| # ONOS VM Build Script |
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| ### Setup |
| First, install the build.py dependencies: |
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| $ ~/mininet/util/vm/build.py --depend |
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| Also, if you will be running this script in a VM, make sure that it supports nested virtualization (for KVM). |
| In VMWare Fusion, this can be enabled in: Settings > Processors & Memory > Advanced Options > Enable hypervisor application in this virtual machine |
| |
| ### Building a base image (Mininet VM) |
| The first step is to build a base image. We will use a Mininet VM as a base image because it already has Mininet and a bunch of oother dependencies installed. We can do this using the following command: |
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| $ ~/mininet/util/vm/build.py raring64server |
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| Note: This will download the ISO, install Ubuntu, and install Mininet; it may take about 15 minutes on a Macbook Pro. |
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| The image will be placed in a timestamped folder in the current directory. (e.g. mn-raring64server-140606-19-21-35) |
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| ### Building the ONOS VM |
| The ONOS VM is built from an existing VM image (probably the base image that we just created). |
| From the onos-vm directory: |
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| $ ./onos-build-vm.py -i mn-raring64server-*/mininet-vm-x86_64.vmdk -o onos-vm-v1 |
| Note: You should replace the image file with the correct directory. |
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| This script will boot the image and run the installONOS function (which just downloads a script and runs it). |
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| This will create onos-vm-v1.ovf and onos-vm-v1.vmdk |
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| To change what is installed on the VM, you should edit vm-setup.sh |