OSM Release THREE

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Open Source MANO (OSM) is the open source community that aims to deliver a production-quality MANO stack for NFV, capable of consuming openly published information models, available to everyone, suitable for all VNFs, operationally significant and VIM-independent. OSM is aligned to NFV ISG information models while providing first-hand feedback based on its implementation experience.

Interaction with VIMs and VNFs

The following figure shows OSM interaction with VIM and VNFs.

OSM Release 1 connectivity 1


In simpler setups, OSM only requires a single interface as long as both VIM and VNF IP addresses are reachable

OSM Release 1 connectivity 2

Install OSM

Install from binaries (Recommended)

All you need to run OSM Release THREE is a single server or VM with the following requirements:

  • MINIMUM: 4 CPUs, 8 GB RAM, 40GB disk and a single interface with Internet access
  • RECOMMENDED: 8 CPUs, 16 GB RAM, 80GB disk and a single interface with Internet access
  • Ubuntu16.04 (64bit varient required) as base image (http://releases.ubuntu.com/16.04/), configured to run LXD containers. If you don't have LXD configured, you can follow the instructions here (LXD configuration).

Note: If you wish to install OSM Release THREE from inside a LXD container, you will need to enable nested containers following instructions here (Nested containers).

Once you have prepared the host with the previous requirements, all you need to do is:

wget https://osm-download.etsi.org/ftp/osm-3.0-three/install_osm.sh
chmod +x install_osm.sh
./install_osm.sh

Install from source

To install OSM Release THREE from source, requirements are the following:

  • 8 CPUs, 16 GB RAM, 100GB disk and a single interface with Internet access
  • Ubuntu16.04 ((64bit varient required) ) as base image (http://releases.ubuntu.com/16.04/), configured to run LXD containers. If you don't have LXD configured, you can follow the instructions here (LXD configuration).

Note: If you wish to install OSM Release THREE from inside a LXD container, you will need to enable nested containers following instructions here (Nested containers).

Once you have prepared the host with the previous requirements, all you need to do is:

wget https://osm-download.etsi.org/ftp/osm-3.0-three/install_osm.sh
chmod +x install_osm.sh
./install_osm.sh --source

If you need to install from latest master (recommended for advanced users only), please use:

./install_osm.sh -b master --source

Checking your installation

Please note that in OSM 3, authentication is performed using OpenIDConnect and OAuth2.0.
An identity provider has been added to the platform and provided as a service in the SO container running on port 8009.
This means both the browser and the UI server components (that run on the SO container) need to be able to access the SO container using identical URIs.
In short, the tuple of scheme://location:port needs to be reachable via both the browser accessing the system and the UI server running on the SO container (e.g. https://10.66.202.206:8009 for a sample deployment).
This means that if your SO container is behind a NAT that cannot reach the public address of the host, authentication and authorization will not be possible and you will not be able to proceed using the UI.

After some time, you will get a fresh OSM Release THREE installation. You can access to the UI in the following URL (user:admin, password: admin):

You can connect to the service via a web browser (Google Chrome version 50 or later is recommended). Open a browser and connect to https://1.2.3.4:8443 , replacing 1.2.3.4 with the IP address of your host. Note that it uses https, not http. Google Chrome is recommended. If you are using Firefox and plan to use the self-signed certificate provided in the installation, please follow instructions at Using untrusted, self-signed certificates Alternatively, you can run Launchpad with trusted CA signed SSL certs as per Using a certificate signed by a trusted CA or, run Launchpad with SSL disabled as per Run Launchpad with SSL Disabled

OSM login window

Make sure that port 8443 is accessible, as well as the following required ports: 8000, 4567, 8008, 80, 9090.

As a result of the installation, three LXD containers are created in the host: RO, VCA, and SO-ub (running the SO and the UI), as shown in the figure below.

OSM Release THREE installation result

Install OSM client

OSM client is a python-based API and CLI for OSM. To install it:

curl http://osm-download.etsi.org/repository/osm/debian/ReleaseTHREE/OSM%20ETSI%20Release%20Key.gpg | sudo apt-key add -
sudo add-apt-repository -y "deb [arch=amd64] http://osm-download.etsi.org/repository/osm/debian/ReleaseTHREE stable osmclient"
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install -y python-osmclient

Once installed, type “osm” to see a list of commands. At minimum, you will need to specify the OSM host, either via an environment variable or via the osm command line (see “osm --help” for info):

export OSM_HOSTNAME=`lxc list | awk '($2=="SO-ub"){print $6}'`
export OSM_RO_HOSTNAME=`lxc list | awk '($2=="RO"){print $6}'`

Via the OSM client, you can do the following:

 config-agent-add
 config-agent-delete
 config-agent-list
 ns-create
 ns-delete
 ns-list
 ns-monitoring-show
 ns-scale
 ns-scaling-show
 ns-show
 nsd-delete
 nsd-list
 ro-dump
 upload-package
 vcs-list
 vim-create
 vim-delete
 vim-list
 vim-show
 vnf-list
 vnf-monitoring-show
 vnf-show
 vnfd-delete
 vnfd-list

Adding VIM accounts

Before proceeding, make sure that you have a site with a VIM configured to run with OSM. Three different kinds of VIMs are currently supported by OSM:

OSM can manage external SDN controllers to perform the dataplane underlay network connectivity on behalve of the VIM. See Configure VIM SDN

OpenVIM site

  • Execute the following command, using the appropriate parameters (e.g. site name: "openvim-site", IP address: 10.10.10.10, VIM tenant: "osm")
osm vim-create --name openvim-site --auth_url http://10.10.10.10:9080/openvim --account_type openvim --description "Openvim site" --tenant osm --user dummy --password dummy

Openstack site

  • Execute the following command, using the appropriate parameters (e.g. site name: "openstack-site", IP address: 10.10.10.11, VIM tenant: "admin", user: "admin", password: "userpwd")
osm vim-create --name openstack-site --user admin --password userpwd --auth_url http://10.10.10.11:5000/v2.0 --tenant admin --account_type openstack

VMware vCloud Director site

  • Execute the following command, using the appropriate parameters (e.g. site name: "vmware-site", IP address: 10.10.10.12, VIM tenant: "vmware-tenant", user: "osm", password: "osm4u", admin user: "admin", admin password: "adminpwd", organization: "orgVDC")
osm vim-create --name vmware-site --user osm --password osm4u --auth_url https://10.10.10.12 --tenant vmware-tenant --account_type vmware --config '{admin_password: adminpwd, admin_username: admin, orgname: orgVDC}'

VMware Integrated Openstack (VIO) site

  • Execute the following command, using the appropriate parameters (e.g. site name: "openstack-site-vio4", IP address: 10.10.10.12, VIM tenant: "admin", user: "admin", password: "passwd")
osm vim-create --name openstack-site-vio4 --user admin --password passwd --auth_url http://10.10.10.12:5000/v3 --tenant admin --account_type openstack --config '{insecure: true, vim_type: VIO, APIversion: v3.3, dataplane_physical_net: dvs-46, "use_internal_endpoint":true,"dataplane_net_vlan_range":["1-5","7-10"]}'

With respect to Openstack, the additional configuration for VIO is the following:

  • vim_type: Set to "VIO" to use VMware Integrated openstack as VIM
  • use_internal_endpoint: When true it allows use of private API endpoints
  • dataplane_physical_net: The configured network_vlan_ranges at neutron for the SRIOV (binding direct) and passthrough (binding direct-physical) networks, e.g. 'physnet_sriov' in the above configuration. In case of VMware Integrated Openstack (VIO) provide moref ID of distributed virtual switch, e.g 'dvs-46' in above configuration.
  • dataplane_net_vlan_range: In case of VMware Integrated Openstack (VIO) provide vlan ranges for the SRIOV (binding direct) networks in format ['start_ID - end_ID']

Amazon Web Services (AWS) site

  • Execute the following command, using the appropriate parameters (e.g. site name: "aws-site", VIM tenant: "admin", user: "XXX", password: "YYY")
osm vim-create --name aws-site --user XXX --password YYY --auth_url https://aws.amazon.com --tenant admin --account_type aws --config '{region_name: eu-central-1, flavor_info: {t2.nano: {cpus: 1, disk: 100, ram: 512}, t2.micro: {cpus: 1, disk: 100, ram: 1024}, t2.small: {cpus: 1, disk: 100, ram: 2048}, m1.small: {cpus: 1, disk: 160, ram: 1741}}}'

Deploying your first Network Service

In this example we will deploy the following Network Service, consisting of two simple VNFs based on CirrOS connected by a simple VLD.

NS with 2 CirrOS VNF

Before going on, download the required VNF and NS packages from this URL: https://osm-download.etsi.org/ftp/osm-3.0-three/examples/cirros_2vnf_ns/

Uploading VNF image to the VIM

Get the cirros 0.3.4 image from the following link: http://download.cirros-cloud.net/0.3.4/cirros-0.3.4-x86_64-disk.img

Then, onboard the image into the VIM. The instruction differs from one VIM to another:

  • In Openstack:
openstack image create --file="./cirros-0.3.4-x86_64-disk.img" --container-format=bare --disk-format=qcow2 cirros034
  • In openvim:
#copy your image to the NFS shared folder (e.g. /mnt/openvim-nfs)
cp ./cirros-0.3.4-x86_64-disk.img /mnt/openvim-nfs/
openvim image-create --name cirros034 --path /mnt/openvim-nfs/cirros-0.3.4-x86_64-disk.img

Onboarding a VNF

  • From the UI:
    • Go to Catalog
    • Click on the import button, then VNFD
    • Drag and drop the VNF package file cirros_vnf.tar.gz in the importing area.

Onboarding a VNF

  • From OSM client:
osm upload-package cirros_vnf.tar.gz
osm vnfd-list

Onboarding a NS

  • From the UI:
    • Go to Catalog
    • Click on the import button, then NSD
    • Drag and drop the NS package file cirros_2vnf_ns.tar.gz in the importing area.
  • From OSM client:
osm upload-package cirros_2vnf_ns.tar.gz
osm nsd-list

Instantiating the NS

  • From the UI:
    • Go to Launchpad > Instantiate
    • Select the NS descriptor to be instantiated, and click on Next
    • Add a name to the NS instance, and click on Launch.

Instantiating a NS (step 1) Instantiating a NS (step 2)

  • From OSM client
osm ns-create --nsd_name cirros --ns_name <ns-instance-name> --vim_account <data-center-name>
osm ns-list

Accessing CLI for viewing instantiated NS details

From the SO-ub container ("lxc exec SO-ub bash"), execute the following command to bring up SO CLI (username:admin password:admin)

/usr/rift/rift-shell -r -i /usr/rift -a /usr/rift/.artifacts -- rwcli 

The CLI can be used to both configure the system and show operational-data from the system. For instance:

 rift# show nsd-catalog # show the nsd catalog
 rift# show vnfd-catalog # show vnfd catalog
 rift# show ns-instance-config nsr # Lists instantiated network service
 rift# show ns-instance-opdata nsr # Lists of instantiated network service op-data

Additional information

Your feedback is most welcome!
You can send us your comments and questions to OSM_TECH@list.etsi.org
Or join the OpenSourceMANO Slack Workplace
See hereafter some best practices to report issues on OSM