core-extra/docs/install.md

6.1 KiB

Installation

  • Table of Contents {:toc}

Overview

CORE provides a script to help automate installing all required software to build and run, including a python virtual environment to run it all in.

The following tools will be leveraged during installation:

Tool Description
pip used to install pipx
pipx used to install standalone python tools (invoke, poetry)
invoke used to run provided tasks (install, daemon, gui, tests, etc)
poetry used to install the managed python virtual environment for running CORE

Required Hardware

Any computer capable of running Linux should be able to run CORE. Since the physical machine will be hosting numerous containers, as a general rule you should select a machine having as much RAM and CPU resources as possible.

Supported Linux Distributions

Plan is to support recent Ubuntu and CentOS LTS releases.

Verified:

  • Ubuntu - 18.04, 20.04
  • CentOS - 7.8, 8.0*

NOTE: Ubuntu 20.04 requires installing legacy ebtables for WLAN functionality

NOTE: CentOS 8 does not provide legacy ebtables support, WLAN will not function properly

NOTE: CentOS 8 does not have the netem kernel mod available by default

CentOS 8 Enabled netem:

sudo yum update
# restart into updated kernel
sudo yum install -y kernel-modules-extra
sudo modprobe sch_netem

Utility Requirements

  • iproute2 4.5+ is a requirement for bridge related commands
  • ebtables not backed by nftables

Upgrading

Please make sure to uninstall the previous installation of CORE cleanly before proceeding to install.

Previous install was built from source:

cd $REPO
sudo make uninstall
make clean
./bootstrap.sh clean

Installed from previously built packages:

# centos
sudo yum remove core
# ubuntu
sudo apt remove core

Automated Installation

The automated install will install the various tools needed to help automate the CORE installation (python3, pip, pipx, invoke, poetry). The script will also automatically clone, build, and install the latest version of OSPF MDR. Finally it will install CORE scripts and a systemd service, which have been modified to use the installed poetry created virtual environment.

After installation has completed you should be able to run the various CORE scripts for running core.

NOTE: provide a prefix that will be found on path when running as sudo if the default prefix is not valid

# clone CORE repo
git clone https://github.com/coreemu/core.git
cd core

# run install script
# script usage: install.sh [-d] [-v]
#
# -v enable verbose install
# -d enable developer install
# -p install prefix, defaults to /usr/local
./install.sh

Unsupported Linux Distribution

If you are on an unsupported distribution, you can look into the install.sh and tasks.py files to see the various commands ran to install CORE and translate them to your use case, assuming it is possible.

If you get install down entirely, feel free to contribute and help others.

Installed Scripts

After the installation complete it will have installed the following scripts.

Name Description
core-daemon runs the backed core server providing TLV and gRPC APIs
core-gui runs the legacy tcl/tk based GUI
core-pygui runs the new python/tk based GUI
core-cleanup tool to help removed lingering core created containers, bridges, directories
core-imn-to-xml tool to help automate converting a .imn file to .xml format
core-route-monitor tool to help monitor traffic across nodes and feed that to SDT
core-service-update tool to update automate modifying a legacy service to match current naming
coresendmsg tool to send TLV API commands from command line
core-cli tool to query, open xml files, and send commands using gRPC
core-manage tool to add, remove, or check for services, models, and node types

Running User Scripts

If you create your own python scripts to run CORE directly or using the gRPC/TLV APIs you will need to make sure you are running them within context of the installed virtual environment.

NOTE: the following assumes CORE has been installed successfully

One way to do this would be to enable the core virtual environment shell.

cd $REPO/daemon
poetry shell
python run /path/to/script.py

Another way would be to run the script directly by way of poetry.

cd $REPO/daemon
poetry run python /path/to/script.py

Manually Install EMANE

EMANE can be installed from deb or RPM packages or from source. See the EMANE GitHub for full details.

Here are quick instructions for installing all EMANE packages for Ubuntu 18.04:

# install dependencies
# ubuntu
sudo apt-get install libssl-dev libxml-libxml-perl libxml-simple-perl
wget https://adjacentlink.com/downloads/emane/emane-1.2.5-release-1.ubuntu-18_04.amd64.tar.gz
tar xzf emane-1.2.5-release-1.ubuntu-18_04.amd64.tar.gz

# install emane python bindings into the core virtual environment
cd $REPO/daemon
poetry run pip install $EMANE_REPO/src/python

Using Invoke Tasks

The invoke tool installed by way of pipx provides conveniences for running CORE tasks to help ensure usage of the create python virtual environment.

Available tasks:

  cleanup           run core-cleanup removing leftover core nodes, bridges, directories
  cli               run core-cli used to query and modify a running session
  daemon            start core-daemon
  gui               start core-pygui
  install           install core, scripts, service, and ospf mdr
  install-scripts   install core script files, modified to leverage virtual environment
  install-service   install systemd core service
  test              run core tests
  test-emane        run core emane tests
  test-mock         run core tests using mock to avoid running as sudo
  uninstall         uninstall core

Example running the core-daemon task from the root of the repo:

inv daemon