This section describes how to design, develop, and submit a Virtual Network Function for use as a Network Resource in the ONAP environment.
A Virtual Network Function can be developed in a stand-alone development environment without most of the tools – or even API libraries – used or furnished by ONAP. The completed VNF is submitted to the Certification Group (see Mailing Lists) as a collection of executable and text files, and must meet the set of requirements described in the Reference Documents for VNF Providers, below.
The primary audiences for this documentation are
- VNF providers: creators of VNFs (executables and related configuration files)
- Acceptance personnel: those tasked with certifying VNFs (approving them to run in ONAP environments)
The following readers may wish to refer to this documentation for a deeper understanding of VNFs, however, for operational information, they should read Using ONAP.
- Service Designers: those who combine Virtual Functions (including VNFs) into Services in ONAP
- DevOps: those who deploy, operate, and monitor ONAP Services containing VNFs
There are three stages in the life cycle of a VNF, shown here:
Figure 1. VNF complete life cycle stages
Reference Documents for VNF Providers
The ONAP release documentation is available at ONAP.readthedocs.io, including VNF Provider guidance: VNF Guidelines, VNF Requirements
Example VNFs Included with ONAP
The example VNFs distributed with ONAP are:
- vFW (Firewall)
- vDNS (Domain Name Server).
The Setting Up ONAP pages describe how to design and operate Services using these VNFs.
Reference VNFs are managed by the Integration Project.