CLAMP R2 - M1 Release Planning
- 1 Overview
- 2 Scope
- 3 Release Deliverables
- 4 Sub-Components
- 5 ONAP Dependencies
- 6 Architecture
- 7 Testing and Integration Plans
- 8 Gaps
- 9 Known Defects and Issues
- 10 Risks
- 11 Resources
- 12 Release Milestone
- 13 Team Internal Milestone
- 14 Documentation, Training
- 14.1 Note
- 15 Other Information
- 16 Charter Compliance
- 17 Release Key Facts
Overview
Project Name | Enter the name of the project |
---|---|
Target Release Name | Beijing Release |
Project Lifecycle State | Incubation.( Refer to ONAP Charter, section 3.3 Project Lifecycle for further information) |
Participating Company | AT&T, ZTE, Nokia.... (TBC) |
Scope
What is this release trying to address?
CLAMP will be improved to enhance its resiliency and separate the UI duties (design time and runtime). The design time should be integrated into the SDC framework and the Runtime will stay in Portal.
Introduction of light dashboarding is also a goal for this release.
Use Cases
The existing Amsterdam use cases are still going to be supported and additional use cases will be supported for the Beijing Release (as defined by the Control loop sub committee)
Minimum Viable Product
The minimum viable product that we aim to reach within R2 is to have the CLAMP application Amsterdam (R1) features at least running in the new UI separation model. CLAMP team plans also to increase maturity level to support single site High Availability.
Functionalities
List the functionalities that this release is committing to deliver by providing a link to JIRA Epics and Stories. In the JIRA Priority field, specify the priority (either High, Medium, Low). The priority will be used in case de-scoping is required. Don't assign High priority to all functionalities.
Epics
Stories
Longer term Roadmap
Indicate at a high level the longer term roadmap. This is to put things into the big perspective.
The long term goal is to reach a common platform for managing control loops within ONAP :
CLAMP is a platform for designing and managing control loops. It is used to design a closed loop, configure it with specific parameters for a particular network service, then deploying and undeploying it. Once deployed, the user can also update the loop with new parameters during runtime, as well as suspending and restarting it.
It interacts with other systems to deploy and execute the closed loop. For example, it pushes the control loop design to the SDC catalog, associating it with the VF resource. It requests from DCAE the instantiation of microservices to manage the closed loop flow. Further, it creates and updates multiple policies in the Policy Engine that define the closed loop flow.
The ONAP CLAMP platform abstracts the details of these systems under the concept of a control loop model. The design of a control loop and its management is represented by a workflow in which all relevant system interactions take place. This is essential for a self-service model of creating and managing control loops, where no low-level user interaction with other components is required.
At a higher level, CLAMP is about supporting and managing the broad operational life cycle of VNFs/VMs and ultimately ONAP components itself. It will offer the ability to configure, test, deploy and update control loop automation - both closed and open. Automating these functions would represent a significant saving on operational costs compared to traditional methods.
Another Key long term goal is to provide a better user experience by separating clearly the UI in 2 entities : one for the design time and one for the runtime.
A Dashboard is also going to be introduced to allow the user to get a quick overview of the status of running control loops.
Release Deliverables
Indicate the outcome (Executable, Source Code, Library, API description, Tool, Documentation, Release Note...) of this release.
Deliverable Name | Deliverable Description | Deliverable location |
---|---|---|
CLAMP Docker container | Docker images available on nexus3 | Nexus3 docker registry |
Source Code | Code of the Designer and run time of CLAMP | CLAMP git repository |
Deployment scripts | Scripts that can be used to help with the container instantiation and configuration | CLAMP git repository |
Property Files | Properties files that can be used to tune the configuration of CLAMP depending on the environment | CLAMP git repository |
Documentation | Release specific documentation (Release Note, user guide, deployment guide) provided through readthedocs | CLAMP git repository |
Sub-Components
There is no currently no sub-components in CLAMP, the R2 application embeds both the designer and runtime parts.
ONAP Dependencies
The other ONAP projects CLAMP depends on are:
SDC : Rest based interface exposed by the SDC, Distribution of service to DCAE + SDC UX UI SDK
DCAE: Rest based interface exposed by DCAE, Common Controller Framework, DCAE microservices onboarded (TCA, Stringmatch, Holmes (optional))
Policy: Rest based interface (the Policy team provide a "jar" to handle the communication), both XACML and Drools PDP, APIs to App-C/VF-C/SDN-C
DMaaP: Message bus within DCAE and cross-ONAP
VNF use cases : defines what type(s) of control loop(s) can be implemented and configured by CLAMP
Architecture
High level architecture diagram
At that stage within the Release, the team is expected to provide more Architecture details describing how the functional modules are interacting.
Block and sequence diagrams showing relation within the project as well as relation with external components are expected.
Anyone reading this section should have a good understanding of all the interacting modules.
Architecture
Below we show how the CLAMP application fits into ONAP. The red figure below shows the CLAMP application components. There is a design portion and an operations component, which are both deployed within ONAP portal.
•CLAMP is separated in 2 areas, which are currently (in seed code) both supported by a single application:
Design Time(Cockpit/UI to define the templates)
Templates are pushed to SDC. The template format is TOSCA blueprint, those blueprints will be pushed/provisioned, by SDC, to DCAE orchestration engine.
policies (configuration and operational policies) are pushed/provisioned towards the Policy Component of ONAP. (those policies will be triggered by DCAE during Closed Loop operations).
The DCAE team needs to provide models to Policy team in order for the Configuration policy to be built.
Run time(DCAE-Policy, grabbing events and triggering policies based actions)
In the first release of CLAMP, the triggering to deploy(and then effectively start the closed loop) a blueprint will be manual (via CLAMP cockpit) an automatic deployment based on an event will come in future release.
The CLAMP cockpit will support the following action at runtime:
start (start the provisioned Closed Loop on DCAE)
stop (stop a provisioned Closed loop on DCAE)
CLAMP will thus control the typical following control loop flow within ONAP :
Platform Maturity
Refering to CII Badging Security Program and Platform Maturity Requirements, fill out the table below by indicating the actual level , the targeted level for the current release and the evidences on how you plan to achieve the targeted level.
Area | Actual level | Targeted level for current release | How, Evidences | Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|
Performance | 0 | 0 | Run performance basic test, depends on performance criteria availability for level 1 - not able to commit to more than what was done on Amsterdam |
|
Stability | 0 | 1 (assumption is that 72 hour soak test will be done by Integration team testing); not separate testing will be done at component level | Participate to Stability runs Level 1 |
|
Resiliency | 1 | 1 |
| |
Security | 0 | 1 | Reach CII passing badge, increasing test coverage as remaining item |
|
Scalability | 1 | 1 | Level 1 single site horizontal scaling |
|
Manageability | 1 | 1 | Already using EELF common framework for logging |
|
Usability | 1 | 1 | Documentation only for this release - Stretch to have automated API docs (Swagger) |
|
API Incoming Dependencies
List the API this release is expecting from other ONAP component(s) releases.
Prior to Release Planning review, Team Leads must agreed on the date by which the API will be fully defined. The API Delivery date must not be later than the release API Freeze date.
Prior to the delivery date, it is a good practice to organize an API review with the API consumers.
API Name | API Description | API Definition Date | API Delivery date | API Definition link (i.e.swagger) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Same as Amsterdam | API exposed by SDC to get list of Alarms and service information's | Date for which the API is reviewed and agreed | Already available | Link toward the detailed API description |
Same as Amsterdam | API exposed by SDC to publish Closed Loop template going to DCAE | Already available | ||
Same as Amsterdam | API exposed by Policy to create/update policies | Already available | ||
Same as Amsterdam | API exposed by DCAE to start/stop a Closed Loop | Already available | ||
Same as Amsterdam | API exposed by DCAE to trigger the deployment/undeployment of a Control Loop template | Already available | ||
Same as Amsterdam | API exposed by DCAE to get status of a Closed Loop | Already available |
API Outgoing Dependencies
API this release of CLAMP is delivering to other ONAP Component(s) releases.
API Name | API Description | API Definition Date | API Delivery date | API Definition link (i.e.swagger) |
---|---|---|---|---|
N/A |
Third Party Products Dependencies
Third Party Products mean products that are mandatory to provide services for your components. Development of new functionality in third party product may or not be expected.
List the Third Party Products (OpenStack, ODL, RabbitMQ, ElasticSearch,Crystal Reports, ...).
Name | Description | Version |
---|---|---|
AJSC | java container | 6 |
AJSC-Camunda | Camunda integration into AJSC | 6 |
Docker | Container engine | 1.12 |
MariaDB | database container | 10.1.11 |
Spring boot | Spring boot Framework dependencies | 1.4.1 |
In case there are specific dependencies (Centos 7 vs Ubuntu 16. Etc.) list them as well.
Testing and Integration Plans
Provide a description of the testing activities (unit test, functional test, automation,...) that will be performed by the team within the scope of this release.
Describe the plan to integrate and test the release deliverables within the overall ONAP system.
Confirm that resources have been allocated to perform such activities.
CLAMP will invest in CSIT tests to allow further integration testing, CLAMP already provided some tests as part of R1.
Gaps
This section is used to document a limitation on a functionality or platform support. We are currently aware of this limitation and it will be delivered in a future Release.
List identified release gaps (if any), and its impact.
Gaps identified | Impact |
---|---|
Testing/Integration | limited testing of final product |
Known Defects and Issues
Provide a link toward the list of all known project bugs.
Risks
List the risks identified for this release along with the plan to prevent the risk to occur (mitigation) and the plan of action in the case the risk would materialized (contingency).
Risk identified | Mitigation Plan | Contingency Plan |
---|---|---|
Resources
Link toward the Resources Committed to the Release centralized page.
Release Milestone
The milestones are defined at the Release Level and all the supporting project agreed to comply with these dates.
Team Internal Milestone
This section may be used to document internal milestones that the team agreed on.
Also, in the case the team has made agreement with other team to deliver some artifacts on a certain date that are not in the release milestone, provide these agreements and dates in this section.
It is not expected to have a detailed project plan.
Date | Project | Deliverable |
---|---|---|
To fill out | sdc | sdc UI/UX SDK |
Documentation, Training
Highlight the team contributions to the specific document related to he project (Config guide, installation guide...).
Highlight the team contributions to the overall Release Documentation and training asset
High level list of documentation, training and tutorials necessary to understand the release capabilities, configuration and operation.
Documentation includes items such as:
Installation instructions
Configuration instructions
Developer guide
End User guide
Admin guide
...
Note
The Documentation project will provide the Documentation Tool Chain to edit, configure, store and publish all Documentation asset.
Other Information
Vendor Neutral
If this project is coming from an existing proprietary codebase, ensure that all proprietary trademarks, logos, product names, etc. have been removed. All ONAP deliverables must comply with this rule and be agnostic of any proprietary symbols.
Free and Open Source Software
FOSS activities are critical to the delivery of the whole ONAP initiative. The information may not be fully available at Release Planning, however to avoid late refactoring, it is critical to accomplish this task as early as possible.
List all third party Free and Open Source Software used within the release and provide License type (BSD, MIT, Apache, GNU GPL,... ).
In the case non Apache License are found inform immediately the TSC and the Release Manager and document your reasoning on why you believe we can use a non Apache version 2 license.
Each project must edit its table within the [[Free_and_Open_Source_Software#Project_Licenses| Master Project License Table]].
Charter Compliance
The project team comply with the ONAP Charter.
Release Key Facts
Fill out and provide a link toward the centralized Release Artifacts.