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  • MO

    • ARCHITECTURE SUB-COMMITTEE - The following are M0 activities with the Architecture Sub-committee. Release content defined.
      • #1 FUNCTIONAL ARCHITECTURE (Proposals) - The functional reference architecture is the high-level architecture overview diagram for all of ONAP. Enhancements to the functional architecture may be driven by new project proposals, updates to the diagram, and architectural changes that may be planned for the release. At M0 impacts to the functional architecture are proposed.
      • #2 COMPONENT ARCHITECTURE (Proposals) - The component architecture impacts originate from the ONAP platform components. Examples of platform components are Policy, CLAMP, SO, A&AI, CCSDK, SDN-C. Each release there may be architecture impacts from the platform components. At M0, component architecture impact proposals are submitted. Architecture reviews are setup & scheduled for component architecture impacts/proposals. Component architecture diagrams would be updated.
      • #3 REQUIREMENTS ARCHITECTURE (Proposals) - These are architecture impacts coming from the requirements and use case work in a release that may impact the functional architecture, platform architecture, or may need architectural guidance. At M0, the requirements and use cases are being proposed for the release. And an early assessment of which ones that might impact the architecture should be considered, and they made translate into requirements architecture proposals. Architecture reviews are setup & scheduled for requirements architecture impacts/proposals. The requirements Sub-Committee can evaluate and identify cross-interactions between proposals. The requirements S/C can make prioritization recommendations to the TSC. The TSC (with EUAG input) can then make a decision to adopt or alter the prioritization recommendations.
      • #4 ARCHITECTURE ENHANCEMENTS (Proposals) - Architecture enhancements are secondary architectural enhancements that are worked during a release. These may include documentation enhancements, landing page enhancements, architecture component description work, flow descriptions and process work. At M0, initial proposals are submitted to the architecture sub-committee.
    • WIKI LINKS References for the Use Case Teams at M0

      WIKI LINKS REFERENCE AT M0
      M0DescriptionWiki Link
      1Functional Reference ArchitectureArchitecture
      2Architecture Portal Page
      https://safratech.net/onapdocs/
      3Release Architecture Page

      All of the architecture reviews that were conducted:


      4Requirements Proposals

      Requirements subcommittee

      Guilin release - functional requirements proposed list

      ModModeling Release Planning PageONAP R7 Modeling High Level Requirements
      U/CArchitecture Review ProcessProject Architectural Review Requirements and Process (Draft)
      U/CArchitecture Review TemplateR7 Guilin Architecture Review (template) - functional requirements


    • Modeling team - At MO the Modeling S/C does MODEL PLANNING. The planning develops into “High Level Info-model Requirements”. These High level info-model requirements fall into 3 categories:
      • #1: NEW USE CASES - items from the expected Use Cases in the release (Scope of modeling, continuing, introducing, standards updates). The Use Case Teams should engage the modeling team to propose new requirements into their release planning page.
      • #2: REFINING EXISTING MODEL - Refining Existing info-model that has not made it to the information model. Previously designs that need to be added into information model.
      • #3: FORWARD LOOKING WORK (FLW) - Modeling future forward looking requirements.
    • USE CASE TEAMS At M0, the Use Case teams are working on the following things:
      • #1: BUSINESS DRIVER TEMPLATE - The Use Case Teams are specifying their business drivers via the template: Business Driver Template for Use Cases
      • #2: REQUIREMENTS SUB-COMMITTEE - Develop their proposals for the release to the Requirements Sub-committee: Requirements subcommittee .
      • #3: REQUIREMENTS RELEASE TRACKING - Requirements put release requirements page. Example wiki: Guilin release - functional requirements proposed list
      • #4: USE CASE DEFINITIONS - Use Case team fill out the Template detailing their Use Case: Use Case Tracking Template
      • #5: INTENTION TO PARTICIPATE - Teams can indicate their corporate intention to participate
      • #6: RELEASE TRACKING - Each release has a release tracking page. The page can be found here: Release Planning
      • #7: PROJECT SUBMISSION, PROPOSAL, PLANNING - The TSC coordinates the project submission, proposal and planning. The TSC reviews and gives disposition on submitted proposals. These are tracked at the Release Planning page.
      • #8: ARCHITECTURE REVIEW - The use cases & requirements undergo Architecture Review


        REVIEW STEPDESCRIPTION
        MODELING INPUT

        The Use case teams should engage the modeling sub-committee and schedule their use case into the model planning page before architecture review. They should identify information is consumed, produced, and utilized by their use case. This should also be scheduled in the Model Planning page: ONAP R7 Modeling High Level Requirements

        CROSS DEPENDENCIES

        Use Case teams should identify cross-dependencies upon other requirement/use cases and/or ONAP components cross-dependencies impacts. For example BBS dependent on PNF registration, it is nice to know about that dependency so that the two teams know to work together. This should be identified before the architecture review if possible.

        CONTROL LOOPSIdentify potential Policies and Control Loops that might be altered or new with your requirements/use case.
        API IMPACTS

        Use Case teams should identify API impacts. The team should highlight the differences between what exists today (the old API) and the new API that they expect to update it to. This should be put in the presentation made to the architecture review.

        INTERFACE IMPACTS

        Interface (northbound and southbound) impacts should be identified

        REQ JIRAS

        The release tracking Jiras should be created. See the ONAP Use Case / Requirements Teams Process Way of Working (WoW)

        ARCH JIRA

        The Architecture Tracking Jira is created. The Architecture Chair will create the ONAPARC Jira tickets before the review. The reviews are scheduled week by week. Navigate to the Architecture Meeting Notes (weekly) ONAP Archecture Meeting Notes (CopyNew)

        ARCH REVIEWWhen the template and checklist has been completed, create a presentation to walk through at the Architecture sub-committee and schedule a review.
        REQ to ONAPARC JIRA LINKING
        1. LINK - Before a requirement may be reviewed by the arch subcommittee, the requirement must be documented in JIRA (REQ), and the REQ reference must be submitted when requesting an arch review.
        2. STEPS - After the arch review subcommittee has completed its review and made a determination, please add an issue link to the REQ issue for your review.
          1. Navigate to your requirement issue in JIRA (REQ)
          2. Select edit
          3. Scroll down until you find the "Linked Issues" field (see attachment)
          4. Make sure that the link type is "Is blocked by" (see attachment)
          5. Add the JIRA reference for your arch review (ONAPARC) to the "issue" field. (see attachment)
          6. Click the "Update" button.
          7. image2020-6-11_11-45-39.png


    • PLATFORM / PTL- High level release scope from PTLs (understand from PTL which ONAP components are expected to have updates). If a component is resolving technical debt or software development that is entirely self-contained.
    • PTL - The Use Case teams should attend the PTL planning meetings if there are expected to be requirements impacts for your use case. It is also where the Release Planning page is developed by the PTL team.

...

  • M1

    • ARCHITECTURE SUBCOMMITTEE leading up to M1 -
      • #1 FUNCTIONAL ARCHITECTURE (Requirements) - The functional reference architecture is the high-level architecture overview diagram for all of ONAP. Enhancements to the functional architecture may be driven by new project proposals, updates to the diagram, and architectural changes that may be planned for the release. At M0 impacts to the functional architecture are proposed.
      • #2 COMPONENT ARCHITECTURE (Requirements) - The component architecture impacts originate from the ONAP platform components. Examples of platform components are SO, A&AI, CCSDK, SDN-C. Each release there may be architecture impacts from the platform components. At M0, component architecture impact proposals are submitted.
      • #3 REQUIREMENTS ARCHITECTURE (Requirements) - These are architecture impacts coming from the requirements and use case work in a release that may impact the functional architecture, platform architecture, or may need architectural guidance. At M0, the requirements and use cases are being proposed for the release. And an early assessment of which ones that might impact the architecture should be considered, and they made translate into requirements architecture proposals.
      • #4 ARCHITECTURE ENHANCEMENTS (Requirements) - Architecture enhancements are secondary architectural enhancements that are worked during a release. These may include documentation enhancements, landing page enhancements, architecture component description work, flow descriptions and process work. At M0, initial proposals are submitted to the architecture sub-committee.
    • WIKI LINKS References for Architecture at M1
    • USE CASE TEAMS - The Use Case Teams prepare their proposals. The Use case teams are defining their requirements and detailed proposals.
      • #1 RELEASE PLANNING TEMPLATE - Use Case teams use the release planning template to help you think about your scope, minimum viable product, architecture, risks, and epics. The release planning template can be found here: Release Planning Template
      • #2 MILESTONE CHECKLIST - The milestone checklist template are used by the Use Case teams. This checklist can be found at this wiki link: Deliverables for Planning Milestone Checklist Template
      • #3 PROJECT DELIVERABLES - are defined including functional architecture, scope, dependencies.
      • #4 MODELING TEAM WORK - The model subcommittee team becomes aware of the use cases for the current release.
      • #5 EARLY DATA MODEL CONCEPTS - Because the information model feeds the data models, the Use Case teams should take into account the new updates in the information model as a basis for their data model.
    • Project & Release planning tables
    • Modeling team The info-model plan is established by the modeling team which summarizes the modeling requirements for a release. The model planning follows a template that is worked by the team. Info-model updates begin. An example template for R6 (Frankfurt) can be seen at this Wiki: ONAP R6 Modeling High Level Requirements.
      • #1: SYNC - The Use Case teams need to engage the Modeling Sub-committee to make the team aware of model impacting use cases. The modeling team should also become aware of at a high-level what impacts a use case might have. The use cases also need to get into the ONAP Modeling High-level requirements planning page.
    • Components (PTL)- Each of the ONAP platform components (e.g. A&AI, SO, Controllers, SDC etc) may be impacted by new use cases. Having the use case leads engage PTLs.
      • #1: COMMITMENT & TRACKING - The data model developed by the use case teams eventually serve as the basis for API changes. Platform components need to update APIs based on new requirements, use cases and features. Requests to components need to be tracked & commitment by the PTLs and components. Ideally the PTLs and component leads should be engaged by the Use Case teams. SDC & A&AI often have more high-running modeling impacts than some of the other components. The modeling team members could attend some of the component calls to raise awareness. Identifying and tracking a modeling impacting item so they aren't lost. An issue impact matrix and tracking page could be developed to track issues (and maybe a Jira ticket).
      • #2 RELEASE TRACKING PAGE - The release tracking page also tracks the platform components.
      • #3 COMPONENT REVIEWS - The component reviews are trying to baseline the understand of the component in the release. Each of the project or project teams should give a presentation at the architecture sub-committee. The focus of the component reviews is to ensure that the documentations provided in these wiki pages are consistent with what the state of each ONAP component for a specific release.

        Use this checklist to prepare for your Platform Component review:

        Checklist ItemDescription

        Check Update Attachments Info

        The "Attachment" folder associated with each Component (... in upper right corner) has also been cleaned up and all draft copies of the diagrams have been deleted.

        All the associated files for the page are stored in the attachment folder. Click on the "..." in the upper right of the page

        Image Removed

        The on the page change the component name. Hit the "EDIT" and change the component name to the "Component name - R#", where R# is the release number.

        Cross check the name with the tag.

        Image Removed

        Use Draw.io

        draw.io is the tool currently used to draw all the diagrams

        When you edit the diagram it will open the Draw.io interface which looks like this:

        Image Removed

        Check Attachments Folder and Drawio Diagrams

        Each component diagram file has the following properties:

      • componentName_r7 (i.e. sdnc_r7 for the SDN Controller)
      • The .png file associated with your component gets generated by draw.io
      • There may be other files/images left in the Attachment folder. feel free to modify/delete any file(s) to reflect the changes  associated with the release. Remove unneeded png files (you can click on the png file and see if it is still relevant for the release, if it is not delete it otherwise we will be carrying this diagram as unnecessary overhead). If the "DELETE" option does not show up contact, the Architecture PTL/Chair to get assistance as they may own the older files.
      • The draw.io diagrams (i.e. lollipop diagram) is based on the C4 Model for visualizing Software Architecture?? - Please maintain the same format as you make any changes to your respective component
      • Each diagram has a release stamp (bottom right corner) that should not be modified
      • Each API (consumed or offered) is depicted by a lollipop and a label. You may add, modify or delete any API as needed but please maintain the same look and feel and the diagram file naming convention.
      • COLOR CODE CONVENTION:

        COLORMEANING
        Status
        colourRed
        titleRED
        Status
        colourBlue
        titleBLUE

        Image Removed

        API Documentation

        The page should document the consumed or offered API, and to provide as much detail and clarity on the what and the how of each API. With that in mind i'd like to propose the following as a starting point for preparing for these reviews:

        PTLs /Representatives will be responsible for making all the changes to their respective component diagrams

        PTLs would certify and approve all the changes to their respective component diagram

        Each API listed on the component diagram (lollipop and Label) should:

        be fully documented in the corresponding table, included in component wiki page above,

        1. each API label should have a link to their respective swagger.xxx, REST, YANG, wiki page, etc...

APIs producing consuming at architecture review

Modeling S/C to understand - Identify APIs information that retreiving updating across those APIs.

Esp. anything NEW. Info-Model → impacts exposing new stuff on an API indicating new information being shared should have RELATED Modeling

Here's new INFO on expensing

Devloping updates on an API. related info-modeling activity.

  • M2

    • ARCHITECTURE SUBCOMMITTEE leading up to M2 -
      • #1 FUNCTIONAL ARCHITECTURE (Architecture Reviews) - The functional reference architecture is the high-level architecture overview diagram for all of ONAP. Enhancements to the functional architecture may be driven by new project proposals, updates to the diagram, and architectural changes that may be planned for the release. At M0 impacts to the functional architecture are proposed.
      • #2 COMPONENT ARCHITECTURE (Architecture Reviews) - The component architecture impacts originate from the ONAP platform components. Examples of platform components are SO, A&AI, CCSDK, SDN-C. Each release there may be architecture impacts from the platform components. At M0, component architecture impact proposals are submitted.
      • #3 REQUIREMENTS ARCHITECTURE (Architecture Reviews) - These are architecture impacts coming from the requirements and use case work in a release that may impact the functional architecture, platform architecture, or may need architectural guidance. At M0, the requirements and use cases are being proposed for the release. And an early assessment of which ones that might impact the architecture should be considered, and they made translate into requirements architecture proposals.
      • #4 ARCHITECTURE ENHANCEMENTS (Architecture Reviews) - Architecture enhancements are secondary architectural enhancements that are worked during a release. These may include documentation enhancements, landing page enhancements, architecture component description work, flow descriptions and process work. At M0, initial proposals are submitted to the architecture sub-committee.
    • Use Case Team Engagement -
      • FUNCTIONAL TEST CASES - Each Project team has defined and documented their Functional Test Cases.
      • API DOCUMENTATION - The Use Case Teams have identified the API that they will be introducing in the current release and at least started to document that API changes that are associated with their use case. The APIs need to be documented and available in the Use Case Wiki.
      • VNF REQUIREMENTS - Base set of impacts to VNF Requirements identified by use case/ project.
      • INFORMATION & DATA MODEL DEVELOPMENT - Discussion Info Model & Data model development by Use Case team with input from the Modeling sub-committee. Active discussion and interaction between Use Case Team and the Modeling S/C to make sure that the information model and the data model development are in lock-step. The modeling sub-committee will communicate the clean release information model as a refining input to the development of the data model for use by the Use Case Teams on specific projects.
      • INFORMATION & DATA MODEL REVIEW - Reviews of Data Model with Project (Use Case) Teams. The Data Model is being reviewed by the Use Case Teams with inputs from the Modeling S/C by bringing the developing data model (in the discussion state) to the modeling S/C. It would not be feasible to for the members of the modeling S/C to attend all of the various U/C meetings; although one-off sync-ups might occur in this stage. For those U/C that have significant data modeling work, it would be advised that that U/C team reserves a slot in the modeling S/C meeting(s) to present their data modeling changes and information flows so that the modeling S/C team can advise the U/C team as they develop their data model.
      • MAPPING BETWEEN INFORMATION & DATA MODEL - Mapping of information model and the data model is also done between the modeling S/C and the Use case teams. This might happen in the project teams, or on the modeling S/C calls.
      • CROSS REFERENCING JIRA TICKETS - The modeling S/C uses Jira tickets to track activities; and the Use Case teams also use Jiras to track platform work, modeling work, epics & stories. So it would be smart to link or associate relevant Jira tickets together.
      • JOINT REVIEWS - The Data model should be reviewed with the Modeling S/C. Data model being developed by the component team is using the component model as input.
      • FUNCTIONALITY IDENTIFIED - The release intended functionality has been identified, agreed to and frozen. No new visible functionality is to be added to the current ONAP release at the point of M2.
    • MODELING SUBCOMMITTEE -
    • For the RELEASE Information Model these are the activities that the Modeling sub-committee is engaged in leading up to M2.
      • RELEASE INFORMATION MODEL (Starting Point) - The release starts with a clean release information model from the PREVIOUS release (with all of its attendant contributions). Then new contributions of the current release are considered (see below the process for handling each specific contribution). Potentially a snapshot of the papyrus model and posted into the current release. The RST documentation that only contains things in the current release or everything that is approved.
      • INFORMATION MODEL FREEZE - The aggregate / release information model for the release is approved by association with the fragment/ component reviews.  Each of the fragment (contributions) are individually approved, thus there is not a "re-approval" or approval of the entire aggregate (release) information model. Editorial clean-up such as misalignments, typos, or sections that were not put in proposal, fixing the template for GenDoc.
      • RELEASE INFO MODEL DECLARED CLEAN - After component reviews have concluded and release info model freeze by the modeling S/C the info model is called the "clean model" in this phase. At this point, the Use Case teams that are developing the Data Model can be pretty certain that the information model will be usable as shown. The diagrams and model wiki pages will indicate that this is a clean model. Put into the information model for that release. Unfinished contributions are postponed or discussed further.
    • DISCUSSION OF CONTRIBUTIONS - Each contribution discussed according to following process. This is where refining of each of the contribution models occurs by the Modeling Sub-committee (S/C). The release information model is not separately tracked, composed, updated, or released in this period of time. But, rather, each individual contribution has its own Wiki. Thus, for each contribution:
      • CONSIDER CONTRIBUTION - START: Input Contribution (verb Consider) END: Contribution in Discussion State
        • An individual model contribution is a model that will eventually be a part of the total release information model. It is generally a self-contained model which depicts a particular capability or function of the system. This contribution starts as a "input contribution" and undergoes consideration by the modeling sub-committee. Consideration means that the modeling S/C is entertains & assesses if the input contribution should be accepted into the current (or a future release) by weighing the contribution against its relevance and the available resources (modelers) in the release. If the team thinks that the contribution is not ready for the current release that contribution will be put into a lower-priority and worked if there are no other contributions to be considered as they would take higher priority. Thus, the contribution would not necessarily be rejected, but would get attention as time allows.
      • REVIEW & REFINE CONTRIBUTION - START: Contribution in Discussion State (verb Reviewing & Refine) END: Contribution in Discussion state
        • The contribution undergoes reviewing & refining during the discussion state. Reviewing & refining means that the modeling S/C is discussing the modeling, and updating the contribution based on feedback and comments from the modeling team. Each contribution can be reviewed and refined independently and concurrently with other contributions. Things in the discussion state are classes, attributes and relationships are tagged as IISOMI experimental.
      • FINAL CALL FOR COMMENTS & INITIATE POLLING - START: Contribution in Discussion State (verb Approving/Poll) END: Contribution in Discussion state. The modeling team issues a call for comments and poll for each contribution.
      • APPROVING CONTRIBUTION - START: Contribution in Discussion State Post-Poll (verb Approving) Contribution in Clean State
        • After the poll has concluded, the contribution has finished the approval process. The contribution is now considered to be in the clean state. The items that are in the IISOMI experimental state get promoted to a preliminary state. A gendoc is generated and put on the wiki page. The gendoc would be translated and published on the readthedocs site.  


  • M2

    • ARCHITECTURE SUBCOMMITTEE leading up to M2 -
      • #1 FUNCTIONAL ARCHITECTURE (Architecture Reviews) - The functional reference architecture is the high-level architecture overview diagram for all of ONAP. Enhancements to the functional architecture may be driven by new project proposals, updates to the diagram, and architectural changes that may be planned for the release. At M0 impacts to the functional architecture are proposed.
      • #2 COMPONENT ARCHITECTURE (Architecture Reviews) - The component architecture impacts originate from the ONAP platform components. Examples of platform components are SO, A&AI, CCSDK, SDN-C. Each release there may be architecture impacts from the platform components. At M0, component architecture impact proposals are submitted.
      • #3 REQUIREMENTS ARCHITECTURE (Architecture Reviews) - These are architecture impacts coming from the requirements and use case work in a release that may impact the functional architecture, platform architecture, or may need architectural guidance. At M0, the requirements and use cases are being proposed for the release. And an early assessment of which ones that might impact the architecture should be considered, and they made translate into requirements architecture proposals.
      • #4 ARCHITECTURE ENHANCEMENTS (Architecture Reviews) - Architecture enhancements are secondary architectural enhancements that are worked during a release. These may include documentation enhancements, landing page enhancements, architecture component description work, flow descriptions and process work. At M0, initial proposals are submitted to the architecture sub-committee.
    • Use Case Team Engagement -
      • FUNCTIONAL TEST CASES - Each Project team has defined and documented their Functional Test Cases.
      • API DOCUMENTATION - The Use Case Teams have identified the API that they will be introducing in the current release and at least started to document that API changes that are associated with their use case. The APIs need to be documented and available in the Use Case Wiki.
      • VNF REQUIREMENTS - Base set of impacts to VNF Requirements identified by use case/ project.
      • INFORMATION & DATA MODEL DEVELOPMENT - Discussion Info Model & Data model development by Use Case team with input from the Modeling sub-committee. Active discussion and interaction between Use Case Team and the Modeling S/C to make sure that the information model and the data model development are in lock-step. The modeling sub-committee will communicate the clean release information model as a refining input to the development of the data model for use by the Use Case Teams on specific projects.
      • INFORMATION & DATA MODEL REVIEW - Reviews of Data Model with Project (Use Case) Teams. The Data Model is being reviewed by the Use Case Teams with inputs from the Modeling S/C by bringing the developing data model (in the discussion state) to the modeling S/C. It would not be feasible to for the members of the modeling S/C to attend all of the various U/C meetings; although one-off sync-ups might occur in this stage. For those U/C that have significant data modeling work, it would be advised that that U/C team reserves a slot in the modeling S/C meeting(s) to present their data modeling changes and information flows so that the modeling S/C team can advise the U/C team as they develop their data model.
      • MAPPING BETWEEN INFORMATION & DATA MODEL - Mapping of information model and the data model is also done between the modeling S/C and the Use case teams. This might happen in the project teams, or on the modeling S/C calls.
      • CROSS REFERENCING JIRA TICKETS - The modeling S/C uses Jira tickets to track activities; and the Use Case teams also use Jiras to track platform work, modeling work, epics & stories. So it would be smart to link or associate relevant Jira tickets together.
      • JOINT REVIEWS - The Data model should be reviewed with the Modeling S/C. Data model being developed by the component team is using the component model as input.
      • FUNCTIONALITY IDENTIFIED - The release intended functionality has been identified, agreed to and frozen. No new visible functionality is to be added to the current ONAP release at the point of M2.
    • MODELING SUBCOMMITTEE -
    • For the RELEASE Information Model these are the activities that the Modeling sub-committee is engaged in leading up to M2.
      • RELEASE INFORMATION MODEL (Starting Point) - The release starts with a clean release information model from the PREVIOUS release (with all of its attendant contributions). Then new contributions of the current release are considered (see below the process for handling each specific contribution). Potentially a snapshot of the papyrus model and posted into the current release. The RST documentation that only contains things in the current release or everything that is approved.
      • INFORMATION MODEL FREEZE - The aggregate / release information model for the release is approved by association with the fragment/ component reviews.  Each of the fragment (contributions) are individually approved, thus there is not a "re-approval" or approval of the entire aggregate (release) information model. Editorial clean-up such as misalignments, typos, or sections that were not put in proposal, fixing the template for GenDoc.
      • RELEASE INFO MODEL DECLARED CLEAN - After component reviews have concluded and release info model freeze by the modeling S/C the info model is called the "clean model" in this phase. At this point, the Use Case teams that are developing the Data Model can be pretty certain that the information model will be usable as shown. The diagrams and model wiki pages will indicate that this is a clean model. Put into the information model for that release. Unfinished contributions are postponed or discussed further.
    • DISCUSSION OF CONTRIBUTIONS - Each contribution discussed according to following process. This is where refining of each of the contribution models occurs by the Modeling Sub-committee (S/C). The release information model is not separately tracked, composed, updated, or released in this period of time. But, rather, each individual contribution has its own Wiki. Thus, for each contribution:
      • CONSIDER CONTRIBUTION - START: Input Contribution (verb Consider) END: Contribution in Discussion State
        • An individual model contribution is a model that will eventually be a part of the total release information model. It is generally a self-contained model which depicts a particular capability or function of the system. This contribution starts as a "input contribution" and undergoes consideration by the modeling sub-committee. Consideration means that the modeling S/C is entertains & assesses if the input contribution should be accepted into the current (or a future release) by weighing the contribution against its relevance and the available resources (modelers) in the release. If the team thinks that the contribution is not ready for the current release that contribution will be put into a lower-priority and worked if there are no other contributions to be considered as they would take higher priority. Thus, the contribution would not necessarily be rejected, but would get attention as time allows.
      • REVIEW & REFINE CONTRIBUTION - START: Contribution in Discussion State (verb Reviewing & Refine) END: Contribution in Discussion state
        • The contribution undergoes reviewing & refining during the discussion state. Reviewing & refining means that the modeling S/C is discussing the modeling, and updating the contribution based on feedback and comments from the modeling team. Each contribution can be reviewed and refined independently and concurrently with other contributions. Things in the discussion state are classes, attributes and relationships are tagged as IISOMI experimental.
      • FINAL CALL FOR COMMENTS & INITIATE POLLING - START: Contribution in Discussion State (verb Approving/Poll) END: Contribution in Discussion state. The modeling team issues a call for comments and poll for each contribution.
      • APPROVING CONTRIBUTION - START: Contribution in Discussion State Post-Poll (verb Approving) Contribution in Clean State
        • After the poll has concluded, the contribution has finished the approval process. The contribution is now considered to be in the clean state. The items that are in the IISOMI experimental state get promoted to a preliminary state. A gendoc is generated and put on the wiki page. The gendoc would be translated and published on the readthedocs site.  
  • Components (PTL) Engagement - ONAP Platform Teams (A&AI, SO, SDC etc) review clean Information Model impacts for the release.
    • FEEDBACK - Component platform work can feedback to the Modeling S/C for updates to the information model during the refining the info model phase and should also provide input during the review. Modeling S/C should take into account component platform updates vis-a-vis the Use Case and modeling requirements for the release.
    • SOCIALIZATION - The socialization of the clean release information model should include updates for the PTLs. The platform PTLs must become aware that the clean release information model has gone to approval. The PTLs also attend the TSC. An email to the PTLs. Possibly a joint call with the PTLs in attendance might help to socialize the information model. Because this is a major milestone of the modeling S/C. Perhaps a modeling notification email distribution list could be made that would send major updates from the modeling S/C and that would not flood notifications from the modeling team. An email announcement of polls, in this case the baseline of a clean release information model.
    • #3 COMPONENT REVIEWS - The component reviews are trying to baseline the understand of the component in the release. Each of the project or project teams should give a presentation at the architecture sub-committee. The focus of the component reviews is to ensure that the documentations provided in these wiki pages are consistent with what the state of each ONAP component for a specific release. For example, the R7 Component Wiki Page is at: ONAP Architecture Component Description - Guilin-R7
    • Use this checklist to prepare for your Platform Component review:

      Checklist ItemDescription

      Check Update Attachments Info

      The "Attachment" folder associated with each Component (... in upper right corner) has also been cleaned up and all draft copies of the diagrams have been deleted.

      All the associated files for the page are stored in the attachment folder. Click on the "..." in the upper right of the page

      Image Added

      The on the page change the component name. Hit the "EDIT" and change the component name to the "Component name - R#", where R# is the release number.

      Cross check the name with the tag.

      Image Added

      Use Draw.io

      draw.io is the tool currently used to draw all the diagrams

      When you edit the diagram it will open the Draw.io interface which looks like this:

      Image Added

      Check Attachments Folder and Drawio Diagrams

      Each component diagram file has the following properties:

      1. componentName_r7 (i.e. sdnc_r7 for the SDN Controller)
      2. The .png file associated with your component gets generated by draw.io
      3. There may be other files/images left in the Attachment folder. feel free to modify/delete any file(s) to reflect the changes  associated with the release. Remove unneeded png files (you can click on the png file and see if it is still relevant for the release, if it is not delete it otherwise we will be carrying this diagram as unnecessary overhead). If the "DELETE" option does not show up contact, the Architecture PTL/Chair to get assistance as they may own the older files.
      4. The draw.io diagrams (i.e. lollipop diagram) is based on the C4 Model for visualizing Software Architecture?? - Please maintain the same format as you make any changes to your respective component
      5. Each diagram has a release stamp (bottom right corner) that should not be modified
      6. Each API (consumed or offered) is depicted by a lollipop and a label. You may add, modify or delete any API as needed but please maintain the same look and feel and the diagram file naming convention.
      7. COLOR CODE CONVENTION. Use a Blue Lollipop to represent a Consumed API, a Beige Lollipop to represent an offered API and add a Legend to your Draw.io diagram showing these.

        COLORMEANING
        Status
        colourYellow
        titleRED
        Offered API
        Status
        colourBlue
        titleBLUE
        Consumed API
        LegendImage Added


      Image Added

      API Documentation

      The page should document the consumed or offered API, and to provide as much detail and clarity on the what and the how of each API. With that in mind i'd like to propose the following as a starting point for preparing for these reviews:

      PTLs /Representatives will be responsible for making all the changes to their respective component diagrams

      PTLs would certify and approve all the changes to their respective component diagram

      Each API listed on the component diagram (lollipop and Label) should:

      be fully documented in the corresponding table, included in component wiki page above,

      1. each API label should have a link to their respective swagger.xxx, REST, YANG, wiki page, etc..
    Components (PTL) Engagement - ONAP Platform Teams (A&AI, SO, SDC etc) review clean Information Model impacts for the release.
    • FEEDBACK - Component platform work can feedback to the Modeling S/C for updates to the information model during the refining the info model phase and should also provide input during the review. Modeling S/C should take into account component platform updates vis-a-vis the Use Case and modeling requirements for the release.
    • SOCIALIZATION - The socialization of the clean release information model should include updates for the PTLs. The platform PTLs must become aware that the clean release information model has gone to approval. The PTLs also attend the TSC. An email to the PTLs. Possibly a joint call with the PTLs in attendance might help to socialize the information model. Because this is a major milestone of the modeling S/C. Perhaps a modeling notification email distribution list could be made that would send major updates from the modeling S/C and that would not flood notifications from the modeling team. An email announcement of polls, in this case the baseline of a clean release information model
      1. .



M2 CHECKPOINTS & COLLABORATION

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