To Fix#8697 . The config load_minigraph initializes 'admin_status' to up when platform.json has DPB configs. This doesn't happen when using port_config.ini
The update minigraph has logic to initialize only the ports whose neighbors are defined or those belonging to portchannel
However, a change was introduced to have default admin status to be 'up' in portconfig.py when the minigraph was using platform.json
This will lead to sanity check failure in sonic-mgmt and thus no test cases could be run
Why I did it
End goal: To have azure pipeline job to run multi-asic VS tests.
Intermediate goal: Require multi-asic KVM image so that the test can be run.
The difference between single asic and multi-asic KVM image is asic.conf file which has different NUM_ASIC values.
Idea behind the approach in this PR to attain the intermediate goal above:
Ease of building multi-asic KVM image so that any user or azure pipeline can use a simple make command to generate single or multi-asic KVM images as required.
Use a single onie installer image and multiple KVM images for single and multi-asic images.
Current scenario:
For VS platform, sonic-vs.bin is generated which is the onie installer image and sonic-vs.img.gz is generated which is the KVM iamge.
Scenario to be achieved:
sonic-vs.bin - which will include single asic platform, 4 asic platform and 6 asic platform.
sonic-vs.img.gz - single asic KVM image
sonic-4asic-vs.img.gz - 4 asic KVM image
sonic-6asic-vs.img.gz - 6 asic KVM image
In this PR, 2 new platforms are added for 4-asic and 6-asic VS.
How I did it
Create 4-asic and 6-asic device directories with the required files and hwsku files.
Add onie-recovery image information in vs platform.
How to verify it
After this PR change, no build change.
sonic-vs.bin onie installer image should include information of new multi-asic vs platforms.
the branch refers the branch name that the commit is in,
for example master, 202012, 201911, ...
In case there is no branch, the name will be HEAD.
release is encoded in /etc/sonic/sonic_release file.
the file is only available for a release branch.
It is not available in master branch.
example for master branch
```
build_version: 'master.602-6efc0a88'
debian_version: '10.7'
kernel_version: '4.19.0-9-2-amd64'
asic_type: vs
commit_id: '6efc0a88'
branch: 'master'
release: 'none'
build_date: Tue Dec 29 06:54:02 UTC 2020
build_number: 602
built_by: johnar@jenkins-worker-23
```
example for 202012 release branch
```
build_version: '202012.602-6efc0a88'
debian_version: '10.7'
kernel_version: '4.19.0-9-2-amd64'
asic_type: vs
commit_id: '6efc0a88'
branch: '202012'
release: '202012'
build_date: Tue Dec 29 06:54:02 UTC 2020
build_number: 602
built_by: johnar@jenkins-worker-23
```
Signed-off-by: Guohan Lu <lguohan@gmail.com>
vs has components from swss, bgp, teamd and nat. This table is needed by this change https://github.com/Azure/sonic-utilities/pull/1554.
Because Azure/sonic-utilities#1554 requires "config warm_restart enable FEATURE" and the FEATURE has to be in feature table.
Signed-off-by: Stepan Blyschak <stepanb@nvidia.com>
Why I did it
Quagga is no longer being used. Remove quagga-related code (e.g., docker-fpm-quagga, sonic-quagga, etc.).
How I did it
Remove quagga-related code.
Why I did it
Quagga is no longer being used. Remove quagga-related code (e.g., docker-fpm-quagga, sonic-quagga, etc.).
How I did it
Remove quagga-related code.
- Why I did it
To give SONiC Application Extension developers an environment to run and develop their apps.
- How I did it
Created sonic-sdk and sonic-sdk-buildenv dockers and their dbg versions.
- How to verify it
Build:
$ make -f slave target/sonic-sdk.gz target/sonic-sdk-buildenv.gz
Signed-off-by: Stepan Blyschak stepanb@nvidia.com
This PR is part of SONiC Application Extension
Depends on #5938
- Why I did it
To provide an infrastructure change in order to support SONiC Application Extension feature.
- How I did it
Label every installable SONiC Docker with a minimal required manifest and auto-generate packages.json file based on
installed SONiC images.
- How to verify it
Build an image, execute the following command:
admin@sonic:~$ docker inspect docker-snmp:1.0.0 | jq '.[0].Config.Labels["com.azure.sonic.manifest"]' -r | jq
Cat /var/lib/sonic-package-manager/packages.json file to verify all dockers are listed there.
To improve management of docker-gbsyncd-vs. gbsyncd_startup.py simply spawned syncd processes and then exited. In that case, supervisord would no longer manage any processes in the container, and thus there was no way to know if a critical process had exited.
I recently created gbsyncdmgrd to be a more complete, robust replacement for gbsyncd_startup.py.
NOTE: This PR is dependent on the inclusion of gbsyncdmgrd in the sonic-sairedis repo. A submodule update is pending at
#7089
Eliminate the need for `gbsyncd_start.sh`, which simply calls `exec "/usr/bin/gbsyncd_startup.py"`. The shell script is unnecessary.
Once this PR merges, we can remove `gbsyncd_start.sh` from the sonic-sairedis repo.
To fix [DPB| wrong aliases for interfaces](https://github.com/Azure/sonic-buildimage/issues/6024) issue, implimented flexible alias support [design doc](https://github.com/Azure/SONiC/pull/749)
> [[dpb|config] Fix the validation logic of breakout mode](https://github.com/Azure/sonic-utilities/pull/1440) depends on this
#### How I did it
1. Removed `"alias_at_lanes"` from port-configuration file(i.e. platfrom.json)
2. Added dictionary to "breakout_modes" values. This defines the breakout modes available on the platform for this parent port, and it maps to the alias list. The alias list presents the alias names for individual ports in order under this breakout mode.
```
{
"interfaces": {
"Ethernet0": {
"index": "1,1,1,1",
"lanes": "0,1,2,3",
"breakout_modes": {
"1x100G[40G]": ["Eth1"],
"2x50G": ["Eth1/1", "Eth1/2"],
"4x25G[10G]": ["Eth1/1", "Eth1/2", "Eth1/3", "Eth1/4"],
"2x25G(2)+1x50G(2)": ["Eth1/1", "Eth1/2", "Eth1/3"],
"1x50G(2)+2x25G(2)": ["Eth1/1", "Eth1/2", "Eth1/3"]
}
}
}
```
#### How to verify it
`config interface breakout`
Signed-off-by: Sangita Maity <samaity@linkedin.com>
- Why I did it
To move ‘sonic-host-service’ which is currently built as a separate package to ‘sonic-host-services' package.
- How I did it
- Moved 'sonic-host-server' to 'src/sonic-host-services' and included it as part of the python3 wheel.
- Other files were moved to 'src/sonic-host-services-data' and included as part of the deb package.
- Changed build option ‘INCLUDE_HOST_SERVICE’ to ‘ENABLE_HOST_SERVICE_ON_START’ for enabling sonic-hostservice at boot-up by default.
Fix#6711
the requirement was introduced in commit 75104bb35d
to support sflow in stretch build. in buster build, the requirement
is met, no need to pin down the version.
Signed-off-by: Guohan Lu <lguohan@gmail.com>
**- Why I did it**
sonic-utilities will become dependent upon sonic-platform-common as of https://github.com/Azure/sonic-utilities/pull/1386.
**- How I did it**
- Add sonic-platform-common as a dependency in docker-sonic-vs.mk
- Additionally, no longer install Python 2 packages of swsssdk and sonic-py-common, as they should no longer be needed.
- combine docker-ptf-saithrift into docker-ptf docker
- build docker-ptf under platform vs
- remove docker-ptf for other platforms
Signed-off-by: Guohan Lu <lguohan@gmail.com>
Check #6483
add test to make sure default route change in eth0 does not
affect the default route in the default vrf
Signed-off-by: Guohan Lu <lguohan@gmail.com>
- Why I did it
Initially, we used Monit to monitor critical processes in each container. If one of critical processes was not running
or crashed due to some reasons, then Monit will write an alerting message into syslog periodically. If we add a new process
in a container, the corresponding Monti configuration file will also need to update. It is a little hard for maintenance.
Currently we employed event listener of Supervisod to do this monitoring. Since processes in each container are managed by
Supervisord, we can only focus on the logic of monitoring.
- How I did it
We borrowed the event listener of Supervisord to monitor critical processes in containers. The event listener will take
following steps if it was notified one of critical processes exited unexpectedly:
The event listener will first check whether the auto-restart mechanism was enabled for this container or not. If auto-restart mechanism was enabled, event listener will kill the Supervisord process, which should cause the container to exit and subsequently get restarted.
If auto-restart mechanism was not enabled for this contianer, the event listener will enter a loop which will first sleep 1 minute and then check whether the process is running. If yes, the event listener exits. If no, an alerting message will be written into syslog.
- How to verify it
First, we need checked whether the auto-restart mechanism of a container was enabled or not by running the command show feature status. If enabled, one critical process should be selected and killed manually, then we need check whether the container will be restarted or not.
Second, we can disable the auto-restart mechanism if it was enabled at step 1 by running the commnad sudo config feature autorestart <container_name> disabled. Then one critical process should be selected and killed. After that, we will see the alerting message which will appear in the syslog every 1 minute.
- Which release branch to backport (provide reason below if selected)
201811
201911
[x ] 202006
1. Fixes the missing DPKG file for gbsyncd-vs package
2. Fixes the softlink issue on the Platform-common and ztp package
3. Fixes the PYTHNON_DEBS list is missing for DBG dockers.
combine multiple same operation into one operation to reduce
the build steps. this is to avoid max depth exceeded issue
in the build.
Signed-off-by: Guohan Lu <lguohan@gmail.com>
Introduce tunnel manager daemon. Start the process as part of swss container
Submodule update for swss:
9ed3026 - 2020-12-24 : [NAT] ACL Rule with DO_NOT_NAT action is getting failed. (#1502) [Akhilesh Samineni]
c39a4b1 - 2020-12-23 : Mux/IPTunnel orchagent changes (#1497) [Prince Sunny]
bc8df0e - 2020-12-23 : Add support for headroom pool watermark (#1567) [Neetha John]
**- Why I did it**
As part of migrating SONiC codebase from Python 2 to Python 3
**- How I did it**
- No longer install Python 2 in docker-base-buster or docker-config-engine-buster.
- Install Python 2 and pip2 in the following containers until we can completely eliminate it there:
- docker-platform-monitor
- docker-sonic-mgmt-framework
- docker-sonic-vs
- Pin pip2 version <21 where it is still temporarily needed, as pip version 21 will drop support for Python 2
- Also preform some other cleanup, ensuring that pip3, setuptools and wheel packages are installed in docker-base-buster, and then removing any attempts to re-install them in derived containers
Install the necessary python3 dependent packages to convert restore_neighbor.py
to support python3 as python2 is EOL. See: Azure/sonic-swss#1542
Signed-off-by: Zhenggen Xu <zxu@linkedin.com>
**- Why I did it**
To support dynamic buffer calculation.
This PR also depends on the following PRs for sub modules
- [sonic-swss: [buffermgr/bufferorch] Support dynamic buffer calculation #1338](https://github.com/Azure/sonic-swss/pull/1338)
- [sonic-swss-common: Dynamic buffer calculation #361](https://github.com/Azure/sonic-swss-common/pull/361)
- [sonic-utilities: Support dynamic buffer calculation #973](https://github.com/Azure/sonic-utilities/pull/973)
**- How I did it**
1. Introduce field `buffer_model` in `DEVICE_METADATA|localhost` to represent which buffer model is running in the system currently:
- `dynamic` for the dynamic buffer calculation model
- `traditional` for the traditional model in which the `pg_profile_lookup.ini` is used
2. Add the tables required for the feature:
- ASIC_TABLE in platform/\<vendor\>/asic_table.j2
- PERIPHERAL_TABLE in platform/\<vendor\>/peripheral_table.j2
- PORT_PERIPHERAL_TABLE on a per-platform basis in device/\<vendor\>/\<platform\>/port_peripheral_config.j2 for each platform with gearbox installed.
- DEFAULT_LOSSLESS_BUFFER_PARAMETER and LOSSLESS_TRAFFIC_PATTERN in files/build_templates/buffers_config.j2
- Add lossless PGs (3-4) for each port in files/build_templates/buffers_config.j2
3. Copy the newly introduced j2 files into the image and rendering them when the system starts
4. Update the CLI options for buffermgrd so that it can start with dynamic mode
5. Fetches the ASIC vendor name in orchagent:
- fetch the vendor name when creates the docker and pass it as a docker environment variable
- `buffermgrd` can use this passed-in variable
6. Clear buffer related tables from STATE_DB when swss docker starts
7. Update the src/sonic-config-engine/tests/sample_output/buffers-dell6100.json according to the buffer_config.j2
8. Remove buffer pool sizes for ingress pools and egress_lossy_pool
Update the buffer settings for dynamic buffer calculation
Changes for supporting vstest for VOQ system ports. The changes include:
(1)Use of chassis_db.json is avoided since the SYSTEM_PORT is made
available in virtual chassis linecard's default_config.json which will
be loaded during bootup
(2)Core port index map file is introduced and is copied from virtual chassis
directory to hwsku direcory by start.sh
(3)vs sai profile is modified to include core port index map file name
Signed-off-by: vedganes <vedavinayagam.ganesan@nokia.com>
Submodule updates include the following commits:
* src/sonic-utilities 9dc58ea...f9eb739 (18):
> Remove unnecessary calls to str.encode() now that the package is Python 3; Fix deprecation warning (#1260)
> [generate_dump] Ignoring file/directory not found Errors (#1201)
> Fixed porstat rate and util issues (#1140)
> fix error: interface counters is mismatch after warm-reboot (#1099)
> Remove unnecessary calls to str.decode() now that the package is Python 3 (#1255)
> [acl-loader] Make list sorting compliant with Python 3 (#1257)
> Replace hard-coded fast-reboot with variable. And some typo corrections (#1254)
> [configlet][portconfig] Remove calls to dict.has_key() which is not available in Python 3 (#1247)
> Remove unnecessary conversions to list() and calls to dict.keys() (#1243)
> Clean up LGTM alerts (#1239)
> Add 'requests' as install dependency in setup.py (#1240)
> Convert to Python 3 (#1128)
> Fix mock SonicV2Connector in python3: use decode_responses mode so caller code will be the same as python2 (#1238)
> [tests] Do not trim from PATH if we did not append to it; Clean up/fix shebangs in scripts (#1233)
> Updates to bgp config and show commands with BGP_INTERNAL_NEIGHBOR table (#1224)
> [cli]: NAT show commands newline issue after migrated to Python3 (#1204)
> [doc]: Update Command-Reference.md (#1231)
> Added 'import sys' in feature.py file (#1232)
* src/sonic-py-swsssdk 9d9f0c6...1664be9 (2):
> Fix: no need to decode() after redis client scan, so it will work for both python2 and python3 (#96)
> FieldValueMap `contains`(`in`) will also work when migrated to libswsscommon(C++ with SWIG wrapper) (#94)
- Also fix Python 3-related issues:
- Use integer (floor) division in config_samples.py (sonic-config-engine)
- Replace print statement with print function in eeprom.py plugin for x86_64-kvm_x86_64-r0 platform
- Update all platform plugins to be compatible with both Python 2 and Python 3
- Remove shebangs from plugins files which are not intended to be executable
- Replace tabs with spaces in Python plugin files and fix alignment, because Python 3 is more strict
- Remove trailing whitespace from plugins files
**- Why I did it**
We were building a custom version of Supervisor because I had added patches to prevent hangs and crashes if the system clock ever rolled backward. Those changes were merged into the upstream Supervisor repo as of version 3.4.0 (http://supervisord.org/changes.html#id9), therefore, we should be able to simply install the vanilla package via pip. This will also allow us to easily move to Python 3, as Python 3 support was added in version 4.0.0.
**- How I did it**
- Remove Makefiles and patches for building supervisor package from source
- Install Python 3 supervisor package version 4.2.1 in Buster base container
- Also install Python 3 version of supervisord-dependent-startup in Buster base container
- Debian package installed binary in `/usr/bin/`, but pip package installs in `/usr/local/bin/`, so rather than update all absolute paths, I changed all references to simply call `supervisord` and let the system PATH find the executable to prevent future need for changes just in case we ever need to switch back to build a Debian package, then we won't need to modify these again.
- Install Python 2 supervisor package >= 3.4.0 in Stretch and Jessie base containers
Prevent intermittent build failures when building Sonic for the ARM platform architecture due to version upgrades of the redis-tools and redis-server packages.
Modify select Dockerfile templates to download the redis-tools and redis-server packages from sonicstorage rather than from debian.org.
This PR has been made possible by the inclusion of ARM versions of redis-tools and redis-server into sonicstorage as described in Issue# 5701
The orchagent and syncd need to have the same default synchronous mode configuration. This PR adds a template file to translate the default value in CONFIG_DB (empty field) to an explicit mode so that the orchagent and syncd could have the same default mode.
**- Why I did it**
Install all host services and their data files in package format rather than file-by-file
**- How I did it**
- Create sonic-host-services Python wheel package, currently including procdockerstatsd
- Also add the framework for unit tests by adding one simple procdockerstatsd test case
- Create sonic-host-services-data Debian package which is responsible for installing the related systemd unit files to control the services in the Python wheel. This package will also be responsible for installing any Jinja2 templates and other data files needed by the host services.
It should no longer be necessary to explicitly install the 'wheel' package, as SONiC packages built as wheels should specify 'wheel' as a dependency in their setup.py files. Therefore, pip[3] should check for the presence of 'wheel' and install it if it isn't present before attempting to call 'setup.py bdist_wheel' to install the package.
bring up chassisdb service on sonic switch according to the design in
Distributed Forwarding in VoQ Arch HLD
Signed-off-by: Honggang Xu <hxu@arista.com>
**- Why I did it**
To bring up new ChassisDB service in sonic as designed in ['Distributed forwarding in a VOQ architecture HLD' ](90c1289eaf/doc/chassis/architecture.md).
**- How I did it**
Implement the section 2.3.1 Global DB Organization of the VOQ architecture HLD.
**- How to verify it**
ChassisDB service won't start without chassisdb.conf file on the existing platforms.
ChassisDB service is accessible with global.conf file in the distributed arichitecture.
Signed-off-by: Honggang Xu <hxu@arista.com>
We were building our own python-click package because we needed features/bug fixes available as of version 7.0.0, but the most recent version available from Debian was in the 6.x range.
"Click" is needed for building/testing and installing sonic-utilities. Now that we are building sonic-utilities as a wheel, with Click specified as a dependency in the setup.py file, setuptools will install a more recent version of Click in the sonic-slave-buster container when building the package, and pip will install a more recent version of Click in the host OS of SONiC when installing the sonic-utilities package. Also, we don't need to worry about installing the Python 2 or 3 version of the package, as the proper one will be installed as necessary.
Make Python3-swsscommon available in image.
```
admin@str-s6000-acs-13:~$ sudo apt-cache search swss
libswsscommon - This package contains Switch State Service common library.
python-swsscommon - This package contains Switch State Service common Python2 library.
python3-swsscommon- This package contains Switch State Service common Python3 library.
admin@str-s6000-acs-13:~$
```