commit | c3bd3462d0641077f22266f72177da3389d7b0d4 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Carmelo Cascone <carmelo@opennetworking.org> | Fri Jul 17 15:27:02 2020 -0700 |
committer | Carmelo Cascone <carmelo@opennetworking.org> | Thu Jul 30 20:04:06 2020 +0000 |
tree | cb48daf0e990298bced6ff7099e47133617f7697 | |
parent | 0d1c76e06c7a31d49669d3920ae2743ffb22d685 [diff] |
AETHER-233 Move IntProgrammable behavior to core APIs Before, the behavior interface and other concrete classes used it by were part of the inbandtelemetry app. To make this behavior available to third-party apps (such as the fabric-tna pipeconf), we move it to the core APIs. In this process, we do some clean-up of the behavior API. For example, we remove references to network-level semantics (as behaviors should only abstract device-level ones). That helps in reducing the number of classes required to maintain in the core. Change-Id: I3ba24ea93cdfea115cee454d5e921e15ec17eee9
ONOS is the only SDN controller platform that supports the transition from legacy “brown field” networks to SDN “green field” networks. This enables exciting new capabilities, and disruptive deployment and operational cost points for network operators.
The following packages are required:
ONOS is built with Bazel, an open-source build tool developed by Google. We suggest downloading and installing Bazel using the official instructions.
The minimum required Bazel version is 1.0.0
$ git clone https://gerrit.onosproject.org/onos
$ cd onos $ cat << EOF >> ~/.bash_profile export ONOS_ROOT="`pwd`" source $ONOS_ROOT/tools/dev/bash_profile EOF $ . ~/.bash_profile
$ cd $ONOS_ROOT
$ bazel build onos
To run ONOS locally on the development machine, simply run the following command:
$ bazel run onos-local [-- [clean] [debug]]
Or simpler one, if you have added the ONOS developer environment to your bash profile:
$ ok [clean] [debug]
The above command will create a local installation from the ONOS tarbal (re-building if necessary) and will start the ONOS server in the background. In the foreground, it will display a continuous view of the ONOS (Apache Karaf) log file. Options following the double-dash (–) are passed through to the ONOS Apache Karaf and can be omitted. Here, the clean
option forces a clean installation, removing any state from previous executions. The debug
option means that the default debug port 5005 will be available for attaching a remote debugger.
To access ONOS UI, use a browser to open:
Or simpler, use the onos-gui localhost
command.
The default username and password is onos
/rocks
.
To attach to the ONOS CLI console, run:
$ onos localhost
To run ONOS unit tests, including code Checkstyle validation, run the following command:
$ bazel query 'tests(//...)' | xargs bazel test
Or better yet, to run code Checkstyle and all unit tests use the following convenience alias:
$ ot
ONOS code is hosted and maintained using Gerrit.
Code on GitHub is only a mirror. The ONOS project does NOT accept code through pull requests on GitHub.
To contribute to ONOS, please refer to Sample Gerrit Workflow. It should includes most of the things you'll need to get your contribution started!
For more information, please check out our wiki page or mailing lists:
ONOS (Open Network Operating System) is published under Apache License 2.0