
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..5a83842
--- /dev/null
+++ b/docs/requirements/images/figure1.png
Binary files differ
diff --git a/docs/requirements/index.rst b/docs/requirements/index.rst
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..599f8bd
--- /dev/null
+++ b/docs/requirements/index.rst
@@ -0,0 +1,37 @@
+.. OPNFV Release Engineering documentation, created by
+ sphinx-quickstart on Tue Jun 9 19:12:31 2015.
+ You can adapt this file completely to your liking, but it should at least
+ contain the root `toctree` directive.
+
+.. image:: etc/opnfv-logo.png
+ :height: 40
+ :width: 200
+ :alt: OPNFV
+ :align: left
+
+ESCALATOR USER REQUIREMENTS
+=======================================
+
+Contents:
+
+.. toctree::
+ :maxdepth: 4
+ :titlesonly:
+
+
+ 000-Contributors.rst
+ 101-Scope.rst
+ 102-Terminologies.rst
+ 103-Background.rst
+ 104-Requirements.rst
+ 105-Use_Cases.rst
+ 106-Reference.rst
+ 1A1-Requirements_from_other_Projects.rst
+ 1A2-Questionnaire_of_Escalator.rst
+
+
+* :ref:`search`
+
+Revision: _sha1_
+
+Build date: |today|