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diff --git a/foreman/docs/src/installation-instructions.rst b/foreman/docs/src/installation-instructions.rst
index 2ac872d13..73b900e58 100644
--- a/foreman/docs/src/installation-instructions.rst
+++ b/foreman/docs/src/installation-instructions.rst
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
-=======================================================================================================
-OPNFV Installation instructions for the Arno release of OPNFV when using Foreman as a deployment tool
-=======================================================================================================
+=========================================================================================================
+OPNFV Installation Instructions for the Arno SR1 Release of OPNFV when using Foreman as a deployment tool
+=========================================================================================================
.. contents:: Table of Contents
@@ -10,15 +10,19 @@ OPNFV Installation instructions for the Arno release of OPNFV when using Foreman
Abstract
========
-This document describes how to install the Arno release of OPNFV when using Foreman/Quickstack as a deployment tool covering it's limitations, dependencies and required system resources.
+This document describes how to install the Arno SR1 release of OPNFV when using Foreman/Quickstack as
+a
+deployment tool covering it's limitations, dependencies and required system resources.
License
=======
-Arno release of OPNFV when using Foreman as a deployment tool Docs (c) by Tim Rozet (RedHat)
+Arno SR1 release of OPNFV when using Foreman as a deployment tool Docs (c) by Tim Rozet (RedHat)
-Arno release of OPNFV when using Foreman as a deployment tool Docs are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. You should have received a copy of the license along with this. If not, see <http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/>.
+Arno SR1 release of OPNFV when using Foreman as a deployment tool Docs are licensed under a Creative
+Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. You should have received a copy of the license along
+with this. If not, see <http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/>.
-Version history
+Version History
===================
+--------------------+--------------------+--------------------+--------------------+
@@ -37,25 +41,43 @@ Version history
| 2015-06-03 | 0.0.4 | Ildiko Vancsa | Minor changes |
| | | (Ericsson) | |
+--------------------+--------------------+--------------------+--------------------+
+| 2015-09-10 | 0.2.0 | Tim Rozet | Update to SR1 |
+| | | (Red Hat) | |
++--------------------+--------------------+--------------------+--------------------+
+| 2015-09-25 | 0.2.1 | Randy Levensalor | Added CLI |
+| | | (CableLabs) | verification |
++--------------------+--------------------+--------------------+--------------------+
Introduction
============
-This document describes the steps to install an OPNFV Arno reference platform, as defined by the Bootstrap/Getting-Started (BGS) Project using the Foreman/QuickStack installer.
+This document describes the steps to install an OPNFV Arno SR1 reference platform, as defined by the
+Bootstrap/Getting-Started (BGS) Project using the Foreman/QuickStack installer.
The audience is assumed to have a good background in networking and Linux administration.
Preface
=======
-Foreman/QuickStack uses the Foreman Open Source project as a server management tool, which in turn manages and executes Genesis/QuickStack. Genesis/QuickStack consists of layers of Puppet modules that are capable of provisioning the OPNFV Target System (3 controllers, n number of compute nodes).
+Foreman/QuickStack uses the Foreman Open Source project as a server management tool, which in turn
+manages and executes Genesis/QuickStack. Genesis/QuickStack consists of layers of Puppet modules that
+are capable of provisioning the OPNFV Target System (3 controllers, n number of compute nodes).
-The Genesis repo contains the necessary tools to get install and deploy an OPNFV target system using Foreman/QuickStack. These tools consist of the Foreman/QuickStack bootable ISO (``arno.2015.1.0.foreman.iso``), and the automatic deployment script (``deploy.sh``).
+The Genesis repo contains the necessary tools to get install and deploy an OPNFV target system using
+Foreman/QuickStack. These tools consist of the Foreman/QuickStack bootable ISO
+(``arno.2015.2.0.foreman.iso``), and the automatic deployment script (``deploy.sh``).
-An OPNFV install requires a "Jumphost" in order to operate. The bootable ISO will allow you to install a customized CentOS 7 release to the Jumphost, which then gives you the required packages needed to run ``deploy.sh``. If you already have a Jumphost with CentOS 7 installed, you may choose to ignore the ISO step and instead move directly to running ``deploy.sh``. In this case, ``deploy.sh`` will install the necessary packages for you in order to execute.
+An OPNFV install requires a "Jumphost" in order to operate. The bootable ISO will allow you to
+install
+a customized CentOS 7 release to the Jumphost, which then gives you the required packages needed to
+run ``deploy.sh``. If you already have a Jumphost with CentOS 7 installed, you may choose to ignore
+the ISO step and instead move directly to cloning the git repository and running ``deploy.sh``. In
+this case, ``deploy.sh`` will install the necessary packages for you in order to execute.
-``deploy.sh`` installs Foreman/QuickStack VM server using Vagrant with VirtualBox as its provider. This VM is then used to provision the OPNFV target system (3 controllers, n compute nodes). These nodes can be either virtual or bare metal. This guide contains instructions for installing both.
+``deploy.sh`` installs Foreman/QuickStack VM server using Vagrant with VirtualBox as its provider.
+This VM is then used to provision the OPNFV target system (3 controllers, n compute nodes). These
+nodes can be either virtual or bare metal. This guide contains instructions for installing both.
Setup Requirements
==================
@@ -71,26 +93,32 @@ The Jumphost requirements are outlined below:
3. libvirt or other hypervisors disabled (no kernel modules loaded).
-4. 3-4 NICs, untagged (no 802.1Q tagging), with IP addresses.
+4. 3-4 NICs for bare metal deployment/only 1 NIC required for virtual deployment, untagged
+ (no 802.1Q tagging), with IP addresses.
5. Internet access for downloading packages, with a default gateway configured.
-6. 4 GB of RAM for a bare metal deployment, 24 GB of RAM for a VM deployment.
+6. 4 GB of RAM for a bare metal deployment, 18 GB (HA) or 8 GB (non-HA) of RAM for a VM
+ deployment.
Network Requirements
--------------------
Network requirements include:
-1. No DHCP or TFTP server running on networks used by OPNFV.
+1. No DHCP or TFTP server running on networks used by OPNFV (bare metal deployment only).
-2. 3-4 separate VLANs (untagged) with connectivity between Jumphost and nodes (bare metal deployment only). These make up the admin, private, public and optional storage networks.
+2. 1, 3, or 4 separate VLANs (untagged) with connectivity between Jumphost and nodes (bare metal
+ deployment only). These make up the admin, private, public and optional storage networks. If
+ only 1 VLAN network used for baremetal, then all of the previously listed logical networks will
+ be consolidated to that single network.
-3. Lights out OOB network access from Jumphost with IPMI node enabled (bare metal deployment only).
+3. Lights out OOB network access from Jumphost with IPMI node enabled (bare metal deployment
+ only).
4. Admin or public network has Internet access, meaning a gateway and DNS availability.
-*Note: Storage network will be consolidated to the private network if only 3 networks are used.*
+**Note: Storage network will be consolidated to the private network if only 3 networks are used.**
Bare Metal Node Requirements
----------------------------
@@ -116,46 +144,85 @@ In order to execute a deployment, one must gather the following information:
4. MAC address of private interfaces on 3 nodes that will be controllers.
+**Note: For single NIC/network barmetal deployment, the MAC address of the admin and private
+interface will be the same.**
Installation High-Level Overview - Bare Metal Deployment
========================================================
-The setup presumes that you have 6 bare metal servers and have already setup connectivity on at least 3 interfaces for all servers via a TOR switch or other network implementation.
+The setup presumes that you have 6 bare metal servers and have already setup connectivity on at least
+1 or 3 interfaces for all servers via a TOR switch or other network implementation.
-The physical TOR switches are **not** automatically configured from the OPNFV reference platform. All the networks involved in the OPNFV infrastructure as well as the provider networks and the private tenant VLANs needs to be manually configured.
+The physical TOR switches are **not** automatically configured from the OPNFV reference platform. All
+the networks involved in the OPNFV infrastructure as well as the provider networks and the private
+tenant VLANs needs to be manually configured.
-The Jumphost can be installed using the bootable ISO. The Jumphost should then be configured with an IP gateway on its admin or public interface and configured with a working DNS server. The Jumphost should also have routable access to the lights out network.
+The Jumphost can be installed using the bootable ISO. The Jumphost should then be configured with an
+IP gateway on its admin or public interface and configured with a working DNS server. The Jumphost
+should also have routable access to the lights out network.
-``deploy.sh`` is then executed in order to install the Foreman/QuickStack Vagrant VM. ``deploy.sh`` uses a configuration file with YAML format in order to know how to install and provision the OPNFV target system. The information gathered under section `Execution Requirements (Bare Metal Only)`_ is put into this configuration file.
+``deploy.sh`` is then executed in order to install the Foreman/QuickStack Vagrant VM. ``deploy.sh``
+uses a configuration file with YAML format in order to know how to install and provision the OPNFV
+target system. The information gathered under section `Execution Requirements (Bare Metal Only)`_
+is put into this configuration file.
-``deploy.sh`` brings up a CentOS 7 Vagrant VM, provided by VirtualBox. The VM then executes an Ansible project called Khaleesi in order to install Foreman and QuickStack. Once the Foreman/QuickStack VM is up, Foreman will be configured with the nodes' information. This includes MAC address, IPMI, OpenStack type (controller, compute, OpenDaylight controller) and other information. At this point Khaleesi makes a REST API call to Foreman to instruct it to provision the hardware.
+``deploy.sh`` brings up a CentOS 7 Vagrant VM, provided by VirtualBox. The VM then executes an
+Ansible project called Khaleesi in order to install Foreman and QuickStack. Once the
+Foreman/QuickStack VM is up, Foreman will be configured with the nodes' information. This includes
+MAC address, IPMI, OpenStack type (controller, compute, OpenDaylight controller) and other
+information.
+At this point Khaleesi makes a REST API call to Foreman to instruct it to provision the hardware.
-Foreman will then reboot the nodes via IPMI. The nodes should already be set to PXE boot first off the admin interface. Foreman will then allow the nodes to PXE and install CentOS 7 as well as Puppet. Foreman/QuickStack VM server runs a Puppet Master and the nodes query this master to get their appropriate OPNFV configuration. The nodes will then reboot one more time and once back up, will DHCP on their private, public and storage NICs to gain IP addresses. The nodes will now check in via Puppet and start installing OPNFV.
+Foreman will then reboot the nodes via IPMI. The nodes should already be set to PXE boot first off
+the
+admin interface. Foreman will then allow the nodes to PXE and install CentOS 7 as well as Puppet.
+Foreman/QuickStack VM server runs a Puppet Master and the nodes query this master to get their
+appropriate OPNFV configuration. The nodes will then reboot one more time and once back up, will DHCP
+on their private, public and storage NICs to gain IP addresses. The nodes will now check in via
+Puppet and start installing OPNFV.
-Khaleesi will wait until these nodes are fully provisioned and then return a success or failure based on the outcome of the Puppet application.
+Khaleesi will wait until these nodes are fully provisioned and then return a success or failure based
+on the outcome of the Puppet application.
Installation High-Level Overview - VM Deployment
================================================
-The VM nodes deployment operates almost the same way as the bare metal deployment with a few differences. ``deploy.sh`` still installs Foreman/QuickStack VM the exact same way, however the part of the Khaleesi Ansible playbook which IPMI reboots/PXE boots the servers is ignored. Instead, ``deploy.sh`` brings up N number more Vagrant VMs (where N is 3 control nodes + n compute). These VMs already come up with CentOS 7 so instead of re-provisioning the entire VM, ``deploy.sh`` initiates a small Bash script that will signal to Foreman that those nodes are built and install/configure Puppet on them.
+The VM nodes deployment operates almost the same way as the bare metal deployment with a few
+differences. ``deploy.sh`` still installs Foreman/QuickStack VM the exact same way, however the part
+of the Khaleesi Ansible playbook which IPMI reboots/PXE boots the servers is ignored. Instead,
+``deploy.sh`` brings up N number more Vagrant VMs (where N is 3 control nodes + n compute). These VMs
+already come up with CentOS 7 so instead of re-provisioning the entire VM, ``deploy.sh`` initiates a
+small Bash script that will signal to Foreman that those nodes are built and install/configure Puppet
+on them.
To Foreman these nodes look like they have just built and register the same way as bare metal nodes.
+VM deployment will automatically use the default gateway interface on the host for all of the VMs
+internet access via bridging the VMs NICs (public network). The other networks - such as admin,
+private, storage will all be created as internal VirtualBox networks. Therefore only a single
+interface on the host is needed for VM deployment.
+
Installation Guide - Bare Metal Deployment
==========================================
-This section goes step-by-step on how to correctly install and provision the OPNFV target system to bare metal nodes.
+This section goes step-by-step on how to correctly install and provision the OPNFV target system to
+bare metal nodes.
Install Bare Metal Jumphost
---------------------------
-1. If your Jumphost does not have CentOS 7 already on it, or you would like to do a fresh install, then download the Foreman/QuickStack bootable ISO <http://artifacts.opnfv.org/arno.2015.1.0/foreman/arno.2015.1.0.foreman.iso> here.
+1. If your Jumphost does not have CentOS 7 already on it, or you would like to do a fresh install,
+ then download the Foreman/QuickStack bootable ISO
+ `here <http://artifacts.opnfv.org/arno.2015.2.0/foreman/arno.2015.2.0.foreman.iso>`_. If you
+ already have a CentOS 7 install that you would like to use then go to step 3.
2. Boot the ISO off of a USB or other installation media and walk through installing OPNFV CentOS 7.
-3. After OS is installed login to your Jumphost as root.
+3. After OS is installed login to your Jumphost as root. If /root/genesis does not exist then
+ ``git clone -b arno.2015.2.0 https://gerrit.opnfv.org/gerrit/genesis /root/genesis``
-4. Configure IP addresses on 3-4 interfaces that you have selected as your admin, private, public, and storage (optional) networks.
+4. Configure IP addresses on 3-4 interfaces that you have selected as your admin, private, public,
+ and storage (optional) networks.
5. Configure the IP gateway to the Internet either, preferably on the public interface.
@@ -174,15 +241,26 @@ Install Bare Metal Jumphost
Creating an Inventory File
--------------------------
-You now need to take the MAC address/IPMI info gathered in section `Execution Requirements (Bare Metal Only)`_ and create the YAML inventory (also known as configuration) file for ``deploy.sh``.
+You now need to take the MAC address/IPMI info gathered in section
+`Execution Requirements (Bare Metal Only)`_ and create the YAML inventory (also known as
+configuration)
+file for ``deploy.sh``.
-1. Copy the ``opnfv_ksgen_settings.yml`` file from ``/root/bgs_vagrant/`` to another directory and rename it to be what you want EX: ``/root/my_ksgen_settings.yml``
+1. Copy the ``opnfv_ksgen_settings.yml`` file (for HA) or ``opnfv_ksgen_settings_no_HA.yml`` from
+ ``/root/genesis/foreman/ci/`` to another directory and rename it to be what you want Example:
+ ``/root/my_ksgen_settings.yml``
-2. Edit the file in your favorite editor. There is a lot of information in this file, but you really only need to be concerned with the "nodes:" dictionary.
+2. Edit the file in your favorite editor. There is a lot of information in this file, but you
+ really only need to be concerned with the "nodes:" dictionary.
-3. The nodes dictionary contains each bare metal host you want to deploy. You can have 1 or more compute nodes and must have 3 controller nodes (these are already defined for you). It is optional at this point to add more compute nodes into the dictionary. You must use a different name, hostname, short_name and dictionary keyname for each node.
+3. The nodes dictionary contains each bare metal host you want to deploy. You can have 1 or more
+ compute nodes and must have 3 controller nodes (these are already defined for you) if ha_flag is
+ set to true. If ha_flag is set to false, please only define 1 controller node. It is optional at
+ this point to add more compute nodes into the dictionary. You must use a different name, hostname
+ , short_name and dictionary keyname for each node.
-4. Once you have decided on your node definitions you now need to modify the MAC address/IPMI info dependent on your hardware. Edit the following values for each node:
+4. Once you have decided on your node definitions you now need to modify the MAC address/IPMI info
+ dependent on your hardware. Edit the following values for each node:
- ``mac_address``: change to MAC address of that node's admin NIC (defaults to 1st NIC)
- ``bmc_ip``: change to IP Address of BMC (out-of-band)/IPMI IP
@@ -194,56 +272,79 @@ You now need to take the MAC address/IPMI info gathered in section `Execution Re
- ``private_mac`` - change to MAC address of node's private NIC (default to 2nd NIC)
-6. Save your changes.
+6. You may also define a unique domain name by editing the ``domain_name`` global parameter.
+
+7. Save your changes.
Running ``deploy.sh``
---------------------
-You are now ready to deploy OPNFV! ``deploy.sh`` will use your ``/tmp/`` directory to store its Vagrant VMs. Your Foreman/QuickStack Vagrant VM will be running out of ``/tmp/bgs_vagrant``.
+You are now ready to deploy OPNFV! ``deploy.sh`` will use your ``/var/opt/opnfv/`` directory to store
+its Vagrant VMs. Your Foreman/QuickStack Vagrant VM will be running out of
+``/var/opt/opnfv/foreman_vm/``.
-It is also recommended that you power off your nodes before running ``deploy.sh`` If there are DHCP servers or other network services that are on those nodes it may conflict with the installation.
+It is also recommended that you power off your nodes before running ``deploy.sh`` If there are DHCP
+servers or other network services that are on those nodes it may conflict with the installation.
Follow the steps below to execute:
-1. ``cd /root/bgs_vagrant``
+1. ``cd /root/genesis/foreman/ci/``
-2. ``./deploy.sh -base_config </root/my_ksgen_settings.yml>``
+2. ``./deploy.sh -base_config /root/my_ksgen_settings.yml``
-3. It will take about 20-25 minutes to install Foreman/QuickStack VM. If something goes wrong during this part of the process, it is most likely a problem with the setup of your Jumphost. You will also notice different outputs in your shell. When you see messages that say "TASK:" or "PLAY:" this is Khalessi running and installing Foreman/QuickStack inside of your VM or deploying your nodes. Look for "PLAY [Deploy Nodes]" as a sign that Foreman/QuickStack is finished installing and now your nodes are being rebuilt.
+**Note: This is for default detection of at least 3 VLAN/interfaces configured on your jumphost
+with defaulting interface assignment by the NIC order (1st Admin, 2nd Private, 3rd Public). If you
+wish to use a single interface for baremetal install, see help output for "-single_baremetal_nic".
+If you would like to specify the NIC mapping to logical network, see help output for "-admin_nic",
+"-private_nic", "-public_nic", "-storage_nic".**
-4. Your nodes will take 40-60 minutes to re-install CentOS 7 and install/configure OPNFV. When complete you will see "Finished: SUCCESS"
+3. It will take about 20-25 minutes to install Foreman/QuickStack VM. If something goes wrong during
+ this part of the process, it is most likely a problem with the setup of your Jumphost. You will
+ also notice different outputs in your shell. When you see messages that say "TASK:" or "PLAY:"
+ this is Khalessi running and installing Foreman/QuickStack inside of your VM or deploying your
+ nodes. Look for "PLAY [Deploy Nodes]" as a sign that Foreman/QuickStack is finished installing
+ and now your nodes are being rebuilt.
-.. _setup_verify:
+4. Your nodes will take 40-60 minutes to re-install CentOS 7 and install/configure OPNFV. When
+ complete you will see "Finished: SUCCESS"
Verifying the Setup
-------------------
-Now that the installer has finished it is a good idea to check and make sure things are working correctly. To access your Foreman/QuickStack VM:
-
-1. ``cd /tmp/bgs_vagrant``
+Now that the installer has finished it is a good idea to check and make sure things are working
+correctly. To access your Foreman/QuickStack VM:
-2. ``vagrant ssh`` (password is "vagrant")
+1. As root: ``cd /var/opt/opnfv/foreman_vm/``
-3. You are now in the VM and can check the status of Foreman service, etc. For example: ``systemctl status foreman``
+2. ``vagrant ssh`` (no password is required)
-4. Type "exit" and leave the Vagrant VM. Now execute: ``cat /tmp/bgs_vagrant/opnfv_ksgen_settings.yml | grep foreman_url``
+3. You are now in the VM and can check the status of Foreman service, etc. For example:
+ ``systemctl status foreman``
-5. This is your Foreman URL on your public interface. You can go to your web browser, ``http://<foreman_ip>``, login will be "admin"/"octopus". This way you can look around in Foreman and check that your hosts are in a good state, etc.
+4. Type "exit" and leave the Vagrant VM. Now execute:
+ ``cat /var/opt/opnfv/foreman_vm/opnfv_ksgen_settings.yml | grep foreman_url``
-6. In Foreman GUI, you can now go to Infrastructure -> Global Parameters. This is a list of all the variables being handed to Puppet for configuring OPNFV. Look for ``horizon_public_vip``. This is your IP address to Horizon GUI.
+5. This is your Foreman URL on your public interface. You can go to your web browser,
+ ``http://<foreman_ip>``, login will be "admin"/"octopus". This way you can look around in
+ Foreman and check that your hosts are in a good state, etc.
- **Note: You can find out more about how to ues Foreman by going to http://www.theforeman.org/ or by watching a walkthrough video here: https://bluejeans.com/s/89gb/**
+6. In Foreman GUI, you can now go to Infrastructure -> Global Parameters. This is a list of all the
+ variables being handed to Puppet for configuring OPNFV. Look for ``horizon_public_vip``. This is
+ your IP address to Horizon GUI.
-7. Now go to your web browser and insert the Horizon public VIP. The login will be "admin"/"octopus".
+**Note: You can find out more about how to use Foreman by going to http://www.theforeman.org/ or
+by watching a walkthrough video here: https://bluejeans.com/s/89gb/**
-8. You are now able to follow the `OpenStack Verification <openstack_verify_>`_ section.
+7. Now go to your web browser and insert the Horizon public VIP. The login will be
+ "admin"/"octopus".
-.. _openstack_verify:
+8. You are now able to follow the `OpenStack Verification`_ section.
OpenStack Verification
----------------------
-Now that you have Horizon access, let's make sure OpenStack the OPNFV target system are working correctly:
+Now that you have Horizon access, let's make sure OpenStack the OPNFV target system are working
+correctly:
1. In Horizon, click Project -> Compute -> Volumes, Create Volume
@@ -251,7 +352,8 @@ Now that you have Horizon access, let's make sure OpenStack the OPNFV target sys
3. Now in the left pane, click Compute -> Images, click Create Image
-4. Insert a name "cirros", Insert an Image Location ``http://download.cirros-cloud.net/0.3.3/cirros-0.3.3-x86_64-disk.img``
+4. Insert a name "cirros", Insert an Image Location
+ ``http://download.cirros-cloud.net/0.3.3/cirros-0.3.3-x86_64-disk.img``
5. Select format "QCOW2", select Public, then hit Create Image
@@ -263,75 +365,244 @@ Now that you have Horizon access, let's make sure OpenStack the OPNFV target sys
9. Enter ``10.0.0.5,10.0.0.9`` under Allocation Pools, then hit Create
-10. Now go to Project -> Compute -> Instances, click Launch Instance
+**Note: You may also want to expand this pool by giving a larger range,
+or you can simply hit Create with entering nothing and the entire subnet
+range will be used for DHCP**
+
+10. Go to Project -> Network -> Routers
+
+11. Click "provider_router". Then select "Add Interface"
+
+12. From the pop up menu, select test_subnet in the "Subnet" field. Press "Add interface"
+
+13. Verify your Network Topology looks correct in Project -> Network -> Network Topology
-11. Enter Instance Name "cirros1", select Instance Boot Source "Boot from image", and then select Image Name "cirros"
+14. Now go to Project -> Compute -> Instances, click Launch Instance
-12. Click Launch, status should show "Spawning" while it is being built
+15. Enter Instance Name "cirros1", select Instance Boot Source "Boot from image", and then select
+ Image Name "cirros"
-13. You can now repeat steps 11 and 12, but create a "cirros2" named instance
+16. Click Launch, status should show "Spawning" while it is being built
-14. Once both instances are up you can see their IP addresses on the Instances page. Click the Instance Name of cirros1.
+17. You can now repeat steps 15 and 16, but create a "cirros2" named instance
-15. Now click the "Console" tab and login as "cirros"/"cubswin" :)
+18. Once both instances are up you can see their IP addresses on the Instances page. Click the
+ Instance Name of cirros1.
-16. Verify you can ping the IP address of cirros2
+19. Now click the "Console" tab and login as "cirros"/"cubswin:)"
+
+20. Verify you can ping the IP address of cirros2
+
+21. Continue to the next steps to provide external network access to cirros1.
+
+22. Go to Project -> Compute -> Instances. From the drop down menu under "Actions" select
+ "Associate Floating IP"
+
+23. Press the "+" symbol next under "IP Address". Select "Allocate IP" on the new pop up.
+
+24. You should now see an external IP address filled into the "IP Address" field. Click
+ "Associate".
+
+25. Now from your external network you should be able to ping/ssh to the floating IP address.
Congratulations you have successfully installed OPNFV!
+OpenStack CLI Verification
+--------------------------
+
+This section is for users who do not have web access or prefer to use command line rather
+than a web browser to validate the OpenStack installation. Do not run this if you have
+already completed the OpenStack verification, since this uses the same names.
+
+1. Install the OpenStack CLI tools or log-in to one of the compute or control servers.
+
+2. Find the IP of keystone public VIP. As root:
+
+ cat /var/opt/opnfv/foreman_vm/opnfv_ksgen_settings.yml | \
+ grep keystone_public_vip
+
+3. Set the environment variables. Substitute the keystone public VIP for <VIP> below.
+
+ | export OS_AUTH_URL=http://<VIP>:5000/v2.0
+ | export OS_TENANT_NAME="admin"
+ | export OS_USERNAME="admin"
+ | export OS_PASSWORD="octopus"
+
+4. Load the CirrOS image into glance.
+
+ glance image-create --copy-from \
+ http://download.cirros-cloud.net/0.3.4/cirros-0.3.4-x86_64-disk.img \
+ --disk-format qcow2 --container-format bare --name 'CirrOS'
+
+5. Verify the image is downloaded. The status will be "active" when the download completes.
+
+ ``glance image-show CirrOS``
+
+6. Create a private tenant network.
+
+ ``neutron net-create test_network``
+
+7. Verify the network has been created by running the command below.
+
+ ``neutron net-show test_network``
+
+8. Create a subnet for the tenant network.
+
+ ``neutron subnet-create test_network --name test_subnet --dns-nameserver 8.8.8.8 10.0.0.0/24``
+
+9. Verify the subnet was created.
+
+ ``neutron subnet-show test_subnet``
+
+10. Add an interface from the test_subnet to the provider router.
+
+ ``neutron router-interface-add provider_router test_subnet``
+
+11. Verify the interface was added.
+
+ ``neutron router-port-list``
+
+12. Deploy a VM.
+
+ ``nova boot --flavor 1 --image CirrOS cirros1``
+
+13. Wait for the VM to complete booting. This can be completed by viewing the console log until a
+ login prompt appears.
+
+ ``nova console-log cirros1``
+
+14. Get the local ip from the VM.
+
+ ``nova show cirros1 | grep test_network``
+
+15. Get the port ID for the ip from the previous command. Replace <IP> with the IP from the previous
+ command. The port id is the first series of numbers and letters.
+
+ ``neutron port-list | grep 10.0.0.2 | awk ' { print $2 } '``
+
+16. Assign a floating ip to the VM. Substitue the port-id from the previous command for <PORT_ID>
+
+ ``neutron floatingip-create --port-id <PORT_ID> provider_network``
+
+17. Log into the vm. Substitute FLOATING_IP for the floating_ip_address displayed in the output in
+ the above command.
+
+ ``ssh cirros@<FLOATING_IP>``
+
+18. Logout and create a second VM.
+
+ ``nova boot --flavor 1 --image CirrOS cirros2``
+
+19. Get the ip for cirros2.
+
+ ``nova show cirros2 | grep test_network``
+
+20. Redo step 17 to log back into cirros1 and ping cirros2. Replace <CIRROS2> with the ip from the
+ previous step.
+
+ ``ping <CIRROS2>``
+
Installation Guide - VM Deployment
==================================
-This section goes step-by-step on how to correctly install and provision the OPNFV target system to VM nodes.
+This section goes step-by-step on how to correctly install and provision the OPNFV target system
+to VM nodes.
Install Jumphost
----------------
-Follow the instructions in the `Install Bare Metal Jumphost`_ section.
+Follow the instructions in the `Install Bare Metal Jumphost`_ section, except that you only need 1
+network interface on the host system with internet connectivity.
+
+Creating an Inventory File
+--------------------------
+
+It is optional to create an inventory file for virtual deployments. Since the nodes are virtual you
+are welcome to use the provided opnfv_ksgen_settings files. You may also elect to customize your
+deployment. Those options include modifying domain name of your deployment as well as allocating
+specific resources per node.
+
+Modifying VM resources is necessary for bigger virtual deployments in order to run more nova
+instances. To modify these resources you can edit each of the follow node paramters in the
+Inventory file:
+
+1. memory - set in KiB
+
+2. cpus - number of vcpus to allocate to this VM
+
+3. disk - size in GB (cannot be less than 40)
Running ``deploy.sh``
----------------------------
+---------------------
-You are now ready to deploy OPNFV! ``deploy.sh`` will use your ``/tmp/`` directory to store its Vagrant VMs. Your Foreman/QuickStack Vagrant VM will run out of ``/tmp/bgs_vagrant``. Your compute and subsequent controller nodes will run in:
+You are now ready to deploy OPNFV! ``deploy.sh`` will use your ``/var/opt/opnfv/`` directory to store
+its Vagrant VMs. Your Foreman/QuickStack Vagrant VM will run out of ``/var/opt/opnfv/foreman_vm/``.
+Your compute and subsequent controller nodes will run in:
-- ``/tmp/compute``
-- ``/tmp/controller1``
-- ``/tmp/controller2``
-- ``/tmp/controller3``
+- ``/var/opt/opnfv/compute``
+- ``/var/opt/opnfv/controller1``
+- ``/var/opt/opnfv/controller2``
+- ``/var/opt/opnfv/controller3``
-Each VM will be brought up and bridged to your Jumphost NICs. ``deploy.sh`` will first bring up your Foreman/QuickStack Vagrant VM and afterwards it will bring up each of the nodes listed above, in order.
+Each VM will be brought up and bridged to your Jumphost NIC for the public network. ``deploy.sh``
+will
+first bring up your Foreman/QuickStack Vagrant VM and afterwards it will bring up each of the nodes
+listed above, in order of controllers first.
Follow the steps below to execute:
-1. ``cd /root/bgs_vagrant``
+1. ``cd /root/genesis/foreman/ci/``
+
+2. ``./deploy.sh -virtual -static_ip_range <your_range>``, Where <your_range> is a range of at least
+ 20 IP addresses (non-HA you need only 5) that are useable on your public subnet.
+ ``Ex: -static_ip_range 192.168.1.101,192.168.1.120``
-2. ``./deploy.sh -virtual``
+**Note: You may also wish to use other options like manually selecting the NIC to be used on your
+host,
+etc. Please use "deploy.sh -h" to see a full list of options available.**
-3. It will take about 20-25 minutes to install Foreman/QuickStack VM. If something goes wrong during this part of the process, it is most likely a problem with the setup of your Jumphost. You will also notice different outputs in your shell. When you see messages that say "TASK:" or "PLAY:" this is Khalessi running and installing Foreman/QuickStack inside of your VM or deploying your nodes. When you see "Foreman is up!", that means deploy will now move on to bringing up your other nodes.
+3. It will take about 20-25 minutes to install Foreman/QuickStack VM. If something goes wrong during
+ this part of the process, it is most likely a problem with the setup of your Jumphost. You will
+ also notice different outputs in your shell. When you see messages that say "TASK:" or "PLAY:"
+ this is Khalessi running and installing Foreman/QuickStack inside of your VM or deploying your
+ nodes. When you see "Foreman is up!", that means deploy will now move on to bringing up your
+ other nodes.
-4. ``deploy.sh`` will now bring up your other nodes, look for logging messages like "Starting Vagrant Node <node name>", "<node name> VM is up!" These are indicators of how far along in the process you are. ``deploy.sh`` will start each Vagrant VM, then run provisioning scripts to inform Foreman they are built and initiate Puppet.
+4. ``deploy.sh`` will now bring up your other nodes, look for logging messages like "Starting Vagrant
+ Node <node name>", "<node name> VM is up!" These are indicators of how far along in the process
+ you are. ``deploy.sh`` will start each Vagrant VM, then run provisioning scripts to inform
+ Foreman they are built and initiate Puppet.
-5. The speed at which nodes are provisioned is totally dependent on your Jumphost server specs. When complete you will see "All VMs are UP!"
+5. The speed at which nodes are provisioned is totally dependent on your Jumphost server specs. When
+ complete you will see "All VMs are UP!"
+
+6. The deploy will then print out the URL for your foreman server as well as the URL to access
+ horizon.
Verifying the Setup - VMs
-------------------------
-Follow the instructions in the `Verifying the Setup <setup_verify_>`_ section.
+Follow the instructions in the `Verifying the Setup`_ section.
-Also, for VM deployment you are able to easily access your nodes by going to ``/tmp/<node name>`` and then ``vagrant ssh`` (password is "vagrant"). You can use this to go to a controller and check OpenStack services, OpenDaylight, etc.
+Also, for VM deployment you are able to easily access your nodes by going to
+``/var/opt/opnfv/<node name>`` and then ``vagrant ssh`` (password is "vagrant"). You can use this to
+go to a controller and check OpenStack services, OpenDaylight, etc.
OpenStack Verification - VMs
----------------------------
-Follow the steps in `OpenStack Verification <openstack_verify_>`_ section.
+Follow the steps in `OpenStack Verification`_ section.
Frequently Asked Questions
==========================
+Please see the `Arno FAQ <https://wiki.opnfv.org/releases/arno/faq>`_.
+
License
=======
-All Foreman/QuickStack and "common" entities are protected by the `Apache 2.0 License <http://www.apache.org/licenses/>`_.
+All Foreman/QuickStack and "common" entities are protected by the
+`Apache 2.0 License <http://www.apache.org/licenses/>`_.
References
==========
@@ -353,7 +624,15 @@ OpenStack
OpenDaylight
------------
-`OpenDaylight artifacts <http://www.opendaylight.org/software/downloads>`_
+Upstream OpenDaylight provides `a number of packaging and deployment options
+<https://wiki.opendaylight.org/view/Deployment>`_ meant for consumption by downstream projects like
+OPNFV.
+
+Currently, OPNFV Foreman uses `OpenDaylight's Puppet module
+<https://github.com/dfarrell07/puppet-opendaylight>`_, which in turn depends on `OpenDaylight's RPM
+<https://github.com/opendaylight/integration-packaging/tree/master/rpm>`_ hosted on the `CentOS
+Community
+Build System <http://cbs.centos.org/repos/nfv7-opendaylight-2-candidate/x86_64/os/Packages/>`_.
Foreman
-------
@@ -361,11 +640,10 @@ Foreman
`Foreman documentation <http://theforeman.org/documentation.html>`_
:Authors: Tim Rozet (trozet@redhat.com)
-:Version: 0.0.3
+:Version: 0.2.0
**Documentation tracking**
Revision: _sha1_
Build date: _date_
-