- play_arrow Overview
- play_arrow Understanding Contrail Controller
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- play_arrow Installing and Upgrading Contrail
- play_arrow Supported Platforms and Server Requirements
- play_arrow Installing Contrail and Provisioning Roles
- Contrail Roles Overview
- Downloading Installation Software
- Installing the Operating System and Contrail Packages
- Configuring System Settings
- Installing the Contrail Packages, Part One (CentOS or Ubuntu)
- Setting Up the Testbed Definitions File
- Testbed Definitions File Settings for Deploying Contrail with an Existing OpenStack Node
- Supporting Multiple Interfaces on Servers and Nodes
- Installing the Contrail Packages, Part Two (CentOS or Ubuntu) — Installing on the Remaining Machines
- Configuring the Control Node with BGP
- Adding or Removing a Compute Node in an Existing Contrail Cluster
- Contrail Global Controller
- Role and Resource-Based Access Control
- play_arrow Installation and Configuration Scenarios
- Setting Up and Using a Simple Virtual Gateway with Contrail
- Configuring MD5 Authentication for BGP Sessions
- Configuring OpenStack Nova Docker with Contrail
- Configuring the Data Plane Development Kit (DPDK) Integrated with Contrail vRouter
- Configuring Single Root I/O Virtualization (SR-IOV)
- Configuring Virtual Networks for Hub-and-Spoke Topology
- Configuring Transport Layer Security-Based XMPP in Contrail
- Configuring Graceful Restart and Long-lived Graceful Restart
- play_arrow Using Contrail with VMware vCenter
- play_arrow Using Contrail with Red Hat
- play_arrow Using Server Manager to Automate Provisioning
- play_arrow Extending Contrail to Physical Routers, Bare Metal Servers, Switches, and Interfaces
- Using ToR Switches and OVSDB to Extend the Contrail Cluster to Other Instances
- Configuring High Availability for the Contrail OVSDB ToR Agent
- Using Device Manager to Manage Physical Routers
- SR-IOV VF as the Physical Interface of vRouter
- Using Gateway Mode to Support Remote Instances
- REST APIs for Extending the Contrail Cluster to Physical Routers, and Physical and Logical Interfaces
- play_arrow Installing and Using Contrail Storage
- play_arrow Upgrading Contrail Software
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- play_arrow Configuring Contrail
- play_arrow Configuring Virtual Networks
- Creating Projects in OpenStack for Configuring Tenants in Contrail
- Creating a Virtual Network with Juniper Networks Contrail
- Creating a Virtual Network with OpenStack Contrail
- Creating an Image for a Project in OpenStack Contrail
- Creating a Floating IP Address Pool
- Using Security Groups with Virtual Machines (Instances)
- Support for IPv6 Networks in Contrail
- Configuring EVPN and VXLAN
- play_arrow Example of Deploying a Multi-Tier Web Application Using Contrail
- play_arrow Configuring Services
- play_arrow Configuring Service Chaining
- play_arrow Examples: Configuring Service Chaining
- play_arrow Adding Physical Network Functions in Service Chains
- play_arrow Configuring High Availability
- play_arrow Configuring Multitenancy Support
- play_arrow Load Balancers
- play_arrow Optimizing Contrail
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- play_arrow Monitoring and Troubleshooting Contrail
- play_arrow Configuring Traffic Mirroring to Monitor Network Traffic
- play_arrow Understanding Contrail Analytics
- play_arrow Configuring Contrail Analytics
- Analytics Scalability
- High Availability for Analytics
- System Log Receiver in Contrail Analytics
- Sending Flow Messages to the Contrail System Log
- Ceilometer Support in a Contrail Cloud
- User Configuration for Analytics Alarms and Log Statistics
- Node Memory and CPU Information
- Role- and Resource-Based Access Control for the Contrail Analytics API
- play_arrow Using Contrail Analytics to Monitor and Troubleshoot the Network
- Monitoring the System
- Debugging Processes Using the Contrail Introspect Feature
- Monitor > Infrastructure > Dashboard
- Monitor > Infrastructure > Control Nodes
- Monitor > Infrastructure > Virtual Routers
- Monitor > Infrastructure > Analytics Nodes
- Monitor > Infrastructure > Config Nodes
- Monitor > Networking
- Query > Flows
- Query > Logs
- Understanding Flow Sampling
- Example: Debugging Connectivity Using Monitoring for Troubleshooting
- play_arrow Common Support Answers
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- play_arrow Contrail Commands and APIs
- play_arrow Contrail Commands
- play_arrow Contrail Application Programming Interfaces (APIs)
-
- play_arrow Downloads
Configuring VNF Properties
You can specify whether to enable automatic recovery of a network service or virtualized network function (VNF) for a network service instance in a centralized deployment. Enabling automatic recovery of a network service or VNF improves reliability of the implementation.
Conversely, disabling automatic recovery of a network service or VNF allows you to quickly investigate a problem with a network service or VNF itself.
To enable or disable automatic recovery of a network service or VNF:
- Select Services > Services Name > Instances.
The Services Instances page appears.
- Select a service instance for which you want to enable or disable automatic recovery.
- Click Enable Auto Healing.
The Service Properties page appears.
- Select whether you want to enable or disable automatic
recovery.Note
By default, automatic recovery of a network service or VNF is enabled.
- Click Save.