-This an overview document for the installation of the Iruya release of OPNFV.
-
-The Iruya release can be installed making use of one of the installer projects in OPNFV:
-Airship or Fuel. Each installer provides the ability to install a common OPNFV
-platform as well as integrating additional features delivered through a variety of scenarios by
-the OPNFV community.
-
-
-Introduction
-============
-
-The OPNFV platform is comprised of a variety of upstream components that may be deployed on your
-infrastructure. A composition of components, tools and configurations is identified in OPNFV as a
-deployment scenario.
-
-The various OPNFV scenarios provide unique features and capabilities that you may want to leverage, and
-it is important to understand your required target platform capabilities before installing and
-configuring your scenarios.
-
-An OPNFV installation requires either a physical infrastructure environment as defined
-in the `Pharos specification <https://wiki.opnfv.org/display/pharos/Pharos+Specification>`_, or a virtual one.
-When configuring a physical infrastructure it is strongly advised to follow the Pharos configuration guidelines.
-
-
-Scenarios
-=========
-
-OPNFV scenarios are designed to host virtualised network functions (VNF’s) in a variety of deployment
-architectures and locations. Each scenario provides specific capabilities and/or components aimed at
-solving specific problems for the deployment of VNF’s.
-
-A scenario may, for instance, include components such as OpenStack, OpenDaylight, OVS, KVM etc.,
-where each scenario will include different source components or configurations.
-
-To learn more about the scenarios supported in the Iruya release refer to the scenario
-description documents provided:
-
-- :ref:`os-nosdn-ovs-noha <os-nosdn-ovs-noha>`
-- :ref:`os-nosdn-fdio-noha <os-nosdn-fdio-noha>`