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  1. Homing and Allocation Service (HAS): OOF-HAS is n policy-driven placement optimizing service (or homing service) that allows ONAP to deploy services automatically across multiple sites and multiple clouds. More details are at the main page of Homing and Allocation Service (HAS)

  2. ONAP Optimization Service Design Framework (OSDF). More details are the main page of Optimization Service Design Framework

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Getting Started with Optimization Framework
Getting Started with Optimization Framework
Getting Started with OOF

  1. If you are not familiar with OOF, please start off with the following documentation

    1. Overview of the OOF approach (model driven declarative framework)
    2. Original ONAP-OF Project Proposal (6/20/17)
    3. Homing and Allocation Service (HAS)
    4. OOF Beijing M1 Release Planning (Release in Q1 2018)
    5. Policy Specification and Retrieval for OOF
    6. ONAP Optimization Framework Project Page (this landing page)
  2. Please fill out a short survey to help the planning process of the Beijing release (and later). Using these data, we can reach out for help with specific tasks, and even figure out what times are good to schedule a phone call. 

    1. The link for the survey is here: https://api.socrative.com/rc/rqatEZIt is a very short (six questions, three of which are related to contact info and available times; and takes about one to five minutes). 

    2. Likewise, there is a link to a doodle poll on preferred times for meetings (https://doodle.com/poll/457bkisaaahe55ny). We have contributors from US (Eastern to Pacific), India, China, and even Australia. The doodle poll link contains only those daytime windows that overlap across US-EST, US-PST, India, and China time zones due to the high probability of being selected. 

  3. Get a Linux Foundation ID – you can use this to edit the wiki, use JIRA for bug reports/tasks, and use gerrit for code reviews and commits. For more information, see ONAP's main page on Joining the Community and covers the following items:
    1. Get a Linux Foundation Identity from the Linux Foundation Portal

    2. Join Relevant Mailing Lists: Recommended one is onap-discuss (by emailing to onap-discuss-join@lists.onap.org)

    3. Have the general ONAP contacts handy: https://wiki.onap.org/pages/viewpage.action?pageId=8226539
  4. Join Weekly Meetings of OOF (currently Monday 11am - 12 noon Eastern); zoom meeting at: https://zoom.us/j/704981574

  5. Become familiar with the steps required to contribute code and documentation via gerrit. 
    1. The ONAP page Developing ONAP is a great place to start, and covers the following items:
      1. Configuring Gerrit (code reviews, commits): https://wiki.onap.org/display/DW/Configuring+Gerrit
      2. Developer Best Practices: https://wiki.onap.org/display/DW/Developer+Best+Practices
  6. Dive in by looking at relevant JIRA Epics, Stories, and Issues. For OOF, the link is: https://jira.onap.org/projects/OPTFRA/issues/OPTFRA-76?filter=allissues

    1. Check the currently active tasks and backlogs. You can sign up for specific tasks or reach out to one of the committers to assign you the task. The link for the Agile Board is here: https://jira.onap.org/secure/RapidBoard.jspa?projectKey=OPTFRA&rapidView=99

    2. Link to backlogs (tasks that need to be done) is here: Link to backlogs: https://jira.onap.org/secure/RapidBoard.jspa?rapidView=99&projectKey=OPTFRA&view=planning.nodetail

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2. Optimization Service Design Framework, a  model-driven framework for creating optimization applications similar to HAS, CMSO, etc., in a declarative manner (i.e. no custom code needed for most cases) and a runtime environment for managing the life cycle of these applications

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