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Rancher Installation - Single Node - Script/template version

Single collocated VM

Automation is currently only written for single VM that hosts both the rancher server and the deployed onap pods. Use the heat template below to deploy your VM (adjust your tenancy parameters)

Once the VM comes up run the oom_entrypoint.sh script - which will download the oom_rancher_setup.sh script to setup docker, rancher, kubernetes and helm - the entrypoint script will then run the cd.sh script to bring up onap based on your values.yaml config by running helm install on it.

# source your windriver tenant rc file
source logging-openrc.sh
# edit the env file with your own tenant config - then run the stack
openstack stack create -t oom_openstack.yaml -e oom_openstack_oom.env obrien20180418b
# wait for the VM (or add the following to the cloud-init section (coming)) - ssh into the VM and run the following
# download and edit values.yaml with your onap preferences and openstack tenant config
wget https://jira.onap.org/secure/attachment/11414/values.yaml
# download and run the bootstrap and onap install script, the -s server name can be an IP, FQDN or hostname
wget https://jira.onap.org/secure/attachment/11439/oom_entrypoint.sh
chmod 777 oom_entrypoint.sh
sudo ./oom_entrypoint.sh -b master -s devops.onap.info -e onap
# wait 15 min for rancher to finish, then 30-90 min for onap to come up


OOM-714 - Getting issue details... STATUS  see https://jira.onap.org/secure/attachment/11455/oom_openstack.yaml and https://jira.onap.org/secure/attachment/11454/oom_openstack_oom.env

OOM-710 - Getting issue details... STATUS  see https://jira.onap.org/secure/attachment/11439/oom_entrypoint.sh

customize your template (true/false for any components, docker overrides etc...)

https://jira.onap.org/secure/attachment/11414/values.yaml

Run oom_entrypoint.sh after you verified values.yaml - it will run both scripts below for you - a single node kubernetes setup running what you configured in values.yaml will be up in 50-90 min.  If you want to just configure your vm without bringing up ONAP - comment out the cd.sh line and run that separately.

OOM-715 - Getting issue details... STATUS  see https://jira.onap.org/secure/attachment/11438/oom_rancher_setup.sh

OOM-716 - Getting issue details... STATUS  see https://jira.onap.org/secure/attachment/11413/cd.sh

Verify your system is up by doing a kubectl get pods --all-namespaces and checking the 8880 port to bring up the rancher or kubernetes gui.

Rancher Installation - cluster

The following are instructions on how to create an Openstack VM running Rancher.

Launch new VM instance to host the Rancher Server

Select Ubuntu 16.04 as base image

Select Flavor

Known issues exist if flavor is too small for Rancher. Please select a flavor with at least 4 vCPU and 8GB ram.


Networking 


Security Groups

Key Pair

Use an existing key pair (e.g. onap_key), import an existing one or create a new one to assign.


Apply customization script for the Rancher VM

This customization script will:

  • setup root access to the VM (comment out if you wish to disable this capability and restrict access to ssh access only)
  • install docker *
  • install rancher *
  • install kubectl *
  • install helm *
  • install nfs server

* ONAP release supported version


Launch Instance


Assign Floating IP for external access



Kubernetes Installation

Launch new VM instance(s) to create a Kubernetes single host or cluster

To create a cluster:

  1. do not append a '-1' suffix (e.g. sb4-k8s)
  2. increase count to the # of of kubernetes worker nodes you want (eg. 3)


Select Ubuntu 16.04 as base image

Select Flavor

The size of a Kubernetes host depends on the size of the ONAP deployment that will be installed.

As of the Beijing release a minimum of 3 x 32GB hosts will be needed to run a full ONAP deployment (all components).

If a small subset of ONAP components are being deployed for testing purposes, then a single 16GB or 32GB host should suffice.

Networking 

Security Group 

Key Pair

Use an existing key pair (e.g. onap_key), import an existing one or create a new one to assign.

Apply customization script for Kubernetes VM(s)

This customization script will:

  • setup root access to the VM (comment out if you wish to disable this capability and restrict access to ssh access only)
  • install docker *
  • install kubectl *
  • install helm *
  • install nfs common (see configuration step here)

* ONAP release supported version

Launch Instance

Assign Floating IP for external access




Configuration (Rancher and Kubernetes)

Access Rancher server via web browser

(e.g.  http://10.12.6.16:8080/env/1a5/apps/stacks)


Add Kubernetes Environment to Rancher

1. Select “Manage Environments”


2. Select “Add Environment”


3. Add unique name for your new Rancher environment

4. Select the Kubernetes template

5. Click "create"


6. Select the new named environment (ie. SB4) from the dropdown list (top left).

Rancher is now waiting for a Kubernetes Host to be added.



Add Kubernetes Host

1.  If this is the first (or only) host being added - click on the "Add a host" link

 and click on "Save" (accept defaults).


otherwise select INFRASTRUCTURE→ Hosts and click on "Add Host"



2. Enter the management IP for the k8s VM (e.g. 10.0.0.4) that was just created.

3. Click on “Copy to Clipboard” button

4. Click on “Close” button


Configure Kubernetes Host

1. Login to the new Kubernetes Host


2. Paste Clipboard content and hit enter to install Rancher Agent


Return to Rancher environment (e.g. SB4) and wait for services to complete (~ 10-15 mins)



Configure kubectl and helm

Note that in this example we are configuring kubectl and helm that have been installed (as a convience) onto the rancher and kubernetes hosts.

Typically you would install them both on your PC and remotely connect to the cluster. The following procedure would remain the same.


1. Click on CLI and then click on “Generate Config”

2. Click on “Copy to Clipboard”


3. Create a .kube directory in user directory (if one does not exist)


4. Paste contents of Clipboard into a file called “config” and save file


4. Validate that kubectl is able to connect to the kubernetes cluster 

and show running pods


5. Validate helm is running at the right version.

If not, an error like this will be displayed:


6. Upgrade the server-side component of helm (tiller) via ‘helm init --upgrade’


ONAP Deployment via OOM

Now that kubernetes and Helm are installed and configured you can prepare to deploy ONAP.


Until an LF-hosted public ONAP repository is available (comping soon!), please clone the OOM repo (https://gerrit.onap.org/r/gitweb?p=oom.git;a=summary).

Follow the instructions in the oom/kubernetes/README.MD or look at the official documentation to get started

http://onap.readthedocs.io/en/latest/submodules/oom.git/docs/oom_quickstart_guide.html?highlight=oom%20quick%20start

http://onap.readthedocs.io/en/latest/submodules/oom.git/docs/oom_user_guide.html








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