The following pages will guide you through the various aspects of the
Cisco Network Services Orchestrator (NSO) use, from basic commands to
writing custom drivers. There is a wealth of information in here,
which can certainly be daunting for new users.
We hope a short overview, along with our suggestions, will help you make
the most out of this documentation.
For users just starting with NSO, we highly recommend reading the
NSO 5.7 Getting Started Guide
first.
It provides a brief overview of all the main concepts, such as
how to do device management or what services are. It also shows you how
to create a simple installation of NSO locally for you to experiment with.
More advanced installation options are covered in
NSO Installation Guide,
which you should consider if you are setting up a shared instance
(accessed by multiple users).
For the most part, a simple local installation will suffice. And if not,
the documentation will clearly tell you so.
The NSO 5.7 User Guide
describes in depth the topics and concepts briefly covered in the
Getting Started Guide, covering out-of-the-box network management
features. It contains a detailed description of the
command-line interface (CLI), connection management, the network simulator,
reporting, etc.
Most of the other guides expect you to have read this one first.
Complementing the User Guide, the
NSO 5.7 Administration Guide
focuses on system administration tasks for the NSO server:
initial configuration, licensing, backup, high availability, and so on.
You should certainly read this if you are deploying a shared or
production-grade instance. However, if you are just experimenting with a
private, local copy, feel free to consult this guide on an as-needed basis.
The NSO 5.7 Northbound APIs
will be of particular interest to system integrators as it details how
other systems can interact with NSO, for example to read data or
push network configuration. If you're building a custom web frontend
on top of NSO, you may find
NSO 5.7 Web UI
useful as well.
Services play a central role in network configuration with NSO.
The NSO 5.7 Development Guide
will show you how you can create your own services to do automation.
You can use simple XML templates or implement custom logic with the
provided API. The latter will require some programming skills but
don't let that discourage you. There are simple examples included which
you can build on.
While increasingly rare, some use cases may require you to add support
for a new device type and the
NSO 5.7 NED Development
will show you how. Likewise, the
NSO Layered Service Architecture
will show you how to design very large, scalable services.
These are advanced topics, however, and the guides assume you are already
fairly familiar with the NSO development.
In case you aren't, feel free to skip these until you get some more
experience.
NSO 5.1 introduced some major changes to device model handling. The
NSO CDM Migration Guide
discusses the details, including what to do if you are upgrading from an
older release. We recommend new users first read the User Guide for a
gentler introduction to these topics.
Additionally, you can browse the online version of the
NSO 5.7 Manual Pages
or the
SDK API
Reference. We hope this documentation will serve you well!
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