Welcome to the Next-Gen SDN tutorial!
This tutorial is targeted at developers who want to learn about the building blocks of the NG-SDN architecture, such as:
- Data plane programming and control via P4 and P4Runtime
- Configuration via YANG, OpenConfig, and gNMI
- Stratum
- ONOS
The tutorial is organized around a sequence of hands-on exercises that show how to build an IPv6-based leaf-spine data center fabric using P4, Stratum, and ONOS.
Tutorial slides are available online: http://bit.ly/ngsdn-tutorial-slides
These slides provide an introduction to each exercise. We suggest you look at it before starting to work on the exercises.
To facilitate access to the tools required to complete this tutorial, we provide two options for you to choose from:
- Download a pre-packaged VM with all included; OR
- Manually install Docker and other dependencies.
Use the following link to download the VM (4 GB):
The VM is in .ova format and has been created using VirtualBox v5.2.32. To run the VM you can use any modern virtualization system, although we recommend using VirtualBox. For instructions on how to get VirtualBox and import the VM, use the following links:
- https://www.virtualbox.org/wiki/Downloads
- https://docs.oracle.com/cd/E26217_01/E26796/html/qs-import-vm.html
Alternatively, you can use the scripts in util/vm to build a VM on your machine using Vagrant.
Recommended VM configuration: The current configuration of the VM is 4 GB of RAM and 4 core CPU. These are the recommended minimum system requirements to complete the exercises. When imported, the VM takes approx. 8 GB of HDD space. For a smooth experience, we recommend running the VM on a host system that has at least the double of resources.
VM user credentials:
Use credentials sdn
/rocks
to log in the Ubuntu system.
All exercises can be executed by installing the following dependencies:
- Docker v1.13.0+ (with docker-compose)
- make
- Python 3
- Bash-like Unix shell
Note for Windows users: all scripts have been tested on macOS and Ubuntu. Although we think they should work on Windows, we have not tested it. For this reason, we advise Windows users to prefer Option 1 (downloading a VM).
To work on the exercises you will need to clone this repo:
cd ~
git clone https://github.com/opennetworkinglab/ngsdn-tutorial
If the ngsdn-tutorial
directory is already present, make sure to update its
content:
cd ~/ngsdn-tutorial
git pull origin master
The VM may have shipped with an older version of the dependencies than we would like to use for the exercises. You can upgrade to the latest version using the following command:
cd ~/ngsdn-tutorial
make pull-deps
This command will download all necessary Docker images (~1.5 GB) allowing you to work off-line. For this reason, we recommend running this step ahead of the tutorial, with a reliable Internet connection.
During the exercises you will need to write code in multiple languages such as P4, Java, and Python. While the exercises do not prescribe the use of any specific IDE or code editor, the tutorial VM comes with Java IDE IntelliJ IDEA Community Edition, already pre-loaded with plugins for P4 syntax highlighting and Python development. We suggest using IntelliJ IDEA especially when working on the ONOS app, as it provides code completion for all ONOS APIs.
This repo is structured as follows:
p4src/
P4 implementationyang/
Yang model used in exercise 2app/
custom ONOS app Java implementationmininet/
Mininet script to emulate a 2x2 leaf-spine fabric topology ofstratum_bmv2
devicesutil/
Utility scriptsptf/
P4 data plane unit tests based on Packet Test Framework (PTF)
To facilitate working on the exercises, we provide a set of make-based commands to control the different aspects of the tutorial. Commands will be introduced in the exercises, here's a quick reference:
Make command | Description |
---|---|
make pull-deps |
Pull all required dependencies |
make p4-build |
Build P4 program |
make p4-test |
Run PTF tests |
make start |
Start Mininet and ONOS containers |
make stop |
Stop all containers |
make reset |
Stop containers and remove any state associated |
make onos-cli |
Access the ONOS CLI (password: rocks , Ctrl-D to exit) |
make onos-log |
Show the ONOS log |
make mn-cli |
Access the Mininet CLI (Ctrl-D to exit) |
make mn-log |
Show the Mininet log (i.e., the CLI output) |
make app-build |
Build custom ONOS app |
make app-reload |
Install and activate the ONOS app |
make netcfg |
Push netcfg.json file (network config) to ONOS |
Click on the exercise name to see the instructions:
- P4 and P4Runtime basics
- Yang, OpenConfig, and gNMI basics
- Using ONOS as the control plane
- Modify code to enable IPv6 routing
You can find solutions for each exercise in the solution directory. Feel free to compare your solution to the reference one whenever you feel stuck.