From 50cd14e5902425b16c76200911e5aa9f185224a0 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Maria Toeroe Date: Wed, 2 Dec 2015 20:03:06 -0500 Subject: Revise Terminology section ESCALATOR-30 Change-Id: Ide85a8d616e8f41578df43d398e210ca45942e91 Signed-off-by: Maria Toeroe --- docs/02-Background_and_Terminologies.rst | 68 ++++++++++++++++++++------------ 1 file changed, 43 insertions(+), 25 deletions(-) (limited to 'docs') diff --git a/docs/02-Background_and_Terminologies.rst b/docs/02-Background_and_Terminologies.rst index 36a81f2..488968b 100644 --- a/docs/02-Background_and_Terminologies.rst +++ b/docs/02-Background_and_Terminologies.rst @@ -7,11 +7,14 @@ Terminologies and definitions NFVI The term is an abbreviation for Network Function Virtualization Infrastructure; sometimes it is also referred as data plane in this - document. + 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 Management; + 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. Operator The term refers to network service providers and Virtual Network @@ -22,24 +25,24 @@ End-User Network Service The term refers to a service provided by an Operator to its - End-users using a set of (virtualized) Network Functions + end-users using a set of (virtualized) Network Functions Infrastructure Services - The term refers to services provided by the NFV Infrastructure and the - the Management & Orchestration functions to the VNFs. I.e. - these are the virtual resources as perceived by the VNFs. + 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 that upgrades each node or - a subset of nodes in a wave style rolling through the data centre. It + 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 that creates and deploys + 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. @@ -50,14 +53,14 @@ Infrastructure Resource Model facility resources and the virtual resources. Physical Resource - The term refers to a hardware pieces of the NFV infrastructure, which may - also include the firmware which enables the hardware. + 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, - they are the resources on which VNF entities are deployed, e.g. - the VMs, virtual switches, virtual routers, virtual disks etc. + 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 @@ -75,8 +78,9 @@ 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 method and its target some parts of the system may be in a more - vulnerable state. + 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 @@ -90,10 +94,19 @@ Rollback 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 by an upgrade by restoring the system from some backup data. This - results in the loss of any data persisted since the backup has been taken. + 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 @@ -118,10 +131,11 @@ Upgrade Objects Physical Resource ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ -Most cloud infrastructures support the dynamic addition/removal of +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 this actions is the primary concern. +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. @@ -143,8 +157,7 @@ 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. In such cases -smooth upgrade is essential. +something the NFVI user (i.e. VNFs ) would know about. Virtualization Facility Resources @@ -154,7 +167,7 @@ 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 addressed below: +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. ) @@ -165,20 +178,25 @@ consider it as part of the hardware upgrade. ) 2. Hypvervisor and virtual switch -3. Other kernel modules, like driver +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 data plane services interruption +the compute node, which may lead to the interruption of data plane services if the virtual resource is not redudant. -Updating 3 might result the same. +Updating 3 might have the same result. Updating 4 might lead to control plane services interruption if not an HA deployment. +.. 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 -- cgit 1.2.3-korg