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Syntax

subject key describes the category of network element, e.g. links, devices, hosts, etc. Each network element is associated with a unique identifier (a subject) and one or more attributes, associated with some value, grouped into configs. The configs themselves are classified by config keys.

The JSON file used with the service then takes on the following format:

Code Block
languagetext
{
    subject key : {                   # element category, e.g. "devices", "links", etc.
        subject : {                   # unique string, e.g. a device ID
            config key 1 : {          # config class of config, e.g. "basic"
                attr1 : value1,       # attribute : value pairs associated with a config
                attr2 : value2,
                ...
            },
            ...
        },
          ...
    },
    ...
}

Sample configuration files may be found in ${ONOS_ROOT}/tools/test/configs/ .

 

Network Configurations for Southbound Providers. 

Different southbound provider: providers, namely NETCONF, SNMP, REST ,and TL1 , use net-cfg as the mechanism to inject ip, port, username, password of a device. 

You can find information about each of these protocols and json examples in their respecitive wiki pages. 

Sample configuration for these protocols are also stored in ${ONOS_ROOT}/tools/test/configs/ .

 

Loading Network Configurations

 

REST API

The NetworkConfigWebResource implements the REST calls for the network configuration subsystem. Its functionalities will eventually replace that of ConfigWebResource.

The following example uses the REST API to upload a configuration file:

 

Code Block
languagetext
curl --user onos:rocks -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" http://192.168.56.111:8181/onos/v1/network/configuration/ -d @/tmp/cfg.json

 

The above assumes a running instance at 192.168.56.111, and a configuration file at /tmp/cfg.json. These should be replaced with appropriate values.

Likewise, the user:password combination might differ with your setup; Other common values are karaf:karaf and onos:onos.

onos-netcfg shell script

There is a shell script that wraps the REST API to provide a more convenient mechanism to upload configuration from the command line (i.e. from outside ONOS).

For example, the same configuration above can be uploaded using:

Code Block
onos-netcfg 192.168.56.111 /tmp/cfg.json

The script also accepts a third argument that allows you to upload smaller chunks of config identified by subject_key/subject/config_key:

Code Block
onos-netcfg $OC1 /tmp/basic.json /devices/of:0000000000000001/basic

Here the /tmp/basic.json script would just contain the payload of the basic config key, for example:

Code Block
{
   "driver" : "softrouter"
}

 

 

Network Configuration Loader

The NetworkConfigLoader reads JSON files from a known location and attempts to load them as network configurations at system startup.

Currently, a file named network-cfg.json is picked up from ${ONOS_ROOT}/tools/package/config/ and placed in ${KARAF_ROOT}../config/ at deployment. The filename and paths are currently fixed. When the remote instance boots, its network configuration loader runtime will read this file.

The Network Configuration Loader is implemented as a listener for Network Configuration events (NetworkConfigEvents). It attempts to use the known Configs in order to generate or update entities in the network model once it is notified that the Configs are available.