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authorSofia Wallin <sofia.wallin@ericsson.com>2017-02-17 16:26:32 +0100
committerSofia Wallin <sofia.wallin@ericsson.com>2017-02-17 16:26:32 +0100
commitf81feae24f7dabdccda36e40260c3dd501ef75c6 (patch)
tree30bad130f631b0d77cc30d84d3ced32b2bd0ad29 /docs/release
parentd13f4c2164eea7381cb97af87a1e32b38a0f078e (diff)
Doc updates for MS6
Updated the docs structure according to directives and MS6 Change-Id: I4bb888e4e997c625f7df088bc6563a54d63155db Signed-off-by: Sofia Wallin <sofia.wallin@ericsson.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/release')
-rw-r--r--docs/release/configguide/configguide.rst22
-rw-r--r--docs/release/configguide/index.rst17
-rw-r--r--docs/release/configguide/installerconfig.rst289
-rw-r--r--docs/release/configguide/postinstall.rst23
-rw-r--r--docs/release/installation/index.rst14
-rw-r--r--docs/release/installation/installationprocedure.rst325
-rw-r--r--docs/release/release-notes/index.rst14
-rw-r--r--docs/release/release-notes/release-notes.rst232
-rw-r--r--docs/release/scenarios/os-nosdn-lxd-ha/index.rst14
-rw-r--r--docs/release/scenarios/os-nosdn-lxd-ha/release-notes.rst159
-rw-r--r--docs/release/scenarios/os-nosdn-lxd-noha/index.rst14
-rw-r--r--docs/release/scenarios/os-nosdn-lxd-noha/release-notes.rst159
-rw-r--r--docs/release/userguide/index.rst14
-rw-r--r--docs/release/userguide/userguide.rst957
14 files changed, 2253 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/docs/release/configguide/configguide.rst b/docs/release/configguide/configguide.rst
new file mode 100644
index 00000000..c1137634
--- /dev/null
+++ b/docs/release/configguide/configguide.rst
@@ -0,0 +1,22 @@
+JOID Configuration
+==================
+
+Scenario 1: ODL L2
+------------------
+
+*./deploy.sh -o mitaka -s odl -t ha -l custom -f none -d xenial*
+
+Scenario 2: Nosdn
+-----------------
+
+*./deploy.sh -o mitaka -s nosdn -t ha -l custom -f none -d xenial*
+
+Scenario 3: ONOS nofeature
+--------------------------
+
+*./deploy.sh -o mitaka -s onos -t ha -l custom -f none -d xenial*
+
+Scenario 4: ONOS with SFC
+------------------
+
+*./deploy.sh -o mitaka -s onos -t ha -l custom -f none -d xenial*
diff --git a/docs/release/configguide/index.rst b/docs/release/configguide/index.rst
new file mode 100644
index 00000000..104846b0
--- /dev/null
+++ b/docs/release/configguide/index.rst
@@ -0,0 +1,17 @@
+.. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence.
+.. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
+.. (c) <optionally add copywriters name>
+
+========================
+JOID Configuration guide
+========================
+
+.. toctree::
+ :numbered:
+ :maxdepth: 2
+
+
+.. add your content files here.
+
+.. include:: ./configguide.rst
+
diff --git a/docs/release/configguide/installerconfig.rst b/docs/release/configguide/installerconfig.rst
new file mode 100644
index 00000000..d4346c0b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/docs/release/configguide/installerconfig.rst
@@ -0,0 +1,289 @@
+==================
+JOID Configuration
+==================
+
+
+
+Bare Metal Installations:
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+Requirements as per Pharos:
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+Networking:
+^^^^^^^^^^^
+**Minimum 2 networks**
+
+| ``1. First for Admin network with gateway to access external network``
+| ``2. Second for public network to consume by tenants for floating ips``
+
+**NOTE: JOID support multiple isolated networks for data as well as storage.
+Based on your network options for Openstack.**
+
+**Minimum 6 physical servers**
+
+1. Jump host server:
+
+| ``  Minimum H/W Spec needed``
+| ``  CPU cores: 16``
+| ``  Memory: 32 GB``
+| ``  Hard Disk: 1(250 GB)``
+| ``  NIC: eth0(Admin, Management), eth1 (external network)``
+
+2. Control node servers (minimum 3):
+
+| ``  Minimum H/W Spec``
+| ``  CPU cores: 16``
+| ``  Memory: 32 GB``
+| ``  Hard Disk: 1(500 GB)``
+| ``  NIC: eth0(Admin, Management), eth1 (external network)``
+
+3. Compute node servers (minimum 2):
+
+| ``  Minimum H/W Spec``
+| ``  CPU cores: 16``
+| ``  Memory: 32 GB``
+| ``  Hard Disk: 1(1 TB) this includes the space for ceph as well``
+| ``  NIC: eth0(Admin, Management), eth1 (external network)``
+
+**NOTE: Above configuration is minimum and for better performance and usage of
+the Openstack please consider higher spec for each nodes.**
+
+Make sure all servers are connected to top of rack switch and configured accordingly. No DHCP server should be up and configured. Only gateway at eth0 and eth1 network should be configure to access the network outside your lab.
+
+Jump node configuration:
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+1. Install Ubuntu 14.04 LTS server version of OS on the nodes.
+2. Install the git and bridge-utils packages on the server and configure minimum two bridges on jump host:
+
+brAdm and brPublic cat /etc/network/interfaces
+
+| ``   # The loopback network interface``
+| ``   auto lo``
+| ``   iface lo inet loopback``
+| ``   iface eth0 inet manual``
+| ``   auto brAdm ``
+| ``   iface brAdm inet static``
+| ``       address 10.4.1.1``
+| ``       netmask 255.255.248.0``
+| ``       network 10.4.0.0``
+| ``       broadcast 10.4.7.255``
+| ``       gateway 10.4.0.1``
+| ``       # dns-* options are implemented by the resolvconf package, if installed``
+| ``       dns-nameservers 10.4.0.2``
+| ``       bridge_ports eth0``
+| ``   auto brPublic``
+| ``   iface brPublic inet static``
+| ``       address 10.2.66.2``
+| ``       netmask 255.255.255.0``
+| ``       bridge_ports eth2``
+
+**NOTE: If you choose to use the separate network for management, data and
+storage then you need to create bridge for each interface. In case of VLAN tags
+use the appropriate network on jump-host depend upon VLAN ID on the interface.**
+
+
+Configure JOID for your lab
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+
+**Get the joid code from gerritt**
+
+*git clone https://gerrit.opnfv.org/gerrit/p/joid.git*
+
+*cd joid/ci*
+
+**Enable MAAS**
+
+- Create a directory in maas/<company name>/<pod number>/ for example
+
+*mkdir maas/intel/pod7/*
+
+
+- Copy files from pod5 to pod7
+
+*cp maas/intel/pod5/\* maas/intel/pod7/*
+
+4 files will get copied: deployment.yaml environments.yaml
+interfaces.host lxc-add-more-interfaces
+
+deployment.yaml file
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+
+Prerequisite:
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+1. Make sure Jump host node has been configured with bridges on each interface,
+so that appropriate MAAS and JUJU bootstrap VM can be created. For example if
+you have three network admin, data and public then I would suggest to give names
+like brAdm, brData and brPublic.
+2. You have information about the node MAC address and power management details (IPMI IP, username, password) of the nodes used for control and compute node.
+
+modify deployment.yaml
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+
+This file has been used to configure your maas and bootstrap node in a
+VM. Comments in the file are self explanatory and we expect fill up the
+information according to match lab infrastructure information. Sample
+deployment.yaml can be found at
+https://gerrit.opnfv.org/gerrit/gitweb?p=joid.git;a=blob;f=ci/maas/intel/pod5/deployment.yaml
+
+modify joid/ci/01-deploybundle.sh
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+under section case $3 add the intelpod7 section and make sure you have
+information provided correctly. Before example consider your network has
+192.168.1.0/24 your default network. and eth1 is on public network which
+will be used to assign the floating ip.
+
+| ``    'intelpod7' )``
+| ``       # As per your lab vip address list be deafult uses 10.4.1.11 - 10.4.1.20``
+| ``        sed -i -- 's/10.4.1.1/192.168.1.2/g' ./bundles.yaml``
+| ``       # Choose the external port to go out from gateway to use.``
+| ``        sed -i -- 's/#        "ext-port": "eth1"/        "ext-port": "eth1"/g' ./bundles.yaml``
+| ``       ;;``
+
+NOTE: If you are using seprate data network then add this line below
+also along with other changes. which represents network 10.4.9.0/24 will
+be used for data network for openstack
+
+``        sed -i -- 's/#os-data-network: 10.4.8.0\/21/os-data-network: 10.4.9.0\/24/g' ./bundles.yaml``
+
+modify joid/ci/02-maasdeploy.sh
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+under section case $1 add the intelpod7 section and make sure you have
+information provided correctly.
+
+| ``     'intelpod7' )``
+| ``       cp maas/intel/pod7/deployment.yaml ./deployment.yaml``
+| ``       ;;``
+
+NOTE: If you are using VLAN tags or more network for data and storage
+then make sure you modify the case $1 section under Enable vlan
+interface with maas appropriately. In the example below eth2 has been
+used as separate data network for tenants in openstack with network
+10.4.9.0/24 on compute and control nodes.
+
+| ``   'intelpod7' )``
+| ``       maas refresh``
+| ``       enableautomodebyname eth2 AUTO "10.4.9.0/24" compute || true``
+| ``       enableautomodebyname eth2 AUTO "10.4.9.0/24" control || true``
+| ``       ;;``
+
+
+MAAS Install
+~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+After integrating the changes as mentioned above run the MAAS install.
+Suppose you name the integration lab as intelpod7 then run the below
+commands to start the MAAS deployment.
+
+``   ./02-maasdeploy.sh intelpod7``
+
+This will take approximately 40 minutes to couple hours depending on your
+environment. This script will do the following:
+
+1. Create 2 VMs (KVM).
+2. Install MAAS in one of the VMs.
+3. Configure the MAAS to enlist and commission a VM for Juju bootstrap node.
+4. Configure the MAAS to enlist and commission bare metal servers.
+
+When it's done, you should be able to view MAAS webpage (http://<MAAS IP>/MAAS) and see 1 bootstrap node and bare metal servers in the 'Ready' state on the nodes page.
+
+Virtual deployment
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+By default, just running the script ./02-maasdeploy.sh will automatically create the KVM VMs on a single machine and configure everything for you.
+
+OPNFV Install
+-------------
+JOID allows you to deploy different combinations of OpenStack release and SDN solution in HA or non-HA mode.
+
+For OpenStack, it supports Juno and Liberty. For SDN, it supports Openvswitch, OpenContrail, OpenDayLight and ONOS.
+
+In addition to HA or non-HA mode, it also supports to deploy the latest from the development tree (tip).
+
+
+The deploy.sh in the joid/ci directoy will do all the work for you. For example, the following deploy OpenStack Libery with OpenDayLight in a HA mode in the Intelpod7.
+
+
+| ``   ./deploy.sh -o liberty -s odl -t ha -l intelpod7 -f none``
+| ``   ``
+
+By default, the SDN is Openvswitch, non-HA, Liberty, Intelpod5, OPNFV Brahmaputra release and ODL_L2 for the OPNFV feature.
+
+Possible options for each choice are as follows:
+
+| ``   [-s ``\ \ ``]``
+| ``   nosdn: openvswitch only and no other SDN.``
+| ``   odl: OpenDayLight Lithium version.``
+| ``   opencontrail: OpenContrail SDN.``
+| ``   onos: ONOS framework as SDN.``
+| ``   ``
+| ``   [-t ``\ \ ``] ``
+| ``   nonha: NO HA mode of Openstack.``
+| ``   ha: HA mode of openstack.``
+| ``    tip: the tip of the development.``
+| ``   ``
+| ``   [-o ``\ \ ``]``
+| ``   juno: OpenStack Juno version.``
+| ``   liberty: OpenStack Liberty version.``
+| ``   ``
+| ``   [-l ``\ \ ``] etc...``
+| ``   default: For virtual deployment where installation will be done on KVM created using ./02-maasdeploy.sh``
+| ``   intelpod5: Install on bare metal OPNFV pod5 of Intel lab.``
+| ``   intelpod6``
+| ``   orangepod2``
+| ``   ..``
+| ``   (other pods)``
+| ``   Note: if you make changes as per your pod above then please use your pod.``
+| ``   ``
+| ``   [-f ``\ \ ``]``
+| ``   none: no special feature will be enabled.``
+| ``   ipv6: ipv6 will be enabled for tenant in openstack.``
+| ``   ``
+
+
+By default debug is enabled in script and error messages will be printed
+on the SSH terminal where you are running the scripts.
+It could take an hour to couple hours (max) to complete.
+
+Is the deployment done successfully?
+------------------------------------
+Once juju-deployer is complete, use juju status to verify that all deployed unit are in the ready state.
+
+| ``   juju status --format tabular``
+
+Find the Openstack-dashboard IP address from the *juju status* output, and see if you can log in via browser. The username and password is admin/openstack.
+
+Optionall, see if you can log in Juju GUI. Juju GUI is on the Juju bootstrap node which is the second VM you define in the 02-maasdeploy.sh. The username and password is admin/admin.
+
+If you deploy ODL, OpenContrail or ONOS, find the IP address of the web UI and login. Please refer to each SDN bundle.yaml for username/password.
+
+Troubleshoot
+~~~~~~~~~~~~
+To access to any deployed units, juju ssh for example to login into nova-compute unit and look for /var/log/juju/unit-<of interest> for more info.
+
+| ``   juju ssh nova-compute/0``
+
+Example:
+
+| ``   ubuntu@R4N4B1:~$ juju ssh nova-compute/0``
+| ``   Warning: Permanently added '172.16.50.60' (ECDSA) to the list of known hosts.``
+| ``   Warning: Permanently added '3-r4n3b1-compute.maas' (ECDSA) to the list of known hosts.``
+| ``   Welcome to Ubuntu 14.04.1 LTS (GNU/Linux 3.13.0-77-generic x86_64)``
+| ``   ``
+| ``    * Documentation: https://help.ubuntu.com/``
+| ``   <skipped>``
+| ``   Last login: Tue Feb 2 21:23:56 2016 from bootstrap.maas``
+| ``   ubuntu@3-R4N3B1-compute:~$ sudo -i``
+| ``   root@3-R4N3B1-compute:~# cd /var/log/juju/``
+| ``   root@3-R4N3B1-compute:/var/log/juju# ls``
+| ``   machine-2.log unit-ceilometer-agent-0.log unit-ceph-osd-0.log unit-neutron-contrail-0.log unit-nodes-compute-0.log unit-nova-compute-0.log unit-ntp-0.log``
+| ``   root@3-R4N3B1-compute:/var/log/juju#``
+
+**By default juju will add the Ubuntu user keys for authentication into
+the deployed server and only ssh access will be available.**
+
+Once you resolve the error, go back to the jump host to rerun the charm hook with:
+
+| ``   juju resolved --retry <unit>``
+
diff --git a/docs/release/configguide/postinstall.rst b/docs/release/configguide/postinstall.rst
new file mode 100644
index 00000000..7d7c753b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/docs/release/configguide/postinstall.rst
@@ -0,0 +1,23 @@
+JOID post installation procedures
+=================================
+
+Configure OpenStack
+-------------------
+In each SDN directory, for example joid/ci/opencontrail, there is a folder
+for Juju deployer where you can find the charm bundle yaml files that the
+deploy.sh uses to deploy.
+
+In the same directory, there is **scripts** folder where you can find shell
+scripts to help you configure the OpenStack cloud that you just deployed. These
+scripts are created to help you configure a basic OpenStack Cloud to verify
+the cloud. For more info on OpenStack Cloud configuration, please refer to the
+OpenStack Cloud Administrator Guide on docs.openstack.org. Similarly, for
+complete SDN configuration, please refer to the respective SDN adminstrator guide.
+
+Each SDN solution requires slightly different setup, please refer to the **README**
+in each SDN folder. Most likely you will need to modify the **openstack.sh**
+and **cloud-setup.sh** scripts for the floating IP range, private IP network,
+and SSH keys. Please go through **openstack.sh**, **glance.sh** and
+**cloud-setup.sh** and make changes as you see fit.
+
+
diff --git a/docs/release/installation/index.rst b/docs/release/installation/index.rst
new file mode 100644
index 00000000..6716e5c1
--- /dev/null
+++ b/docs/release/installation/index.rst
@@ -0,0 +1,14 @@
+.. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence.
+.. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
+.. (c) <optionally add copywriters name>
+
+=============================
+JOID installation instruction
+=============================
+
+.. toctree::
+ :numbered:
+ :maxdepth: 2
+
+ ./installationprocedure.rst
+
diff --git a/docs/release/installation/installationprocedure.rst b/docs/release/installation/installationprocedure.rst
new file mode 100644
index 00000000..65560b1c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/docs/release/installation/installationprocedure.rst
@@ -0,0 +1,325 @@
+Bare Metal Installations:
+=========================
+
+Requirements as per Pharos:
+===========================
+
+Networking:
+===========
+
+**Minimum 2 networks**
+
+| ``1. First for Admin network with gateway to access external network``
+| ``2. Second for public network to consume by tenants for floating ips``
+
+**NOTE: JOID support multiple isolated networks for data as well as storage.
+Based on your network options for Openstack.**
+
+**Minimum 6 physical servers**
+
+1. Jump host server:
+
+| ``  Minimum H/W Spec needed``
+| ``  CPU cores: 16``
+| ``  Memory: 32 GB``
+| ``  Hard Disk: 1(250 GB)``
+| ``  NIC: eth0(Admin, Management), eth1 (external network)``
+
+2. Node servers (minimum 5):
+
+| ``  Minimum H/W Spec``
+| ``  CPU cores: 16``
+| ``  Memory: 32 GB``
+| ``  Hard Disk: 1(1 TB) this includes the space for ceph as well``
+| ``  NIC: eth0(Admin, Management), eth1 (external network)``
+
+
+**NOTE: Above configuration is minimum and for better performance and usage of
+the Openstack please consider higher spec for each nodes.**
+
+Make sure all servers are connected to top of rack switch and configured accordingly. No DHCP server should be up and configured. Only gateway at eth0 and eth1 network should be configure to access the network outside your lab.
+
+------------------------
+Jump node configuration:
+------------------------
+
+1. Install Ubuntu 14.04 LTS server version of OS on the nodes.
+2. Install the git and bridge-utils packages on the server and configure minimum two bridges on jump host:
+
+brAdm and brPublic cat /etc/network/interfaces
+
+| ``   # The loopback network interface``
+| ``   auto lo``
+| ``   iface lo inet loopback``
+| ``   iface eth0 inet manual``
+| ``   auto brAdm ``
+| ``   iface brAdm inet static``
+| ``       address 10.4.1.1``
+| ``       netmask 255.255.248.0``
+| ``       network 10.4.0.0``
+| ``       broadcast 10.4.7.255``
+| ``       gateway 10.4.0.1``
+| ``       # dns-* options are implemented by the resolvconf package, if installed``
+| ``       dns-nameservers 10.4.0.2``
+| ``       bridge_ports eth0``
+| ``   auto brPublic``
+| ``   iface brPublic inet static``
+| ``       address 10.2.66.2``
+| Seperate yaml fi ``       netmask 255.255.255.0``
+| ``       bridge_ports eth2``
+
+**NOTE: If you choose to use the separate network for management, data and
+storage then you need to create bridge for each interface. In case of VLAN tags
+use the appropriate network on jump-host depend upon VLAN ID on the interface.**
+
+
+Configure JOID for your lab
+===========================
+
+**Get the joid code from gerritt**
+
+*git clone https://gerrit.opnfv.org/gerrit/p/joid.git*
+
+**Enable MAAS (labconfig.yaml is must and base for MAAS installation and scenario deployment)**
+
+If you have already enabled maas for your environment and installed it then there is no need to enabled it again or install it. If you have patches from previous MAAS enablement then you can apply it here.
+
+NOTE: If MAAS is pre installed without 00-maasdeploy.sh then please do the following and skip rest of the step to enable MAAS.
+
+1. Copy MAAS API key and paste in ~/.juju/environments.yaml at appropriate place.
+2. Run command cp ~/.juju/environments.yaml ./joid/ci/
+3. Generate labconfig.yaml for your lab and copy it to joid.
+ a. cp joid/labconfig/<company name>/<pod number>/labconfig.yaml joid/ci/ or
+ b. cp <newly generated labconfig.yaml> joid/ci
+4. cd joid/ci
+5. python genMAASConfig.py -l labconfig.yaml > deployment.yaml
+6. python genDeploymentConfig.py -l labconfig.yaml > deployconfig.yaml
+7. cp ./environments.yaml ~/.juju/
+8. cp ./deployment.yaml ~/.juju/
+9. cp ./labconfig.yaml ~/.juju/
+10. cp ./deployconfig.yaml ~/.juju/
+
+If enabling first time then follow it further.
+- Create a directory in joid/labconfig/<company name>/<pod number>/ for example
+
+*mkdir joid/labconfig/intel/pod7/*
+
+- copy labconfig.yaml from pod6 to pod7
+*cp joid/labconfig/intel/pod5/\* joid/labconfig/intel/pod7/*
+
+labconfig.yaml file
+===================
+
+-------------
+Prerequisite:
+-------------
+
+1. Make sure Jump host node has been configured with bridges on each interface,
+so that appropriate MAAS and JUJU bootstrap VM can be created. For example if
+you have three network admin, data and public then I would suggest to give names
+like brAdm, brData and brPublic.
+2. You have information about the node MAC address and power management details (IPMI IP, username, password) of the nodes used for control and compute node.
+
+---------------------
+modify labconfig.yaml
+---------------------
+
+This file has been used to configure your maas and bootstrap node in a
+VM. Comments in the file are self explanatory and we expect fill up the
+information according to match lab infrastructure information. Sample
+labconfig.yaml can be found at
+https://gerrit.opnfv.org/gerrit/gitweb?p=joid.git;a=blob;f=labconfig/intel/pod6/labconfig.yaml
+
+*lab:
+ location: intel
+ racks:
+ - rack: pod5
+ nodes:
+ - name: rack-5-m1
+ architecture: x86_64
+ roles: [network,control]
+ nics:
+ - ifname: eth1
+ spaces: [public]
+ mac: ["xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx"]
+ power:
+ type: ipmi
+ address: xx.xx.xx.xx
+ user: xxxx
+ pass: xxxx
+ - name: rack-5-m1
+ architecture: x86_64
+ roles: [network,control]
+ nics:
+ - ifname: eth1
+ spaces: [public]
+ mac: ["xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx"]
+ power:
+ type: ipmi
+ address: xx.xx.xx.xx
+ user: xxxx
+ pass: xxxx
+ - name: rack-5-m1
+ architecture: x86_64
+ roles: [network,control]
+ nics:
+ - ifname: eth1
+ spaces: [public]
+ mac: ["xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx"]
+ power:
+ type: ipmi
+ address: xx.xx.xx.xx
+ user: xxxx
+ pass: xxxx
+ - name: rack-5-m1
+ architecture: x86_64
+ roles: [network,control]
+ nics:
+ - ifname: eth1
+ spaces: [public]
+ mac: ["xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx"]
+ power:
+ type: ipmi
+ address: xx.xx.xx.xx
+ user: xxxx
+ pass: xxxx
+ - name: rack-5-m1
+ architecture: x86_64
+ roles: [network,control]
+ nics:
+ - ifname: eth1
+ spaces: [public]
+ mac: ["xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx"]
+ power:
+ type: ipmi
+ address: xx.xx.xx.xx
+ user: xxxx
+ pass: xxxx
+ floating-ip-range: 10.5.15.6,10.5.15.250,10.5.15.254,10.5.15.0/24
+ ext-port: "eth1"
+ dns: 8.8.8.8
+opnfv:
+ release: c
+ distro: trusty
+ type: nonha
+ openstack: liberty
+ sdncontroller:
+ - type: nosdn
+ storage:
+ - type: ceph
+ disk: /srv
+ feature: odl_l2
+ spaces:
+ - type: public
+ bridge: brPublic
+ cidr: 10.5.15.0/24
+ gateway: 10.5.15.254
+ vlan:
+ - type: external
+ bridge: brExt
+ cidr:
+ gateway:
+ ipaddress: 10.2.117.92
+ vlan:*
+
+NOTE: If you are using VLAN tagged network then make sure you modify the case $1 section under Enable vlan interface with maas appropriately.
+
+*'intelpod7' )
+ maas refresh
+ enableautomodebyname eth2 AUTO "10.4.9.0/24" compute || true
+ enableautomodebyname eth2 AUTO "10.4.9.0/24" control || true
+ ;;*
+
+Deployment of OPNFV using JOID:
+===============================
+
+Once you have done the change in above section then run the following commands to do the automatic deployments.
+
+------------
+MAAS Install
+------------
+
+After integrating the changes as mentioned above run the MAAS install.
+then run the below commands to start the MAAS deployment.
+
+``   ./00-maasdeploy.sh custom <absolute path of config>/labconfig.yaml ``
+or
+``   ./00-maasdeploy.sh custom http://<web site location>/labconfig.yaml ``
+
+-------------
+OPNFV Install
+-------------
+
+| ``   ./deploy.sh -o mitaka -s odl -t ha -l custom -f none -d xenial``
+| ``   ``
+
+./deploy.sh -o mitaka -s odl -t ha -l custom -f none -d xenial
+
+NOTE: Possible options are as follows:
+
+choose which sdn controller to use.
+ [-s <nosdn|odl|opencontrail|onos>]
+ nosdn: openvswitch only and no other SDN.
+ odl: OpenDayLight Lithium version.
+ opencontrail: OpenContrail SDN can be installed with Juno Openstack today.
+ onos: ONOS framework as SDN.
+
+Mode of Openstack deployed.
+ [-t <nonha|ha|tip>]
+ nonha: NO HA mode of Openstack
+ ha: HA mode of openstack.
+
+Wihch version of Openstack deployed.
+ [-o <liberty|Mitaka>]
+ liberty: Liberty version of openstack.
+ Mitaka: Mitaka version of openstack.
+
+Where to deploy
+ [-l <custom | default | intelpod5 >] etc...
+ custom: For bare metal deployment where labconfig.yaml provided externally and not part of JOID.
+ default: For virtual deployment where installation will be done on KVM created using ./00-maasdeploy.sh
+ intelpod5: Install on bare metal OPNFV pod5 of Intel lab.
+ intelpod6
+ orangepod2
+ custom
+
+what feature to deploy. Comma seperated list
+ [-f <lxd|dvr|sfc|dpdk|ipv6|none>]
+ none: no special feature will be enabled.
+ ipv6: ipv6 will be enabled for tenant in openstack.
+ lxd: With this feature hypervisor will be LXD rather than KVM.
+ dvr: Will enable distributed virtual routing.
+ dpdk: Will enable DPDK feature.
+ sfc: Will enable sfc feature only supported with onos deployment.
+
+which Ubuntu distro to use.
+ [ -d <trusty|xenial> ]
+
+OPNFV Scenarios in JOID
+Following OPNFV scenarios can be deployed using JOID. Seperate yaml bundle will be created to deploy the individual scenario.
+
+Scenario Owner Known Issues
+os-nosdn-nofeature-ha Joid
+os-nosdn-nofeature-noha Joid
+os-odl_l2-nofeature-ha Joid
+os-nosdn-lxd-ha Joid Yardstick team is working to support.
+os-nosdn-lxd-noha Joid Yardstick team is working to support.
+os-onos-nofeature-ha ONOSFW
+os-onos-sfc-ha ONOSFW
+
+------------
+Troubleshoot
+------------
+
+By default debug is enabled in script and error messages will be printed on ssh terminal where you are running the scripts.
+
+To Access of any control or compute nodes.
+juju ssh <service name>
+for example to login into openstack-dashboard container.
+
+juju ssh openstack-dashboard/0
+juju ssh nova-compute/0
+juju ssh neutron-gateway/0
+
+By default juju will add the Ubuntu user keys for authentication into the deployed server and only ssh access will be available.
+
diff --git a/docs/release/release-notes/index.rst b/docs/release/release-notes/index.rst
new file mode 100644
index 00000000..e85bc607
--- /dev/null
+++ b/docs/release/release-notes/index.rst
@@ -0,0 +1,14 @@
+.. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence.
+.. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
+.. (c) <optionally add copywriters name>
+
+==================
+JOID Release Notes
+==================
+
+.. toctree::
+ :numbered:
+ :maxdepth: 4
+
+ release-notes.rst
+
diff --git a/docs/release/release-notes/release-notes.rst b/docs/release/release-notes/release-notes.rst
new file mode 100644
index 00000000..3d4f02a0
--- /dev/null
+++ b/docs/release/release-notes/release-notes.rst
@@ -0,0 +1,232 @@
+.. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
+.. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
+.. (c) <optionally add copywriters name>
+
+
+Abstract
+========
+
+This document compiles the release notes for the Colorado release of
+OPNFV when using JOID as a deployment tool.
+
+Introduction
+============
+
+These notes provides release information for the use of joid as deployment
+tool for the Colorado release of OPNFV.
+
+The goal of the Colorado release and this JOID based deployment process is
+to establish a lab ready platform accelerating further development
+of the OPNFV infrastructure.
+
+Carefully follow the installation-instructions which guides a user to deploy
+OPNFV using JOID which is based on MAAS and Juju.
+
+Summary
+=======
+
+ Colorado release with the JOID deployment toolchain will establish an OPNFV target system on a Pharos compliant lab infrastructure.
+The current definition of an OPNFV target system is and OpenStack Mitaka combined with OpenDaylight Beryllium.
+
+ The system is deployed with OpenStack High Availability (HA) for most OpenStack services.
+Ceph storage is used as Cinder backend, and is the only supported storage for Colorado. Ceph is setup as 2 OSDs and 2 Monitors, one OSD+Mon per Compute node.
+
+ User has following choices to make to do the deployment.
+
+ - Openstack -- Mitaka
+ - Type -- HA, nonHA, tip (stable git branch of respective openstack)
+ - SDN controller -- OpenDaylight, nosdn(Openvswitch), Onos, OpenContrail
+ - Feature -- IPV6, DVR(distributed virtual routing), SFC(service function chaining odl only), BGPVPN(odl only)
+
+- Documentation is built by Jenkins
+- Jenkins deploys a Brahmaputra release with the JOID deployment toolchain baremetal,
+ which includes 3 control+network nodes, and 2 compute nodes.
+
+NOTE: Detailed information on how to install in your lab can be find in installation guide
+
+Release Data
+============
+
++--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
+| **Project** | JOID |
+| | |
++--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
+| **Repo/tag** | gerrit.opnfv.org/gerrit/joid.git |
+| | stable/colorado |
++--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
+| **Release designation** | Colorado release |
+| | |
++--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
+| **Release date** | September 22 2016 |
+| | |
++--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
+| **Purpose of the delivery** | Colorado release |
+| | |
++--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
+
+Deliverables
+------------
+
+Software deliverables
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+`JOID based installer script files <https://gerrit.opnfv.org/gerrit/gitweb?p=joid.git;a=summary>`_
+
+Documentation deliverables
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+- Installation instructions
+- Release notes (This document)
+- User guide
+
+Version change
+--------------
+.. This section describes the changes made since the last version of this document.
+
+Module version change
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+ Colorado release with the JOID deployment toolchain.
+ - OpenStack (Mitaka release)
+ - OpenDaylight (Beryllium release)
+ - Ubuntu 16.04 LTS
+
+Document version change
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+- OPNFV Installation instructions for the Colorado release using JOID deployment
+ toolchain - ver. 1.0.0
+- OPNFV Release Notes with the JOID deployment toolchain - ver. 1.0.0 (this document)
+
+Reason for new version
+----------------------
+
+Feature additions
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
++--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
+| **JIRA REFERENCE** | **SLOGAN** |
++--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
+| JIRA: JOID-1 | use Juju and Ubuntu to deploy OPNFV |
++--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
+| JIRA: JOID-76 | Integrate Aodh in JOID |
++--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
+| JIRA: JOID-69 | OVS with DPDK |
++--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
+| JIRA: JOID-68 | ONOS Goldeneye Support |
++--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
+| JIRA: JOID-61 | Mitaka OpenStack Support |
++--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
+
+Bug corrections
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+**JIRA TICKETS:**
+
++--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
+| **JIRA REFERENCE** | **SLOGAN** |
+| | |
++--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
+| JIRA: | |
+| | |
++--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
+
+
+Known Limitations, Issues and Workarounds
+=========================================
+
+System Limitations
+------------------
+**Min jumphost requirements:** At least 16GB of RAM, 4 core cpu and 250 gb disk should support virtualization.
+
+
+Known issues
+------------
+
+**JIRA TICKETS:**
+
++--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
+| **JIRA REFERENCE** | **SLOGAN** |
+| | |
++--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
+| JIRA: YARDSTICK-325 | Provide raw format yardstick vm image|
+| | for nova-lxd scenario(OPNFV) |
++--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
+| JIRA: | |
++--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
+
+
+Workarounds
+-----------
+See JIRA: <link>
+
+
+Test Result
+===========
+Colorado test result using JOID as deployment tool.
+- `https://build.opnfv.org/ci/view/joid/job/functest-joid-baremetal-daily-colorado/>`_
+- `https://build.opnfv.org/ci/view/joid/job/yardstick-joid-baremetal-daily-colorado/>`_
+
+Scenario Releases
+=================
+Name: joid-os-nosdn-nofeature-ha
+Test Link: https://build.opnfv.org/ci/view/joid/job/joid-os-nosdn-nofeature-ha-baremetal-daily-colorado/
+Notes:
+
+Name: joid-os-odl-nofeature-ha
+Test Link: https://build.opnfv.org/ci/view/joid/job/joid-os-odl_l2-nofeature-ha-baremetal-daily-colorado/
+Notes:
+
+Name: joid-os-nosdn-lxd-ha
+Test Link: https://build.opnfv.org/ci/view/joid/job/joid-os-nosdn-lxd-ha-baremetal-daily-colorado/
+Notes:
+
+Name: joid-os-onos-nofeature-ha
+Test Link: https://build.opnfv.org/ci/view/joid/job/joid-os-onos-nofeature-ha-baremetal-daily-colorado/
+Notes:
+
+Name: joid-os-onos-sfc-ha
+Test Link: https://build.opnfv.org/ci/view/joid/job/joid-os-onos-sfc-ha-baremetal-daily-colorado/
+Notes:
+
+Name: joid-os-nosdn-lxd-noha
+Test Link: https://build.opnfv.org/ci/user/narindergupta/my-views/view/joid/job/joid-os-nosdn-lxd-noha-baremetal-daily-colorado/
+Notes:
+
+Name: joid-os-nosdn-nofeature-noha
+Test Link: https://build.opnfv.org/ci/user/narindergupta/my-views/view/joid/job/joid-os-nosdn-nofeature-noha-baremetal-daily-colorado/
+Notes:
+
+Name: applies to all HA scenarios
+Notes:
+* 'COPPER-22 <https://jira.opnfv.org/browse/COPPER-22>`_:
+ Congress service HA deployment is not yet supported/verified.
+
+References
+==========
+For more information on the OPNFV Colorado release, please visit
+- `OPNFV Colorado release <http://www.opnfv.org/colorado>`_
+
+Juju
+----
+- `Juju Charm store <https://jujucharms.com/>`_
+- `Juju documents <https://jujucharms.com/docs/stable/getting-started>`_
+
+MAAS
+----
+- `Bare metal management (Metal-As-A-Service) <http://maas.io/get-started>`_
+- `MAAS API documents <http://maas.ubuntu.com/docs/>`_
+
+JOID
+----
+- `OPNFV JOID wiki <https://wiki.opnfv.org/joid>`_
+- `OPNFV JOID User Guide <https://wiki.opnfv.org/joid/b_userguide>`_
+- `OPNFV Release Notes <https://wiki.opnfv.org/display/joid/Colorado+Release+Notes>`_
+- `OPNFV JOID Install Guide <https://wiki.opnfv.org/display/joid/Colorado+installation+Guide>`_
+
+OpenStack
+---------
+- `OpenStack Mitaka Release artifacts <http://www.openstack.org/software/mitaka>`_
+- `OpenStack documentation <http://docs.openstack.org>`_
+
+OpenDaylight
+------------
+- `OpenDaylight artifacts <http://www.opendaylight.org/software/downloads>`_
+
diff --git a/docs/release/scenarios/os-nosdn-lxd-ha/index.rst b/docs/release/scenarios/os-nosdn-lxd-ha/index.rst
new file mode 100644
index 00000000..8180fbb3
--- /dev/null
+++ b/docs/release/scenarios/os-nosdn-lxd-ha/index.rst
@@ -0,0 +1,14 @@
+.. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence.
+.. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
+.. (c) <optionally add copywriters name>
+
+======================
+JOID LXD Release Notes
+======================
+
+.. toctree::
+ :numbered:
+ :maxdepth: 4
+
+ release-notes.rst
+
diff --git a/docs/release/scenarios/os-nosdn-lxd-ha/release-notes.rst b/docs/release/scenarios/os-nosdn-lxd-ha/release-notes.rst
new file mode 100644
index 00000000..780804f3
--- /dev/null
+++ b/docs/release/scenarios/os-nosdn-lxd-ha/release-notes.rst
@@ -0,0 +1,159 @@
+.. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
+.. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
+.. (c) <optionally add copywriters name>
+
+
+Abstract
+========
+
+This document compiles the release notes for the Colorado release of
+OPNFV when using JOID as a deployment tool with LXD container hypervisor.
+
+Introduction
+============
+
+These notes provides release information for the use of joid as deployment
+tool for the Colorado release of OPNFV with LXD hypervisor for containers
+scenario.
+
+The goal of the Colorado release and this JOID based deployment process is
+to establish a lab ready platform accelerating further development
+of the OPNFV infrastructure.
+
+Carefully follow the installation-instructions which guides a user to deploy
+OPNFV using JOID which is based on MAAS and Juju.
+
+Summary
+=======
+
+ LXD is a lightweight container hypervisor for full system containers,
+unlike Docker and Rocket which is for application containers. This means that
+the container will look and feel like a regular VM – but will act like a
+container. LXD uses the same container technology found in the Linux kernel
+(cgroups, namespaces, LSM, etc).
+
+Colorado release with the JOID deployment with LXD hypervisor will establish an
+OPNFV target system on a Pharos compliant lab infrastructure.
+The current definition of an OPNFV target system is and OpenStack Mitaka combined
+with LXD Hypervisor.
+
+ The system is deployed with OpenStack High Availability (HA) for most OpenStack services.
+
+ User has following choices to make to do the deployment.
+
+ - Openstack -- Mitaka
+ - Type -- HA, nonHA, tip (stable git branch of respective openstack)
+ - Feature -- LXD (container hypervisor)
+
+NOTE: Detailed information on how to install in your lab can be find in installation guide
+command to deploy lxd feature is:
+
+#LXD deployment with HA Openstack
+./deploy.sh -o mitaka -f lxd -t ha -l custom -s nosdn
+
+#LXD deployment with no HA Openstack
+./deploy.sh -o mitaka -f lxd -t nonha -l custom -s nosdn
+
+Using LXD with Openstack
+========================
+
+Once you have finished installinf the JOID with LXD container hypervisor you can use the
+following to uplod your lxd image to the glance server that LXD can use.
+In order to do that you simply have to do the following:
+
+wget -O xenial-server-cloudimg-amd64-root.tar.gz \
+https://cloud-images.ubuntu.com/xenial/current/xenial-server-cloudimg-amd64-root.tar.gz
+
+glance image-create --name="Xenial LXC x86_64" --visibility=public --container-format=bare \
+--disk-format=root-tar --property architecture="x86_64" xenial-server-cloudimg-amd64-root.tar.gz
+
+After you upload the image to glance then you will be ready to go. If you have any questions
+please don’t hesitate to ask on the LXC mailing, #lxcontainers IRC channel on freenode
+
+
+Release Data
+============
+
++--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
+| **Project** | JOID |
+| | |
++--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
+| **Repo/tag** | gerrit.opnfv.org/gerrit/joid.git |
+| | stable/colorado |
++--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
+| **Release designation** | Colorado release |
+| | |
++--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
+| **Release date** | September 22 2016 |
+| | |
++--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
+| **Purpose of the delivery** | Colorado release |
+| | |
++--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
+
+Deliverables
+------------
+
+Software deliverables
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+`JOID based installer script files <https://gerrit.opnfv.org/gerrit/gitweb?p=joid.git;a=summary>`_
+
+Known Limitations, Issues and Workarounds
+=========================================
+
+Known issues
+------------
+
+**JIRA TICKETS:**
+
++--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
+| **JIRA REFERENCE** | **SLOGAN** |
+| | |
++--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
+| JIRA: YARDSTICK-325 | Provide raw format yardstick vm image|
+| | for nova-lxd scenario(OPNFV) |
++--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
+| JIRA: | |
++--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
+
+
+Scenario Releases
+=================
+Name: joid-os-nosdn-lxd-ha
+Test Link: https://build.opnfv.org/ci/view/joid/job/joid-os-nosdn-lxd-ha-baremetal-daily-colorado/
+Notes:
+
+Name: joid-os-nosdn-lxd-noha
+Test Link: https://build.opnfv.org/ci/user/narindergupta/my-views/view/joid/job/joid-os-nosdn-lxd-noha-baremetal-daily-colorado/
+Notes:
+
+References
+==========
+LXD
+---
+- `JUJU LXD charm <https://jujucharms.com/lxd/xenial/2>`_
+- `LXD hypervisor <https://help.ubuntu.com/lts/serverguide/lxd.html>`_
+- `LXD Story <http://insights.ubuntu.com/2016/03/14/the-lxd-2-0-story-prologue/>`_
+
+Juju
+----
+- `Juju Charm store <https://jujucharms.com/>`_
+- `Juju documents <https://jujucharms.com/docs/stable/getting-started>`_
+
+MAAS
+----
+- `Bare metal management (Metal-As-A-Service) <http://maas.io/get-started>`_
+- `MAAS API documents <http://maas.ubuntu.com/docs/>`_
+
+JOID
+----
+- `OPNFV JOID wiki <https://wiki.opnfv.org/joid>`_
+- `OPNFV JOID User Guide <https://wiki.opnfv.org/joid/b_userguide>`_
+- `OPNFV Release Notes <https://wiki.opnfv.org/display/joid/Colorado+Release+Notes>`_
+- `OPNFV JOID Install Guide <https://wiki.opnfv.org/display/joid/Colorado+installation+Guide>`_
+
+OpenStack
+---------
+- `OpenStack Mitaka Release artifacts <http://www.openstack.org/software/mitaka>`_
+- `OpenStack documentation <http://docs.openstack.org>`_
+
diff --git a/docs/release/scenarios/os-nosdn-lxd-noha/index.rst b/docs/release/scenarios/os-nosdn-lxd-noha/index.rst
new file mode 100644
index 00000000..8180fbb3
--- /dev/null
+++ b/docs/release/scenarios/os-nosdn-lxd-noha/index.rst
@@ -0,0 +1,14 @@
+.. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence.
+.. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
+.. (c) <optionally add copywriters name>
+
+======================
+JOID LXD Release Notes
+======================
+
+.. toctree::
+ :numbered:
+ :maxdepth: 4
+
+ release-notes.rst
+
diff --git a/docs/release/scenarios/os-nosdn-lxd-noha/release-notes.rst b/docs/release/scenarios/os-nosdn-lxd-noha/release-notes.rst
new file mode 100644
index 00000000..780804f3
--- /dev/null
+++ b/docs/release/scenarios/os-nosdn-lxd-noha/release-notes.rst
@@ -0,0 +1,159 @@
+.. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
+.. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
+.. (c) <optionally add copywriters name>
+
+
+Abstract
+========
+
+This document compiles the release notes for the Colorado release of
+OPNFV when using JOID as a deployment tool with LXD container hypervisor.
+
+Introduction
+============
+
+These notes provides release information for the use of joid as deployment
+tool for the Colorado release of OPNFV with LXD hypervisor for containers
+scenario.
+
+The goal of the Colorado release and this JOID based deployment process is
+to establish a lab ready platform accelerating further development
+of the OPNFV infrastructure.
+
+Carefully follow the installation-instructions which guides a user to deploy
+OPNFV using JOID which is based on MAAS and Juju.
+
+Summary
+=======
+
+ LXD is a lightweight container hypervisor for full system containers,
+unlike Docker and Rocket which is for application containers. This means that
+the container will look and feel like a regular VM – but will act like a
+container. LXD uses the same container technology found in the Linux kernel
+(cgroups, namespaces, LSM, etc).
+
+Colorado release with the JOID deployment with LXD hypervisor will establish an
+OPNFV target system on a Pharos compliant lab infrastructure.
+The current definition of an OPNFV target system is and OpenStack Mitaka combined
+with LXD Hypervisor.
+
+ The system is deployed with OpenStack High Availability (HA) for most OpenStack services.
+
+ User has following choices to make to do the deployment.
+
+ - Openstack -- Mitaka
+ - Type -- HA, nonHA, tip (stable git branch of respective openstack)
+ - Feature -- LXD (container hypervisor)
+
+NOTE: Detailed information on how to install in your lab can be find in installation guide
+command to deploy lxd feature is:
+
+#LXD deployment with HA Openstack
+./deploy.sh -o mitaka -f lxd -t ha -l custom -s nosdn
+
+#LXD deployment with no HA Openstack
+./deploy.sh -o mitaka -f lxd -t nonha -l custom -s nosdn
+
+Using LXD with Openstack
+========================
+
+Once you have finished installinf the JOID with LXD container hypervisor you can use the
+following to uplod your lxd image to the glance server that LXD can use.
+In order to do that you simply have to do the following:
+
+wget -O xenial-server-cloudimg-amd64-root.tar.gz \
+https://cloud-images.ubuntu.com/xenial/current/xenial-server-cloudimg-amd64-root.tar.gz
+
+glance image-create --name="Xenial LXC x86_64" --visibility=public --container-format=bare \
+--disk-format=root-tar --property architecture="x86_64" xenial-server-cloudimg-amd64-root.tar.gz
+
+After you upload the image to glance then you will be ready to go. If you have any questions
+please don’t hesitate to ask on the LXC mailing, #lxcontainers IRC channel on freenode
+
+
+Release Data
+============
+
++--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
+| **Project** | JOID |
+| | |
++--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
+| **Repo/tag** | gerrit.opnfv.org/gerrit/joid.git |
+| | stable/colorado |
++--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
+| **Release designation** | Colorado release |
+| | |
++--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
+| **Release date** | September 22 2016 |
+| | |
++--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
+| **Purpose of the delivery** | Colorado release |
+| | |
++--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
+
+Deliverables
+------------
+
+Software deliverables
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+`JOID based installer script files <https://gerrit.opnfv.org/gerrit/gitweb?p=joid.git;a=summary>`_
+
+Known Limitations, Issues and Workarounds
+=========================================
+
+Known issues
+------------
+
+**JIRA TICKETS:**
+
++--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
+| **JIRA REFERENCE** | **SLOGAN** |
+| | |
++--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
+| JIRA: YARDSTICK-325 | Provide raw format yardstick vm image|
+| | for nova-lxd scenario(OPNFV) |
++--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
+| JIRA: | |
++--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
+
+
+Scenario Releases
+=================
+Name: joid-os-nosdn-lxd-ha
+Test Link: https://build.opnfv.org/ci/view/joid/job/joid-os-nosdn-lxd-ha-baremetal-daily-colorado/
+Notes:
+
+Name: joid-os-nosdn-lxd-noha
+Test Link: https://build.opnfv.org/ci/user/narindergupta/my-views/view/joid/job/joid-os-nosdn-lxd-noha-baremetal-daily-colorado/
+Notes:
+
+References
+==========
+LXD
+---
+- `JUJU LXD charm <https://jujucharms.com/lxd/xenial/2>`_
+- `LXD hypervisor <https://help.ubuntu.com/lts/serverguide/lxd.html>`_
+- `LXD Story <http://insights.ubuntu.com/2016/03/14/the-lxd-2-0-story-prologue/>`_
+
+Juju
+----
+- `Juju Charm store <https://jujucharms.com/>`_
+- `Juju documents <https://jujucharms.com/docs/stable/getting-started>`_
+
+MAAS
+----
+- `Bare metal management (Metal-As-A-Service) <http://maas.io/get-started>`_
+- `MAAS API documents <http://maas.ubuntu.com/docs/>`_
+
+JOID
+----
+- `OPNFV JOID wiki <https://wiki.opnfv.org/joid>`_
+- `OPNFV JOID User Guide <https://wiki.opnfv.org/joid/b_userguide>`_
+- `OPNFV Release Notes <https://wiki.opnfv.org/display/joid/Colorado+Release+Notes>`_
+- `OPNFV JOID Install Guide <https://wiki.opnfv.org/display/joid/Colorado+installation+Guide>`_
+
+OpenStack
+---------
+- `OpenStack Mitaka Release artifacts <http://www.openstack.org/software/mitaka>`_
+- `OpenStack documentation <http://docs.openstack.org>`_
+
diff --git a/docs/release/userguide/index.rst b/docs/release/userguide/index.rst
new file mode 100644
index 00000000..77373f54
--- /dev/null
+++ b/docs/release/userguide/index.rst
@@ -0,0 +1,14 @@
+.. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence.
+.. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
+.. (c) <optionally add copywriters name>
+
+===============
+JOID User Guide
+===============
+
+.. toctree::
+ :numbered:
+ :maxdepth: 4
+
+ userguide.rst
+
diff --git a/docs/release/userguide/userguide.rst b/docs/release/userguide/userguide.rst
new file mode 100644
index 00000000..ce949819
--- /dev/null
+++ b/docs/release/userguide/userguide.rst
@@ -0,0 +1,957 @@
+
+Introduction
+============
+This document will explain how to install OPNFV Brahmaputra with JOID including installing JOID, configuring JOID for your environment, and deploying OPNFV with different SDN solutions in HA, or non-HA mode. Prerequisites include
+
+- An Ubuntu 14.04 LTS Server Jumphost
+- Minimum 2 Networks per Pharos requirement
+
+ - One for the administrative network with gateway to access the Internet
+ - One for the OpenStack public network to access OpenStack instances via floating IPs
+ - JOID supports multiple isolated networks for data as well as storage based on your network requirement for OpenStack.
+
+- Minimum 6 Physical servers for bare metal environment
+
+ - Jump Host x 1, minimum H/W configuration:
+
+ - CPU cores: 16
+ - Memory: 32GB
+ - Hard Disk: 1 (250GB)
+ - NIC: eth0 (Admin, Management), eth1 (external network)
+
+ - Control Node x 3, minimum H/W configuration:
+
+ - CPU cores: 16
+ - Memory: 32GB
+ - Hard Disk: 1 (500GB)
+ - NIC: eth0 (Admin, Management), eth1 (external network)
+
+ - Compute Node x 2, minimum H/W configuration:
+
+ - CPU cores: 16
+ - Memory: 32GB
+ - Hard Disk: 1 (1TB), this includes the space for Ceph.
+ - NIC: eth0 (Admin, Management), eth1 (external network)
+
+**OTE**: Above configuration is minimum. For better performance and usage of the OpenStack, please consider higher specs for all nodes.
+
+Make sure all servers are connected to top of rack switch and configured accordingly. No DHCP server should be up and configured. Configure gateways only on eth0 and eth1 networks to access the network outside your lab.
+
+Orientation
+===========
+JOID in brief
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+JOID as Juju OPNFV Infrastructure Deployer allows you to deploy different combinations of
+OpenStack release and SDN solution in HA or non-HA mode. For OpenStack, JOID supports
+Juno and Liberty. For SDN, it supports Openvswitch, OpenContrail, OpenDayLight, and ONOS. In addition to HA or non-HA mode, it also supports deploying from the latest development tree.
+
+JOID heavily utilizes the technology developed in Juju and MAAS. Juju is a
+state-of-the-art, open source, universal model for service oriented architecture and
+service oriented deployments. Juju allows you to deploy, configure, manage, maintain,
+and scale cloud services quickly and efficiently on public clouds, as well as on physical
+servers, OpenStack, and containers. You can use Juju from the command line or through its
+powerful GUI. MAAS (Metal-As-A-Service) brings the dynamism of cloud computing to the
+world of physical provisioning and Ubuntu. Connect, commission and deploy physical servers
+in record time, re-allocate nodes between services dynamically, and keep them up to date;
+and in due course, retire them from use. In conjunction with the Juju service
+orchestration software, MAAS will enable you to get the most out of your physical hardware
+and dynamically deploy complex services with ease and confidence.
+
+For more info on Juju and MAAS, please visit https://jujucharms.com/ and http://maas.ubuntu.com.
+
+Typical JOID Setup
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+The MAAS server is installed and configured in a VM on the Ubuntu 14.04 LTS Jump Host with
+access to the Internet. Another VM is created to be managed by MAAS as a bootstrap node
+for Juju. The rest of the resources, bare metal or virtual, will be registered and
+provisioned in MAAS. And finally the MAAS environment details are passed to Juju for use.
+
+Installation
+============
+We will use MAAS-deployer to automate the deployment of MAAS clusters for use as a Juju provider. MAAS-deployer uses a set of configuration files and simple commands to build a MAAS cluster using virtual machines for the region controller and bootstrap hosts and automatically commission nodes as required so that the only remaining step is to deploy services with Juju. For more information about the maas-deployer, please see https://launchpad.net/maas-deployer.
+
+Configuring the Jump Host
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+Let's get started on the Jump Host node.
+
+The MAAS server is going to be installed and configured in a virtual machine. We need to create bridges on the Jump Host prior to setting up the MAAS-deployer.
+
+**OTE**: For all the commands in this document, please do not use a ‘root’ user account to run. Please create a non root user account. We recommend using the ‘ubuntu’ user.
+
+Install the bridge-utils package on the Jump Host and configure a minimum of two bridges, one for the Admin network, the other for the Public network:
+
+::
+
+ $ sudo apt-get install bridge-utils
+
+ $ cat /etc/network/interfaces
+ # This file describes the network interfaces available on your system
+ # and how to activate them. For more information, see interfaces(5).
+
+ # The loopback network interface
+ auto lo
+ iface lo inet loopback
+
+ iface p1p1 inet manual
+
+ auto brAdm
+ iface brAdm inet static
+ address 172.16.50.51
+ netmask 255.255.255.0
+ bridge_ports p1p1
+
+ iface p1p2 inet manual
+
+ auto brPublic
+ iface brPublic inet static
+ address 10.10.15.1
+ netmask 255.255.240.0
+ gateway 10.10.10.1
+ dns-nameservers 8.8.8.8
+ bridge_ports p1p2
+
+**NOTE**: If you choose to use separate networks for management, data, and storage, then you need to create a bridge for each interface. In case of VLAN tags, make the appropriate network on jump-host depend upon VLAN ID on the interface.
+
+**NOTE**: The Ethernet device names can vary from one installation to another. Please change the Ethernet device names according to your environment.
+
+MAAS-deployer has been integrated in the JOID project. To get the JOID code, please run
+
+::
+
+ $ sudo apt-get install git
+ $ git clone https://gerrit.opnfv.org/gerrit/p/joid.git
+
+Setting Up Your Environment for JOID
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+To set up your own environment, create a directory in joid/ci/maas/<company name>/<pod number>/ and copy an existing JOID environment over. For example:
+
+::
+
+ $ cd joid/ci
+ $ mkdir -p maas/myown/pod
+ $ cp maas/juniper/pod1/deployment.yaml maas/myown/pod/
+
+Now let's configure MAAS-deployer by editing the deployment.yaml file. Let's review each section. We will use the Juniper pod deployment.yaml as an example.
+
+::
+
+ # This file defines the deployment for the MAAS environment which is to be
+ # deployed and automated.
+ demo-maas:
+ maas:
+ # Defines the general setup for the MAAS environment, including the
+ # username and password for the host as well as the MAAS server.
+ user: ubuntu
+ password: ubuntu
+
+'demo-maas' is the environment name we set, it will be used by Juju. The username and password will be the login credentials for the MAAS server VM and also for the MAAS server web UI.
+
+::
+
+ # Contains the virtual machine parameters for creating the MAAS virtual
+ # server. Here you can configure the name of the virsh domain, the
+ # parameters for how the network is attached.
+ name: opnfv-maas-juniper
+ interfaces: ['bridge=brAdm,model=virtio', 'bridge=brPublic,model=virtio']
+ memory: 4096
+ vcpus: 1
+ arch: amd64
+ pool: default
+ disk_size: 160G
+
+When it's configured, you will see a KVM VM created and named 'opnfv-maas-juniper' on the
+Jump Host with 2 network interfaces configured and connected to brAdm and brPublic on the
+host. You may want to increase the vcpu number and disk size for the VM depending on the
+resources.
+
+::
+
+ # Apt http proxy setting(s)
+ apt_http_proxy:
+
+ apt_sources:
+ - ppa:maas/stable
+ - ppa:juju/stable
+
+If in your environment uses an http proxy, please enter its information here. In addition, add the MAAS and Juju PPA locations here.
+
+::
+
+ # Virsh power settings
+ # Specifies the uri and keys to use for virsh power control of the
+ # juju virtual machine. If the uri is omitted, the value for the
+ # --remote is used. If no power settings are desired, then do not
+ # supply the virsh block.
+ virsh:
+ rsa_priv_key: /home/ubuntu/.ssh/id_rsa
+ rsa_pub_key: /home/ubuntu/.ssh/id_rsa.pub
+ uri: qemu+ssh://ubuntu@172.16.50.51/system
+
+ # Defines the IP Address that the configuration script will use
+ # to access the MAAS controller via SSH.
+ ip_address: 172.16.50.50
+
+This section defines MAAS server IP (172.16.50.50) and the virsh power settings. The Juju bootstrap VM is defined later.
+
+::
+
+ # This section allows the user to set a series of options on the
+ # MAAS server itself. The list of config options can be found in
+ # the upstream MAAS documentation:
+ # - http://maas.ubuntu.com/docs/api.html#maas-server
+ settings:
+ main_archive: http://us.archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu
+ upstream_dns: 8.8.8.8
+ maas_name: juniperpod1
+ # kernel_opts: "console=tty0 console=ttyS1,115200n8"
+ # ntp_server: ntp.ubuntu.com
+
+Here we specify some settings for the MAAS server itself. Once MAAS is deployed, you will find these settings on http://172.16.50.50/MAAS/settings/.
+
+::
+
+ # This section is used to define the networking parameters for when
+ # the node first comes up. It is fed into the meta-data cloud-init
+ # configuration and is used to configure the networking piece of the
+ # service. The contents of this section are written directly to the
+ # /etc/network/interfaces file.
+ #
+ # Please note, this is slightly different than the
+ # node-group-interfaces section below. This will configure the
+ # machine's networking params, and the node-group-interfaces will
+ # configure the maas node-group interfaces which is used for
+ # controlling the dhcp, dns, etc.
+ network_config: |
+ auto lo
+ iface lo inet loopback
+
+ auto eth0
+ iface eth0 inet static
+ address 172.16.50.50
+ netmask 255.255.255.0
+ network 172.16.50.0
+ broadcast 172.16.50.255
+ dns-nameservers 8.8.8.8 127.0.0.1
+
+ auto eth1
+ iface eth1 inet static
+ address 10.10.15.50
+ netmask 255.255.240.0
+ network 10.10.0.0
+ broadcast 10.10.15.255
+ gateway 10.10.10.1
+
+This section defines the MAAS server's network interfaces. Once MAAS is deployed, you will find this setting at /etc/network/interfaces in the MAAS VM.
+
+::
+
+ # The node-group-interfaces section is used to configure the MAAS
+ # network interfaces. Basic configuration is supported, such as which
+ # device should be bound, the range of IP addresses, etc.
+ # Note: this may contain the special identifiers:
+ # ${maas_net} - the first 3 octets of the ipv4 address
+ # ${maas_ip} - the ip address of the MAAS controller
+ node_group_ifaces:
+ - device: eth0
+ ip: 172.16.50.50
+ subnet_mask: 255.255.255.0
+ broadcast_ip: 172.16.50.255
+ router_ip: 172.16.50.50
+ static_range:
+ low: 172.16.50.60
+ high: 172.16.50.90
+ dynamic_range:
+ low: 172.16.50.91
+ high: 172.16.50.254
+
+This section configures the MAAS cluster controller. Here it configures the MAAS cluster
+to provide DHCP and DNS services on the eth0 interface with dynamic and static IP ranges
+defined. You should allocate enough IP addresses for bare metal hosts in the static IP
+range, and allocate as many as possible in the dynamic IP range.
+
+::
+
+ # Defines the physical nodes which are added to the MAAS cluste
+ # controller upon startup of the node.
+ nodes:
+ - name: 2-R4N4B2-control
+ tags: control
+ architecture: amd64/generic
+ mac_addresses:
+ - "0c:c4:7a:16:2a:70"
+ power:
+ type: ipmi
+ address: 10.10.7.92
+ user: ADMIN
+ pass: ADMIN
+ driver: LAN_2_0
+
+ - name: 3-R4N3B1-compute
+ tags: compute
+ architecture: amd64/generic
+ mac_addresses:
+ - "0c:c4:7a:53:57:c2"
+ power:
+ type: ipmi
+ address: 10.10.7.84
+ user: ADMIN
+ pass: ADMIN
+ driver: LAN_2_0
+ <snip>
+
+This section defines the physical nodes to be added to the MAAS cluster controller. For
+example, the first node here is named ‘2-R4N4B2-control’, with a tag 'control' and
+architecture specified as amd64/generic. You will need to know the MAC address of the
+network interface of the node where it can reach MAAS server; it's the network interface
+of the node to PXE boot on. You need to tell MAAS how to power control the node by
+providing the the BMC IP address and BMC admin credentials. MAAS power control not only
+supports IPMI v2.0, but also supports virsh, Cisco UCS manager, HP moonshot iLO, and
+Microsoft OCS, among others. Tag is used here with Juju constraints to make sure that a
+particular service gets deployed only on hardware with the tag you created. Later when we
+go through the Juju deploy bundle, you will see the constraints setting.
+
+::
+
+ # Contains the virtual machine parameters for creating the Juju bootstrap
+ # node virtual machine
+ juju-bootstrap:
+ name: bootstrap
+ interfaces: ['bridge=brAdm,model=virtio', 'bridge=brPublic,model=virtio']
+ memory: 4096
+ vcpus: 2
+ arch: amd64
+ pool: default
+ disk_size: 120G
+
+The last section of the example deployment.yaml file defines the Juju bootstrap VM node.
+When it's configured, you will see a KVM VM created and named 'juju-boostrap' on the Jump
+Host with 2 network interfaces configured and connected to brAdm and brPublic on the host.
+You may want to increase the vcpu number and disk size for the VM depending on the resources.
+
+We are now done providing all the information regarding the MAAS VM and Juju VM, and how
+nodes and how many of them will be registered in MAAS. This information is very important,
+if you have questions, please hop on to #opnfv-joid IRC channel on freenode to ask.
+
+Next we will use the 02-maasdeploy.sh in joid/ci to kick off maas-deployer. Before we do
+that, we will create an entry to tell maas-deployer what deployment.yaml file to use. Use
+your favorite editor to add an entry under the section case $1. In our example, this is
+what we add::
+
+ 'juniperpod1' )
+ cp maas/juniper/pod1/deployment.yaml ./deployment.yaml
+ ;;
+
+**NOTE**: If your username is different from ‘ubuntu’, please change the ssh key section accordingly::
+
+ #just make sure the ssh keys are added into maas for the current user
+ sed --i "s@/home/ubuntu@$HOME@g" ./deployment.yaml
+ sed --i "s@qemu+ssh://ubuntu@qemu+ssh://$USER@g" ./deployment.yaml
+
+Starting MAAS-deployer
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+Now run the 02-maasdeploy.sh script with the environment you just created
+
+::
+
+ ~/joid/ci$ ./02-maasdeploy.sh juniperpod1
+
+This will take approximately 40 minutes to couple of hours depending on your environment. This script will do the following:
+1. Create 2 VMs (KVM).
+2. Install MAAS in one of the VMs.
+3. Configure MAAS to enlist and commission a VM for Juju bootstrap node.
+4. Configure MAAS to enlist and commission bare metal servers.
+
+When it's done, you should be able to view the MAAS webpage (in our example http://172.16.50.50/MAAS) and see 1 bootstrap node and bare metal servers in the 'Ready' state on the nodes page.
+
+Here is an example output of running 02-maasdeploy.sh: http://pastebin.ubuntu.com/15117137/
+
+Troubleshooting MAAS deployer
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+During the installation process, please carefully review the error messages.
+
+Join IRC channel #opnfv-joid on freenode to ask question. After the issues are resolved, re-running 02-maasdeploy.sh will clean up the VMs created previously. There is no need to manually undo what’s been done.
+
+Deploying OPNFV
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+JOID allows you to deploy different combinations of OpenStack release and SDN solution in
+HA or non-HA mode. For OpenStack, it supports Juno and Liberty. For SDN, it supports Open
+vSwitch, OpenContrail, OpenDaylight and ONOS (Open Network Operating System). In addition
+to HA or non-HA mode, it also supports deploying the latest from the development tree (tip).
+
+The deploy.sh script in the joid/ci directoy will do all the work for you. For example, the following deploys OpenStack Liberty with OpenDaylight in a HA mode in the Intelpod7.
+
+::
+
+ ~/joid/ci$ ./deploy.sh -o liberty -s odl -t ha -l intelpod7 -f none
+
+**NOTE: You will need to modify ~/joid/ci/01-deploybundle.sh to deploy to your own environment, explained later.**
+
+Take a look at the deploy.sh script. You will find we support the following for each option::
+
+ [-s]
+ nosdn: Open vSwitch.
+ odl: OpenDayLight Lithium version.
+ opencontrail: OpenContrail.
+ onos: ONOS framework as SDN.
+ [-t]
+ nonha: NO HA mode of OpenStack.
+ ha: HA mode of OpenStack.
+ tip: The tip of the development.
+ [-o]
+ juno: OpenStack Juno version.
+ liberty: OpenStack Liberty version.
+ [-l]
+ default: For virtual deployment where installation will be done on KVM created using ./02-maasdeploy.sh
+ intelpod5: Install on bare metal OPNFV pod5 of the Intel lab.
+ intelpod6: Install on bare metal OPNFV pod6 of the Intel lab.
+ orangepod2: Install on bare metal OPNFV pod2 of the Orange lab.
+ (other pods)
+ Note: if you make changes as per your pod above then please use your pod.
+ [-f]
+ none: no special feature will be enabled.
+ ipv6: IPv6 will be enabled for tenant in OpenStack.
+
+The script will call 00-bootstrap.sh to bootstrap the Juju VM node, then it will call 01-deploybundle.sh with the corrosponding parameter values.
+
+::
+
+ ./01-deploybundle.sh $opnfvtype $openstack $opnfvlab $opnfvsdn $opnfvfeature
+
+You will notice in the 01-deploybundle.sh, it copies over the charm bundle file based on the ha/nonha/tip setting::
+
+ case "$1" in
+ 'nonha' )
+ cp $4/juju-deployer/ovs-$4-nonha.yaml ./bundles.yaml
+ ;;
+ 'ha' )
+ cp $4/juju-deployer/ovs-$4-ha.yaml ./bundles.yaml
+ ;;
+ 'tip' )
+ cp $4/juju-deployer/ovs-$4-tip.yaml ./bundles.yaml
+ cp common/source/* ./
+ sed -i -- "s|branch: master|branch: stable/$2|g" ./*.yaml
+ ;;
+ * )
+ cp $4/juju-deployer/ovs-$4-nonha.yaml ./bundles.yaml
+ ;;
+ esac
+
+After the respective yaml file is copied over and renamed to bundle.yaml, in the next
+section, it will update the bundle.yaml based on your network configuration and
+environment. For example, for the Juniper pod 1, we need to change vip suffix from
+10.4.1.1 to 172.16.50.1, which is our admin network, and eth1 is on the public network.
+
+::
+
+ 'juniperpod1' )
+ sed -i -- 's/10.4.1.1/172.16.50.1/g' ./bundles.yaml
+ sed -i -- 's/#ext-port: "eth1"/ext-port: "eth1"/g' ./bundles.yaml
+ ;;
+
+**NOTE**: If you are using a separate data network, then add this line below along with other changes, which signify that network 10.4.9.0/24 will be used as the data network for openstack.
+
+::
+
+ sed -i -- 's/#os-data-network: 10.4.8.0\/21/os-data-network: 10.4.9.0\/24/g' ./bundles.yaml
+
+By default debug is enabled in the deploy.sh script and error messages will be printed on the SSH terminal where you are running the scripts. It could take an hour to a couple of hours (maximum) to complete. Here is an example output of the deployment: http://pastebin.ubuntu.com/15006924/
+
+You can check the status of the deployment by running this command in another terminal::
+
+ $ watch juju status --format tabular
+
+This will refresh the juju status output in tabular format every 2 seconds. Here is an example output of juju status --format tabular: http://pastebin.ubuntu.com/15134109/
+
+Next we will show you what Juju is deploying and to where, and how you can modify based on your own needs.
+
+OPNFV Juju Charm Bundles
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+The magic behind Juju is a collection of software components called charms. They contain
+all the instructions necessary for deploying and configuring cloud-based services. The
+charms publicly available in the online Charm Store represent the distilled DevOps
+knowledge of experts.
+
+A bundle is a set of services with a specific configuration and their corresponding
+relations that can be deployed together in a single step. Instead of deploying a single
+service, they can be used to deploy an entire workload, with working relations and
+configuration. The use of bundles allows for easy repeatability and for sharing of
+complex, multi-service deployments.
+
+For OPNFV, we have collected the charm bundles for each SDN deployment. They are stored in
+each SDN directory in ~/joid/ci. In each SDN folder, there are 3 bundle.yaml files, one
+for HA, one for non-HA, and the other for tip. For example for OpenDaylight::
+
+ ~/joid/ci/odl/juju-deployer$ ls
+ ovs-odl-ha.yaml ovs-odl-nonha.yaml ovs-odl-tip.yaml scripts
+ ~/joid/ci/odl/juju-deployer$
+
+We use Juju-deployer to deploy a set of charms via a yaml configuration file. You can find the complete format guide for the Juju-deployer configuration file here: http://pythonhosted.org/juju-deployer/config.html
+
+Let’s take a quick look at the ovs-odl-nonha.yaml to give you an idea about the charm bundle.
+
+Assuming we are deploying OpenDayling with OpenStack Liberty in non-HA mode, according to the deploy.sh, we know it will run these two commands::
+
+ juju-deployer -vW -d -t 3600 -c bundles.yaml trusty-liberty-nodes
+ juju-deployer -vW -d -t 7200 -r 5 -c bundles.yaml trusty-liberty
+
+In the ovs-odl-nonha.yaml file, find the section of ‘trusty-liberty-nodes’ close to the bottom of the file::
+
+ trusty-liberty-nodes:
+ inherits: openstack-phase1
+ overrides:
+ series: trusty
+
+It inherits ‘openstack-phase1’, which you will find in the beginning of the file::
+
+ openstack-phase1:
+ series: trusty
+ services:
+ nodes-api:
+ charm: "cs:trusty/ubuntu"
+ num_units: 1
+ constraints: tags=control
+ nodes-compute:
+ charm: "cs:trusty/ubuntu"
+ num_units: 1
+ constraints: tags=compute
+ ntp:
+ charm: "cs:trusty/ntp"
+ relations:
+ - - "ntp:juju-info"
+ - "nodes-api:juju-info"
+ - - "ntp:juju-info"
+ - "nodes-compute:juju-info"
+
+In the ‘services’ subsection, here we deploy the ‘Ubuntu Trusty charm from the charm
+store,’ name the service ‘nodes-api,’ deploy just one unit, and assign a tag of ‘control’
+to this service. You can deploy the same charm and name it differently such as the second
+service ‘nodes-compute.’ The third service we deploy is named ‘ntp’ and is deployed from
+the NTP Trusty charm from the Charm Store. The NTP charm is a subordinate charm, which is
+designed for and deployed to the running space of another service unit.
+
+The tag here is related to what we define in the deployment.yaml file for the
+MAAS-deployer. When ‘constraints’ is set, Juju will ask its provider, in this case MAAS,
+to provide a resource with the tags. In this case, Juju is asking one resource tagged with
+control and one resource tagged with compute from MAAS. Once the resource information is
+passed to Juju, Juju will start the installation of the specified version of Ubuntu.
+
+In the next subsection, we define the relations between the services. The beauty of Juju
+and charms is you can define the relation of two services and all the service units
+deployed will set up the relations accordingly. This makes scaling out a very easy task.
+Here we add the relation between NTP and the two bare metal services.
+
+Once the relations are established, Juju-deployer considers the deployment complete and moves to the next.
+
+::
+
+ juju-deployer -vW -d -t 7200 -r 5 -c bundles.yaml trusty-liberty
+
+It will start at the ‘trusty-liberty’ section, which inherits the ‘contrail’ section,
+which inherits the ‘openstack-phase2’ section. it follows the same services and relations
+format as above. We will take a look at another common service configuration next.
+
+::
+
+ nova-cloud-controller:
+ branch: lp:~openstack-charmers/charms/trusty/nova-cloud-controller/next
+ num_units: 1
+ options:
+ network-manager: Neutron
+ to:
+ - "lxc:nodes-api=0"
+
+We define a service name ‘nova-cloud-controller,’ which is deployed from the next branch
+of the nova-cloud-controller Trusty charm hosted on the Launchpad openstack-charmers team.
+The number of units to be deployed is 1. We set the network-manager option to ‘Neutron.’
+This 1-service unit will be deployed to a LXC container at service ‘nodes-api’ unit 0.
+
+To find out what other options there are for this particular charm, you can go to the code location at http://bazaar.launchpad.net/~openstack-charmers/charms/trusty/nova-cloud-controller/next/files and the options are defined in the config.yaml file.
+
+Once the service unit is deployed, you can see the current configuration by running juju get::
+
+ $ juju get nova-cloud-controller
+
+You can change the value with juju set, for example::
+
+ $ juju set nova-cloud-controller network-manager=’FlatManager’
+
+Charms encapsulate the operation best practices. The number of options you need to configure should be at the minimum. The Juju Charm Store is a great resource to explore what a charm can offer you. Following the nova-cloud-controller charm example, here is the main page of the recommended charm on the Charm Store: https://jujucharms.com/nova-cloud-controller/trusty/66
+
+If you have any questions regarding Juju, please join the IRC channel #opnfv-joid on freenode for JOID related questions or #juju for general questions.
+
+Testing Your Deployment
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+Once juju-deployer is complete, use juju status --format tabular to verify that all deployed units are in the ready state.
+
+Find the Openstack-dashboard IP address from the juju status output, and see if you can login via a web browser. The username and password is admin/openstack.
+
+Optionally, see if you can log in to the Juju GUI. The Juju GUI is on the Juju bootstrap node, which is the second VM you define in the 02-maasdeploy.sh file. The username and password is admin/admin.
+
+If you deploy OpenDaylight, OpenContrail or ONOS, find the IP address of the web UI and login. Please refer to each SDN bundle.yaml for the login username/password.
+
+Troubleshooting
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+Logs are indispensable when it comes time to troubleshoot. If you want to see all the
+service unit deployment logs, you can run juju debug-log in another terminal. The
+debug-log command shows the consolidated logs of all Juju agents (machine and unit logs)
+running in the environment.
+
+To view a single service unit deployment log, use juju ssh to access to the deployed unit. For example to login into nova-compute unit and look for /var/log/juju/unit-nova-compute-0.log for more info.
+
+::
+
+ $ juju ssh nova-compute/0
+
+Example::
+
+ ubuntu@R4N4B1:~$ juju ssh nova-compute/0
+ Warning: Permanently added '172.16.50.60' (ECDSA) to the list of known hosts.
+ Warning: Permanently added '3-r4n3b1-compute.maas' (ECDSA) to the list of known hosts.
+ Welcome to Ubuntu 14.04.1 LTS (GNU/Linux 3.13.0-77-generic x86_64)
+
+ * Documentation: https://help.ubuntu.com/
+ <skipped>
+ Last login: Tue Feb 2 21:23:56 2016 from bootstrap.maas
+ ubuntu@3-R4N3B1-compute:~$ sudo -i
+ root@3-R4N3B1-compute:~# cd /var/log/juju/
+ root@3-R4N3B1-compute:/var/log/juju# ls
+ machine-2.log unit-ceilometer-agent-0.log unit-ceph-osd-0.log unit-neutron-contrail-0.log unit-nodes-compute-0.log unit-nova-compute-0.log unit-ntp-0.log
+ root@3-R4N3B1-compute:/var/log/juju#
+
+**NOTE**: By default Juju will add the Ubuntu user keys for authentication into the deployed server and only ssh access will be available.
+
+Once you resolve the error, go back to the jump host to rerun the charm hook with::
+
+ $ juju resolved --retry <unit>
+
+If you would like to start over, run juju destroy-environment <environment name> to release the resources, then you can run deploy.sh again.
+
+::
+
+ $ juju destroy-environment demo-maas
+ WARNING! this command will destroy the "demo-maas" environment (type: maas)
+ This includes all machines, services, data and other resources.
+
+ Continue [y/N]? y
+ $
+
+If there is an error destroying the environment, use --force.
+
+::
+
+ $ juju destroy-environment demo-maas --force
+ $
+
+If the above command hangs, use Ctrl-C to get out of it, and manually remove the environment file in the ~/.juju/environments/ directory.
+
+::
+
+ $ ls ~/.juju/environments/
+ demo-maas.jenv
+ $ sudo rm ~/.juju/environments/demo-maas.jenv
+ $
+
+
+The following are the common issues we have collected from the community:
+
+- The right variables are not passed as part of the deployment procedure.
+
+::
+
+ ./deploy.sh -o liberty -s odl -t ha -l intelpod5 -f none
+
+- If you have setup maas not with 02-maasdeply.sh then the ./clean.sh command could hang,
+ the juju status command may hang because the correct MAAS API keys are not listed in
+ environments.yaml, or environments.yaml does not exist in the current working directory.
+ Solution: Please make sure you have an environments.yaml file under joid/ci directory
+ and the correct MAAS API key has been listed.
+- Deployment times out:
+ use the command juju status --format=tabular and make sure all service containers receive an IP address and they are executing code. Ensure there is no service in the error state.
+- In case the cleanup process hangs,remove the files from the ~/.juju/ directory except environments.yaml and shutdown all nodes manually.
+
+**Direct console access** via the OpenStack GUI can be quite helpful if you need to login to a VM but cannot get to it over the network.
+It can be enabled by setting the ``console-access-protocol`` in the ``nova-cloud-controller`` to ``vnc``. One option is to directly edit the juju-deployer bundle and set it there prior to deploying OpenStack.
+
+::
+
+ nova-cloud-controller:
+ options:
+ console-access-protocol: vnc
+
+To access the console, just click on the instance in the OpenStack GUI and select the Console tab.
+
+Post Installation Configuration
+===============================
+Configuring OpenStack
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+At the end of the deployment, the admin-openrc with OpenStack login credentials will be created for you. You can source the file and start configuring OpenStack via CLI.
+
+::
+
+ ~/joid/ci/cloud$ cat admin-openrc
+ export OS_USERNAME=admin
+ export OS_PASSWORD=openstack
+ export OS_TENANT_NAME=admin
+ export OS_AUTH_URL=http://172.16.50.114:5000/v2.0
+ export OS_REGION_NAME=Canonical
+ ~/joid/ci/cloud$
+
+We have prepared some scripts to help your configure the OpenStack cloud that you just deployed. In each SDN directory, for example joid/ci/opencontrail, there is a ‘scripts’ folder where you can find the scripts. These scripts are created to help you configure a basic OpenStack Cloud to verify the cloud. For more information on OpenStack Cloud configuration, please refer to the OpenStack Cloud Administrator Guide: http://docs.openstack.org/user-guide-admin/. Similarly, for complete SDN configuration, please refer to the respective SDN administrator guide.
+
+Each SDN solution requires slightly different setup. Please refer to the README in each
+SDN folder. Most likely you will need to modify the openstack.sh and cloud-setup.sh
+scripts for the floating IP range, private IP network, and SSH keys. Please go through
+openstack.sh, glance.sh and cloud-setup.sh and make changes as you see fit.
+
+Let’s take a look at those for the Open vSwitch and briefly go through each script so you know what you need to change for your own environment.
+
+::
+
+ ~/joid/ci/nosdn/juju-deployer/scripts$ ls
+ cloud-setup.sh glance.sh openstack.sh
+ ~/joid/ci/nosdn/juju-deployer/scripts$
+
+openstack.sh
+~~~~~~~~~~~~
+Let’s first look at ‘openstack.sh’. First there are 3 functions defined, configOpenrc(), unitAddress(), and unitMachine().
+
+::
+
+ configOpenrc()
+ {
+ cat <<-EOF
+ export OS_USERNAME=$1
+ export OS_PASSWORD=$2
+ export OS_TENANT_NAME=$3
+ export OS_AUTH_URL=$4
+ export OS_REGION_NAME=$5
+ EOF
+ }
+
+ unitAddress()
+ {
+ juju status | python -c "import yaml; import sys; print yaml.load(sys.stdin)[\"services\"][\"$1\"][\"units\"][\"$1/$2\"][\"public-address\"]" 2> /dev/null
+ }
+
+ unitMachine()
+ {
+ juju status | python -c "import yaml; import sys; print yaml.load(sys.stdin)[\"services\"][\"$1\"][\"units\"][\"$1/$2\"][\"machine\"]" 2> /dev/null
+ }
+
+The function configOpenrc() creates the OpenStack login credentials, the function unitAddress() finds the IP address of the unit, and the function unitMachine() finds the machine info of the unit.
+
+::
+
+ mkdir -m 0700 -p cloud
+ controller_address=$(unitAddress keystone 0)
+ configOpenrc admin openstack admin http://$controller_address:5000/v2.0 Canonical > cloud/admin-openrc
+ chmod 0600 cloud/admin-openrc
+
+This creates a folder named ‘cloud’, finds the IP address of the keystone unit 0, feeds in
+the OpenStack admin credentials to a new file name ‘admin-openrc’ in the ‘cloud’ folder
+and change the permission of the file. It’s important to change the credentials here if
+you use a different password in the deployment Juju charm bundle.yaml.
+
+::
+
+ machine=$(unitMachine glance 0)
+ juju scp glance.sh cloud/admin-openrc $machine:
+ juju run --machine $machine ./glance.sh
+
+This section first finds the machine ID of the glance service unit 0, transfers the
+glance.sh and admin-openrc files over to the glance unit 0, and then run the glance.sh in
+the glance unit 0. We will take a look at the glance.sh in the next section.
+
+::
+
+ machine=$(unitMachine nova-cloud-controller 0)
+ juju scp cloud-setup.sh cloud/admin-openrc ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub $machine:
+ juju run --machine $machine ./cloud-setup.sh
+
+This section first finds the the machine ID of the nova-cloud-controller service unit 0,
+transfers 3 files over to the nova-cloud-controller unit 0, and then runs the
+cloud-setup.sh in the nova-cloud-controller unit 0. We will take a look at the
+cloud-setup.sh following glance.sh.
+
+glance.sh
+~~~~~~~~~
+
+::
+
+ . ~/admin-openrc
+
+First, this script sources the admin-openrc file.
+
+::
+
+ wget -P /tmp/images http://download.cirros-cloud.net/0.3.3/cirros-0.3.3-x86_64-disk.img
+ wget -P /tmp/images http://cloud-images.ubuntu.com/trusty/current/trusty-server-cloudimg-amd64-disk1.img
+
+Download two images, Cirros and Ubuntu Trusty cloud image to /tmp/images folder.
+
+::
+
+ glance image-create --name "cirros-0.3.3-x86_64" --file /tmp/images/cirros-0.3.3-x86_64-disk.img --disk-format qcow2 --container-format bare --progress
+ glance image-create --name "ubuntu-trusty-daily" --file /tmp/images/trusty-server-cloudimg-amd64-disk1.img --disk-format qcow2 --container-format bare --progress
+ rm -rf /tmp/images
+
+Use the glance python client to upload those two images, and finally remove those images from the local file system.
+
+If you wish to use different images, please change the image download links and filenames here accordingly.`
+
+**NOTE**: The image downloading and uploading might take too long and time out. In this case, use juju ssh glance/0 to log in to the glance unit 0 and run the script again, or manually run the glance commands.
+
+cloud-setup.sh
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+::
+
+ . ~/admin-openrc
+
+First, source the the admin-openrc file.
+
+::
+
+ # adjust tiny image
+ nova flavor-delete m1.tiny
+ nova flavor-create m1.tiny 1 512 8 1
+
+Adjust the tiny image profile as the default tiny instance is too small for Ubuntu.
+
+::
+
+ # configure security groups
+ neutron security-group-rule-create --direction ingress --ethertype IPv4 --protocol icmp --remote-ip-prefix 0.0.0.0/0 default
+ neutron security-group-rule-create --direction ingress --ethertype IPv4 --protocol tcp --port-range-min 22 --port-range-max 22 --remote-ip-prefix 0.0.0.0/0 default
+
+Open up the ICMP and SSH access in the default security group.
+
+::
+
+ # import key pair
+ keystone tenant-create --name demo --description "Demo Tenant"
+ keystone user-create --name demo --tenant demo --pass demo --email demo@demo.demo
+
+ nova keypair-add --pub-key id_rsa.pub ubuntu-keypair
+
+Create a project called ‘demo’ and create a user called ‘demo’ in this project. Import the key pair.
+
+::
+
+ # configure external network
+ neutron net-create ext-net --router:external --provider:physical_network external --provider:network_type flat --shared
+ neutron subnet-create ext-net --name ext-subnet --allocation-pool start=10.5.8.5,end=10.5.8.254 --disable-dhcp --gateway 10.5.8.1 10.5.8.0/24
+
+This section configures an external network ‘ext-net’ with a subnet called ‘ext-subnet’.
+In this subnet, the IP pool starts at 10.5.8.5 and ends at 10.5.8.254. DHCP is disabled.
+The gateway is at 10.5.8.1, and the subnet mask is 10.5.8.0/24. These are the public IPs
+that will be requested and associated to the instance. Please change the network configuration according to your environment.
+
+::
+
+ # create vm network
+ neutron net-create demo-net
+ neutron subnet-create --name demo-subnet --gateway 10.20.5.1 demo-net 10.20.5.0/24
+
+This section creates a private network for the instances. Please change accordingly.
+
+::
+
+ neutron router-create demo-router
+
+ neutron router-interface-add demo-router demo-subnet
+
+ neutron router-gateway-set demo-router ext-net
+
+This section creates a router and connects this router to the two networks we just created.
+
+::
+
+ # create pool of floating ips
+ i=0
+ while [ $i -ne 10 ]; do
+ neutron floatingip-create ext-net
+ i=$((i + 1))
+ done
+
+Finally, the script will request 10 floating IPs.
+
+Appendix A: Single Node Deployment
+==================================
+By default, running the script ./02-maasdeploy.sh will automatically create the KVM VMs on a single machine and configure everything for you.
+
+::
+
+ * )
+ virtinstall=1
+ ./cleanvm.sh
+ cp maas/default/deployment.yaml ./deployment.yaml
+ ;;
+
+Please change ~/joid/ci/maas/default/deployment.yaml accordingly. The MAAS-deployer will do the following:
+1. Create 2 VMs (KVM).
+2. Install MAAS in one of the VMs.
+3. Configure MAAS to enlist and commission a VM for Juju bootstrap node.
+
+Later, the 02-massdeploy.sh script will create two additional VMs and register them into the MAAS Server:
+
+::
+
+ if [ "$virtinstall" -eq 1 ]; then
+ # create two more VMs to do the deployment.
+ sudo virt-install --connect qemu:///system --name node1-control --ram 8192 --vcpus 4 --disk size=120,format=qcow2,bus=virtio,io=native,pool=default --network bridge=virbr0,model=virtio --network bridge=virbr0,model=virtio --boot network,hd,menu=off --noautoconsole --vnc --print-xml | tee node1-control
+ sudo virt-install --connect qemu:///system --name node2-compute --ram 8192 --vcpus 4 --disk size=120,format=qcow2,bus=virtio,io=native,pool=default --network bridge=virbr0,model=virtio --network bridge=virbr0,model=virtio --boot network,hd,menu=off --noautoconsole --vnc --print-xml | tee node2-compute
+
+ node1controlmac=`grep "mac address" node1-control | head -1 | cut -d "'" -f 2`
+ node2computemac=`grep "mac address" node2-compute | head -1 | cut -d "'" -f 2`
+
+ sudo virsh -c qemu:///system define --file node1-control
+ sudo virsh -c qemu:///system define --file node2-compute
+
+ maas maas tags new name='control'
+ maas maas tags new name='compute'
+
+ controlnodeid=`maas maas nodes new autodetect_nodegroup='yes' name='node1-control' tags='control' hostname='node1-control' power_type='virsh' mac_addresses=$node1controlmac power_parameters_power_address='qemu+ssh://'$USER'@192.168.122.1/system' architecture='amd64/generic' power_parameters_power_id='node1-control' | grep system_id | cut -d '"' -f 4 `
+
+ maas maas tag update-nodes control add=$controlnodeid
+
+ computenodeid=`maas maas nodes new autodetect_nodegroup='yes' name='node2-compute' tags='compute' hostname='node2-compute' power_type='virsh' mac_addresses=$node2computemac power_parameters_power_address='qemu+ssh://'$USER'@192.168.122.1/system' architecture='amd64/generic' power_parameters_power_id='node2-compute' | grep system_id | cut -d '"' -f 4 `
+
+ maas maas tag update-nodes compute add=$computenodeid
+
+ fi
+
+Appendix B: Automatic Device Discovery
+======================================
+If your bare metal servers support IPMI, they can be discovered and enlisted automatically
+by the MAAS server. You need to configure bare metal servers to PXE boot on the network
+interface where they can reach the MAAS server. With nodes set to boot from a PXE image,
+they will start, look for a DHCP server, receive the PXE boot details, boot the image,
+contact the MAAS server and shut down.
+
+During this process, the MAAS server will be passed information about the node, including
+the architecture, MAC address and other details which will be stored in the database of
+nodes. You can accept and commission the nodes via the web interface. When the nodes have
+been accepted the selected series of Ubuntu will be installed.
+
+
+Appendix C: Machine Constraints
+===============================
+Juju and MAAS together allow you to assign different roles to servers, so that hardware and software can be configured according to their roles. We have briefly mentioned and used this feature in our example. Please visit Juju Machine Constraints https://jujucharms.com/docs/stable/charms-constraints and MAAS tags https://maas.ubuntu.com/docs/tags.html for more information.
+
+Appendix D: Offline Deployment
+==============================
+When you have limited access policy in your environment, for example, when only the Jump Host has Internet access, but not the rest of the servers, we provide tools in JOID to support the offline installation.
+
+The following package set is provided to those wishing to experiment with a ‘disconnected
+from the internet’ setup when deploying JOID utilizing MAAS. These instructions provide
+basic guidance as to how to accomplish the task, but it should be noted that due to the
+current reliance of MAAS and DNS, that behavior and success of deployment may vary
+depending on infrastructure setup. An official guided setup is in the roadmap for the next release:
+
+1. Get the packages from here: https://launchpad.net/~thomnico/+archive/ubuntu/ubuntu-cloud-mirrors
+
+ **NOTE**: The mirror is quite large 700GB in size, and does not mirror SDN repo/ppa.
+
+2. Additionally to make juju use a private repository of charms instead of using an external location are provided via the following link and configuring environments.yaml to use cloudimg-base-url: https://github.com/juju/docs/issues/757
+