使用Apache Kafka Streams
本指南展示了你的Quarkus应用如何利用Apache Kafka Streams API来实现基于Apache Kafka的流处理应用。
先决条件
完成这个指南,你需要:
-
大概30 minutes
-
编辑器
-
JDK 17+ installed with
JAVA_HOME
configured appropriately -
Apache Maven 3.9.9
-
Docker and Docker Compose or Podman, and Docker Compose
-
如果你愿意的话,还可以选择使用Quarkus CLI
-
如果你想构建原生可执行程序,可以选择安装Mandrel或者GraalVM,并正确配置(或者使用Docker在容器中进行构建)
It is recommended, that you have read the Kafka quickstart before.
The Quarkus extension for Kafka Streams allows for very fast turnaround times during development by supporting the Quarkus Dev Mode (e.g. via A recommended development set-up is to have some producer which creates test messages on the processed topic(s) in fixed intervals, e.g. every second and observe the streaming application’s output topic(s) using a tool such as For the best development experience, we recommend applying the following configuration settings to your Kafka broker:
Also specify the following settings in your Quarkus
Together, these settings will ensure that the application can very quickly reconnect to the broker after being restarted in dev mode. |
应用结构
In this guide, we are going to generate (random) temperature values in one component (named generator
).
These values are associated to given weather stations and are written in a Kafka topic (temperature-values
).
Another topic (weather-stations
) contains just the main data about the weather stations themselves (id and name).
A second component (aggregator
) reads from the two Kafka topics and processes them in a streaming pipeline:
-
the two topics are joined on weather station id
-
per weather station the min, max and average temperature is determined
-
this aggregated data is written out to a third topic (
temperatures-aggregated
)
The data can be examined by inspecting the output topic. By exposing a Kafka Streams interactive query, the latest result for each weather station can alternatively be obtained via a simple REST query.
The overall architecture looks like so:
解决方案
我们建议您按照下一节的说明逐步创建应用程序。然而,您可以直接转到已完成的示例。
克隆 Git 仓库: git clone https://github.com/quarkusio/quarkus-quickstarts.git
,或下载一个 存档 。
The solution is located in the kafka-streams-quickstart
directory.
Creating the Producer Maven Project
First, we need a new project with the temperature value producer. Create a new project with the following command:
For Windows users:
-
If using cmd, (don’t use backward slash
\
and put everything on the same line) -
If using Powershell, wrap
-D
parameters in double quotes e.g."-DprojectArtifactId=kafka-streams-quickstart-producer"
This command generates a Maven project, importing the Reactive Messaging and Kafka connector extensions.
If you already have your Quarkus project configured, you can add the messaging-kafka
extension
to your project by running the following command in your project base directory:
quarkus extension add quarkus-messaging-kafka
./mvnw quarkus:add-extension -Dextensions='quarkus-messaging-kafka'
./gradlew addExtension --extensions='quarkus-messaging-kafka'
这会将以下内容添加到你的构建文件中:
<dependency>
<groupId>io.quarkus</groupId>
<artifactId>quarkus-messaging-kafka</artifactId>
</dependency>
implementation("io.quarkus:quarkus-messaging-kafka")
The Temperature Value Producer
Create the producer/src/main/java/org/acme/kafka/streams/producer/generator/ValuesGenerator.java
file,
with the following content:
package org.acme.kafka.streams.producer.generator;
import java.math.BigDecimal;
import java.math.RoundingMode;
import java.time.Duration;
import java.time.Instant;
import java.util.Arrays;
import java.util.Collections;
import java.util.List;
import java.util.Random;
import jakarta.enterprise.context.ApplicationScoped;
import io.smallrye.mutiny.Multi;
import io.smallrye.reactive.messaging.kafka.Record;
import org.eclipse.microprofile.reactive.messaging.Outgoing;
import org.jboss.logging.Logger;
/**
* A bean producing random temperature data every second.
* The values are written to a Kafka topic (temperature-values).
* Another topic contains the name of weather stations (weather-stations).
* The Kafka configuration is specified in the application configuration.
*/
@ApplicationScoped
public class ValuesGenerator {
private static final Logger LOG = Logger.getLogger(ValuesGenerator.class);
private Random random = new Random();
private List<WeatherStation> stations = List.of(
new WeatherStation(1, "Hamburg", 13),
new WeatherStation(2, "Snowdonia", 5),
new WeatherStation(3, "Boston", 11),
new WeatherStation(4, "Tokio", 16),
new WeatherStation(5, "Cusco", 12),
new WeatherStation(6, "Svalbard", -7),
new WeatherStation(7, "Porthsmouth", 11),
new WeatherStation(8, "Oslo", 7),
new WeatherStation(9, "Marrakesh", 20));
@Outgoing("temperature-values") (1)
public Multi<Record<Integer, String>> generate() {
return Multi.createFrom().ticks().every(Duration.ofMillis(500)) (2)
.onOverflow().drop()
.map(tick -> {
WeatherStation station = stations.get(random.nextInt(stations.size()));
double temperature = BigDecimal.valueOf(random.nextGaussian() * 15 + station.averageTemperature)
.setScale(1, RoundingMode.HALF_UP)
.doubleValue();
LOG.infov("station: {0}, temperature: {1}", station.name, temperature);
return Record.of(station.id, Instant.now() + ";" + temperature);
});
}
@Outgoing("weather-stations") (3)
public Multi<Record<Integer, String>> weatherStations() {
return Multi.createFrom().items(stations.stream()
.map(s -> Record.of(
s.id,
"{ \"id\" : " + s.id +
", \"name\" : \"" + s.name + "\" }"))
);
}
private static class WeatherStation {
int id;
String name;
int averageTemperature;
public WeatherStation(int id, String name, int averageTemperature) {
this.id = id;
this.name = name;
this.averageTemperature = averageTemperature;
}
}
}
1 | Instruct Reactive Messaging to dispatch the items from the returned Multi to temperature-values . |
2 | The method returns a Mutiny stream (Multi ) emitting a random temperature value every 0.5 seconds. |
3 | Instruct Reactive Messaging to dispatch the items from the returned Multi (static list of weather stations) to weather-stations . |
The two methods each return a reactive stream whose items are sent to the streams named temperature-values
and weather-stations
, respectively.
Topic Configuration
The two channels are mapped to Kafka topics using the Quarkus configuration file application.properties
.
For that, add the following to the file producer/src/main/resources/application.properties
:
# Configure the Kafka broker location
kafka.bootstrap.servers=localhost:9092
mp.messaging.outgoing.temperature-values.connector=smallrye-kafka
mp.messaging.outgoing.temperature-values.key.serializer=org.apache.kafka.common.serialization.IntegerSerializer
mp.messaging.outgoing.temperature-values.value.serializer=org.apache.kafka.common.serialization.StringSerializer
mp.messaging.outgoing.weather-stations.connector=smallrye-kafka
mp.messaging.outgoing.weather-stations.key.serializer=org.apache.kafka.common.serialization.IntegerSerializer
mp.messaging.outgoing.weather-stations.value.serializer=org.apache.kafka.common.serialization.StringSerializer
This configures the Kafka bootstrap server, the two topics and the corresponding (de-)serializers. More details about the different configuration options are available on the Producer configuration and Consumer configuration section from the Kafka documentation.
Creating the Aggregator Maven Project
With the producer application in place, it’s time to implement the actual aggregator application, which will run the Kafka Streams pipeline. Create another project like so:
For Windows users:
-
If using cmd, (don’t use backward slash
\
and put everything on the same line) -
If using Powershell, wrap
-D
parameters in double quotes e.g."-DprojectArtifactId=kafka-streams-quickstart-aggregator"
This creates the aggregator
project with the Quarkus extension for Kafka Streams and with the Jackson support for Quarkus REST (formerly RESTEasy Reactive).
If you already have your Quarkus project configured, you can add the kafka-streams
extension
to your project by running the following command in your project base directory:
quarkus extension add kafka-streams
./mvnw quarkus:add-extension -Dextensions='kafka-streams'
./gradlew addExtension --extensions='kafka-streams'
这将在你的 pom.xml
中添加以下内容:
<dependency>
<groupId>io.quarkus</groupId>
<artifactId>quarkus-kafka-streams</artifactId>
</dependency>
implementation("io.quarkus:quarkus-kafka-streams")
The Pipeline Implementation
Let’s begin the implementation of the stream processing application by creating a few value objects for representing temperature measurements, weather stations and for keeping track of aggregated values.
First, create the file aggregator/src/main/java/org/acme/kafka/streams/aggregator/model/WeatherStation.java
,
representing a weather station, with the following content:
package org.acme.kafka.streams.aggregator.model;
import io.quarkus.runtime.annotations.RegisterForReflection;
@RegisterForReflection (1)
public class WeatherStation {
public int id;
public String name;
}
1 | @RegisterForReflection 注解用于指导Quarkus在native编译过程中保留该类和其成员。关于 @RegisterForReflection 注解的更多细节可以在 native应用程序提示 页面找到。 |
Then the file aggregator/src/main/java/org/acme/kafka/streams/aggregator/model/TemperatureMeasurement.java
,
representing temperature measurements for a given station:
package org.acme.kafka.streams.aggregator.model;
import java.time.Instant;
public class TemperatureMeasurement {
public int stationId;
public String stationName;
public Instant timestamp;
public double value;
public TemperatureMeasurement(int stationId, String stationName, Instant timestamp,
double value) {
this.stationId = stationId;
this.stationName = stationName;
this.timestamp = timestamp;
this.value = value;
}
}
And finally aggregator/src/main/java/org/acme/kafka/streams/aggregator/model/Aggregation.java
,
which will be used to keep track of the aggregated values while the events are processed in the streaming pipeline:
package org.acme.kafka.streams.aggregator.model;
import java.math.BigDecimal;
import java.math.RoundingMode;
import io.quarkus.runtime.annotations.RegisterForReflection;
@RegisterForReflection
public class Aggregation {
public int stationId;
public String stationName;
public double min = Double.MAX_VALUE;
public double max = Double.MIN_VALUE;
public int count;
public double sum;
public double avg;
public Aggregation updateFrom(TemperatureMeasurement measurement) {
stationId = measurement.stationId;
stationName = measurement.stationName;
count++;
sum += measurement.value;
avg = BigDecimal.valueOf(sum / count)
.setScale(1, RoundingMode.HALF_UP).doubleValue();
min = Math.min(min, measurement.value);
max = Math.max(max, measurement.value);
return this;
}
}
Next, let’s create the actual streaming query implementation itself in the aggregator/src/main/java/org/acme/kafka/streams/aggregator/streams/TopologyProducer.java
file.
All we need to do for that is to declare a CDI producer method which returns the Kafka Streams Topology
;
the Quarkus extension will take care of configuring, starting and stopping the actual Kafka Streams engine.
package org.acme.kafka.streams.aggregator.streams;
import java.time.Instant;
import jakarta.enterprise.context.ApplicationScoped;
import jakarta.enterprise.inject.Produces;
import org.acme.kafka.streams.aggregator.model.Aggregation;
import org.acme.kafka.streams.aggregator.model.TemperatureMeasurement;
import org.acme.kafka.streams.aggregator.model.WeatherStation;
import org.apache.kafka.common.serialization.Serdes;
import org.apache.kafka.streams.StreamsBuilder;
import org.apache.kafka.streams.Topology;
import org.apache.kafka.streams.kstream.Consumed;
import org.apache.kafka.streams.kstream.GlobalKTable;
import org.apache.kafka.streams.kstream.Materialized;
import org.apache.kafka.streams.kstream.Produced;
import org.apache.kafka.streams.state.KeyValueBytesStoreSupplier;
import org.apache.kafka.streams.state.Stores;
import io.quarkus.kafka.client.serialization.ObjectMapperSerde;
@ApplicationScoped
public class TopologyProducer {
static final String WEATHER_STATIONS_STORE = "weather-stations-store";
private static final String WEATHER_STATIONS_TOPIC = "weather-stations";
private static final String TEMPERATURE_VALUES_TOPIC = "temperature-values";
private static final String TEMPERATURES_AGGREGATED_TOPIC = "temperatures-aggregated";
@Produces
public Topology buildTopology() {
StreamsBuilder builder = new StreamsBuilder();
ObjectMapperSerde<WeatherStation> weatherStationSerde = new ObjectMapperSerde<>(
WeatherStation.class);
ObjectMapperSerde<Aggregation> aggregationSerde = new ObjectMapperSerde<>(Aggregation.class);
KeyValueBytesStoreSupplier storeSupplier = Stores.persistentKeyValueStore(
WEATHER_STATIONS_STORE);
GlobalKTable<Integer, WeatherStation> stations = builder.globalTable( (1)
WEATHER_STATIONS_TOPIC,
Consumed.with(Serdes.Integer(), weatherStationSerde));
builder.stream( (2)
TEMPERATURE_VALUES_TOPIC,
Consumed.with(Serdes.Integer(), Serdes.String())
)
.join( (3)
stations,
(stationId, timestampAndValue) -> stationId,
(timestampAndValue, station) -> {
String[] parts = timestampAndValue.split(";");
return new TemperatureMeasurement(station.id, station.name,
Instant.parse(parts[0]), Double.valueOf(parts[1]));
}
)
.groupByKey() (4)
.aggregate( (5)
Aggregation::new,
(stationId, value, aggregation) -> aggregation.updateFrom(value),
Materialized.<Integer, Aggregation> as(storeSupplier)
.withKeySerde(Serdes.Integer())
.withValueSerde(aggregationSerde)
)
.toStream()
.to( (6)
TEMPERATURES_AGGREGATED_TOPIC,
Produced.with(Serdes.Integer(), aggregationSerde)
);
return builder.build();
}
}
1 | The weather-stations table is read into a GlobalKTable , representing the current state of each weather station |
2 | The temperature-values topic is read into a KStream ; whenever a new message arrives to this topic, the pipeline will be processed for this measurement |
3 | The message from the temperature-values topic is joined with the corresponding weather station, using the topic’s key (weather station id); the join result contains the data from the measurement and associated weather station message |
4 | The values are grouped by message key (the weather station id) |
5 | Within each group, all the measurements of that station are aggregated, by keeping track of minimum and maximum values and calculating the average value of all measurements of that station (see the Aggregation type) |
6 | The results of the pipeline are written out to the temperatures-aggregated topic |
The Kafka Streams extension is configured via the Quarkus configuration file application.properties
.
Create the file aggregator/src/main/resources/application.properties
with the following contents:
quarkus.kafka-streams.bootstrap-servers=localhost:9092
quarkus.kafka-streams.application-server=${hostname}:8080
quarkus.kafka-streams.topics=weather-stations,temperature-values
# pass-through options
kafka-streams.cache.max.bytes.buffering=10240
kafka-streams.commit.interval.ms=1000
kafka-streams.metadata.max.age.ms=500
kafka-streams.auto.offset.reset=earliest
kafka-streams.metrics.recording.level=DEBUG
The options with the quarkus.kafka-streams
prefix can be changed dynamically at application startup,
e.g. via environment variables or system properties.
bootstrap-servers
and application-server
are mapped to the Kafka Streams properties bootstrap.servers
and application.server
, respectively.
topics
is specific to Quarkus: the application will wait for all the given topics to exist before launching the Kafka Streams engine.
This is to done to gracefully await the creation of topics that don’t yet exist at application startup time.
Alternatively, you can use kafka.bootstrap.servers instead of quarkus.kafka-streams.bootstrap-servers as you did in the generator project above.
|
Once you are ready to promote your application into production, consider changing the above configuration values. While |
All the properties within the kafka-streams
namespace are passed through as-is to the Kafka Streams engine.
Changing their values requires a rebuild of the application.
Building and Running the Applications
We now can build the producer
and aggregator
applications:
./mvnw clean package -f producer/pom.xml
./mvnw clean package -f aggregator/pom.xml
Instead of running them directly on the host machine using the Quarkus dev mode,
we’re going to package them into container images and launch them via Docker Compose.
This is done in order to demonstrate scaling the aggregator
aggregation to multiple nodes later on.
The Dockerfile
created by Quarkus by default needs one adjustment for the aggregator
application in order to run the Kafka Streams pipeline.
To do so, edit the file aggregator/src/main/docker/Dockerfile.jvm
and replace the line FROM fabric8/java-alpine-openjdk8-jre
with FROM fabric8/java-centos-openjdk8-jdk
.
Next create a Docker Compose file (docker-compose.yaml
) for spinning up the two applications as well as Apache Kafka and ZooKeeper like so:
version: '3.5'
services:
zookeeper:
image: quay.io/strimzi/kafka:0.41.0-kafka-3.7.0
command: [
"sh", "-c",
"bin/zookeeper-server-start.sh config/zookeeper.properties"
]
ports:
- "2181:2181"
environment:
LOG_DIR: /tmp/logs
networks:
- kafkastreams-network
kafka:
image: quay.io/strimzi/kafka:0.41.0-kafka-3.7.0
command: [
"sh", "-c",
"bin/kafka-server-start.sh config/server.properties --override listeners=$${KAFKA_LISTENERS} --override advertised.listeners=$${KAFKA_ADVERTISED_LISTENERS} --override zookeeper.connect=$${KAFKA_ZOOKEEPER_CONNECT} --override num.partitions=$${KAFKA_NUM_PARTITIONS}"
]
depends_on:
- zookeeper
ports:
- "9092:9092"
environment:
LOG_DIR: "/tmp/logs"
KAFKA_ADVERTISED_LISTENERS: PLAINTEXT://kafka:9092
KAFKA_LISTENERS: PLAINTEXT://0.0.0.0:9092
KAFKA_ZOOKEEPER_CONNECT: zookeeper:2181
KAFKA_NUM_PARTITIONS: 3
networks:
- kafkastreams-network
producer:
image: quarkus-quickstarts/kafka-streams-producer:1.0
build:
context: producer
dockerfile: src/main/docker/Dockerfile.${QUARKUS_MODE:-jvm}
environment:
KAFKA_BOOTSTRAP_SERVERS: kafka:9092
networks:
- kafkastreams-network
aggregator:
image: quarkus-quickstarts/kafka-streams-aggregator:1.0
build:
context: aggregator
dockerfile: src/main/docker/Dockerfile.${QUARKUS_MODE:-jvm}
environment:
QUARKUS_KAFKA_STREAMS_BOOTSTRAP_SERVERS: kafka:9092
networks:
- kafkastreams-network
networks:
kafkastreams-network:
name: ks
To launch all the containers, building the producer
and aggregator
container images,
run docker-compose up --build
.
Instead of QUARKUS_KAFKA_STREAMS_BOOTSTRAP_SERVERS , you can use KAFKA_BOOTSTRAP_SERVERS .
|
You should see log statements from the producer
application about messages being sent to the "temperature-values" topic.
Now run an instance of the debezium/tooling image, attaching to the same network all the other containers run in. This image provides several useful tools such as kafkacat and httpie:
docker run --tty --rm -i --network ks debezium/tooling:1.1
Within the tooling container, run kafkacat to examine the results of the streaming pipeline:
kafkacat -b kafka:9092 -C -o beginning -q -t temperatures-aggregated
{"avg":34.7,"count":4,"max":49.4,"min":16.8,"stationId":9,"stationName":"Marrakesh","sum":138.8}
{"avg":15.7,"count":1,"max":15.7,"min":15.7,"stationId":2,"stationName":"Snowdonia","sum":15.7}
{"avg":12.8,"count":7,"max":25.5,"min":-13.8,"stationId":7,"stationName":"Porthsmouth","sum":89.7}
...
You should see new values arrive as the producer continues to emit temperature measurements, each value on the outbound topic showing the minimum, maximum and average temperature values of the represented weather station.
Interactive Queries
Subscribing to the temperatures-aggregated
topic is a great way to react to any new temperature values.
It’s a bit wasteful though if you’re just interested in the latest aggregated value for a given weather station.
This is where Kafka Streams interactive queries shine:
they let you directly query the underlying state store of the pipeline for the value associated to a given key.
By exposing a simple REST endpoint which queries the state store,
the latest aggregation result can be retrieved without having to subscribe to any Kafka topic.
Let’s begin by creating a new class InteractiveQueries
in the file aggregator/src/main/java/org/acme/kafka/streams/aggregator/streams/InteractiveQueries.java
:
one more method to the KafkaStreamsPipeline
class which obtains the current state for a given key:
package org.acme.kafka.streams.aggregator.streams;
import jakarta.enterprise.context.ApplicationScoped;
import jakarta.inject.Inject;
import org.acme.kafka.streams.aggregator.model.Aggregation;
import org.acme.kafka.streams.aggregator.model.WeatherStationData;
import org.apache.kafka.streams.KafkaStreams;
import org.apache.kafka.streams.errors.InvalidStateStoreException;
import org.apache.kafka.streams.state.QueryableStoreTypes;
import org.apache.kafka.streams.state.ReadOnlyKeyValueStore;
@ApplicationScoped
public class InteractiveQueries {
@Inject
KafkaStreams streams;
public GetWeatherStationDataResult getWeatherStationData(int id) {
Aggregation result = getWeatherStationStore().get(id);
if (result != null) {
return GetWeatherStationDataResult.found(WeatherStationData.from(result)); (1)
}
else {
return GetWeatherStationDataResult.notFound(); (2)
}
}
private ReadOnlyKeyValueStore<Integer, Aggregation> getWeatherStationStore() {
while (true) {
try {
return streams.store(TopologyProducer.WEATHER_STATIONS_STORE, QueryableStoreTypes.keyValueStore());
} catch (InvalidStateStoreException e) {
// ignore, store not ready yet
}
}
}
}
1 | A value for the given station id was found, so that value will be returned |
2 | No value was found, either because a non-existing station was queried or no measurement exists yet for the given station |
Also create the method’s return type in the file aggregator/src/main/java/org/acme/kafka/streams/aggregator/streams/GetWeatherStationDataResult.java
:
package org.acme.kafka.streams.aggregator.streams;
import java.util.Optional;
import java.util.OptionalInt;
import org.acme.kafka.streams.aggregator.model.WeatherStationData;
public class GetWeatherStationDataResult {
private static GetWeatherStationDataResult NOT_FOUND =
new GetWeatherStationDataResult(null);
private final WeatherStationData result;
private GetWeatherStationDataResult(WeatherStationData result) {
this.result = result;
}
public static GetWeatherStationDataResult found(WeatherStationData data) {
return new GetWeatherStationDataResult(data);
}
public static GetWeatherStationDataResult notFound() {
return NOT_FOUND;
}
public Optional<WeatherStationData> getResult() {
return Optional.ofNullable(result);
}
}
Also create aggregator/src/main/java/org/acme/kafka/streams/aggregator/model/WeatherStationData.java
,
which represents the actual aggregation result for a weather station:
package org.acme.kafka.streams.aggregator.model;
import io.quarkus.runtime.annotations.RegisterForReflection;
@RegisterForReflection
public class WeatherStationData {
public int stationId;
public String stationName;
public double min = Double.MAX_VALUE;
public double max = Double.MIN_VALUE;
public int count;
public double avg;
private WeatherStationData(int stationId, String stationName, double min, double max,
int count, double avg) {
this.stationId = stationId;
this.stationName = stationName;
this.min = min;
this.max = max;
this.count = count;
this.avg = avg;
}
public static WeatherStationData from(Aggregation aggregation) {
return new WeatherStationData(
aggregation.stationId,
aggregation.stationName,
aggregation.min,
aggregation.max,
aggregation.count,
aggregation.avg);
}
}
We now can add a simple REST endpoint (aggregator/src/main/java/org/acme/kafka/streams/aggregator/rest/WeatherStationEndpoint.java
),
which invokes getWeatherStationData()
and returns the data to the client:
package org.acme.kafka.streams.aggregator.rest;
import java.net.URI;
import java.net.URISyntaxException;
import java.util.List;
import jakarta.enterprise.context.ApplicationScoped;
import jakarta.inject.Inject;
import jakarta.ws.rs.GET;
import jakarta.ws.rs.Path;
import jakarta.ws.rs.core.MediaType;
import jakarta.ws.rs.core.Response;
import jakarta.ws.rs.core.Response.Status;
import org.acme.kafka.streams.aggregator.streams.GetWeatherStationDataResult;
import org.acme.kafka.streams.aggregator.streams.KafkaStreamsPipeline;
@ApplicationScoped
@Path("/weather-stations")
public class WeatherStationEndpoint {
@Inject
InteractiveQueries interactiveQueries;
@GET
@Path("/data/{id}")
public Response getWeatherStationData(int id) {
GetWeatherStationDataResult result = interactiveQueries.getWeatherStationData(id);
if (result.getResult().isPresent()) { (1)
return Response.ok(result.getResult().get()).build();
}
else {
return Response.status(Status.NOT_FOUND.getStatusCode(),
"No data found for weather station " + id).build();
}
}
}
1 | Depending on whether a value was obtained, either return that value or a 404 response |
With this code in place, it’s time to rebuild the application and the aggregator
service in Docker Compose:
./mvnw clean package -f aggregator/pom.xml
docker-compose stop aggregator
docker-compose up --build -d
This will rebuild the aggregator
container and restart its service.
Once that’s done, you can invoke the service’s REST API to obtain the temperature data for one of the existing stations.
To do so, you can use httpie
in the tooling container launched before:
http aggregator:8080/weather-stations/data/1
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Connection: keep-alive
Content-Length: 85
Content-Type: application/json
Date: Tue, 18 Jun 2019 19:29:16 GMT
{
"avg": 12.9,
"count": 146,
"max": 41.0,
"min": -25.6,
"stationId": 1,
"stationName": "Hamburg"
}
Scaling Out
A very interesting trait of Kafka Streams applications is that they can be scaled out, i.e. the load and state can be distributed amongst multiple application instances running the same pipeline. Each node will then contain a subset of the aggregation results, but Kafka Streams provides you with an API to obtain the information which node is hosting a given key. The application can then either fetch the data directly from the other instance, or simply point the client to the location of that other node.
Launching multiple instances of the aggregator
application will make look the overall architecture like so:
The InteractiveQueries
class must be adjusted slightly for this distributed architecture:
public GetWeatherStationDataResult getWeatherStationData(int id) {
StreamsMetadata metadata = streams.metadataForKey( (1)
TopologyProducer.WEATHER_STATIONS_STORE,
id,
Serdes.Integer().serializer()
);
if (metadata == null || metadata == StreamsMetadata.NOT_AVAILABLE) {
LOG.warn("Found no metadata for key {}", id);
return GetWeatherStationDataResult.notFound();
}
else if (metadata.host().equals(host)) { (2)
LOG.info("Found data for key {} locally", id);
Aggregation result = getWeatherStationStore().get(id);
if (result != null) {
return GetWeatherStationDataResult.found(WeatherStationData.from(result));
}
else {
return GetWeatherStationDataResult.notFound();
}
}
else { (3)
LOG.info(
"Found data for key {} on remote host {}:{}",
id,
metadata.host(),
metadata.port()
);
return GetWeatherStationDataResult.foundRemotely(metadata.host(), metadata.port());
}
}
public List<PipelineMetadata> getMetaData() { (4)
return streams.allMetadataForStore(TopologyProducer.WEATHER_STATIONS_STORE)
.stream()
.map(m -> new PipelineMetadata(
m.hostInfo().host() + ":" + m.hostInfo().port(),
m.topicPartitions()
.stream()
.map(TopicPartition::toString)
.collect(Collectors.toSet()))
)
.collect(Collectors.toList());
}
1 | The streams metadata for the given weather station id is obtained |
2 | The given key (weather station id) is maintained by the local application node, i.e. it can answer the query itself |
3 | The given key is maintained by another application node; in this case the information about that node (host and port) will be returned |
4 | The getMetaData() method is added to provide callers with a list of all the nodes in the application cluster. |
The GetWeatherStationDataResult
type must be adjusted accordingly:
package org.acme.kafka.streams.aggregator.streams;
import java.util.Optional;
import java.util.OptionalInt;
import org.acme.kafka.streams.aggregator.model.WeatherStationData;
public class GetWeatherStationDataResult {
private static GetWeatherStationDataResult NOT_FOUND =
new GetWeatherStationDataResult(null, null, null);
private final WeatherStationData result;
private final String host;
private final Integer port;
private GetWeatherStationDataResult(WeatherStationData result, String host,
Integer port) {
this.result = result;
this.host = host;
this.port = port;
}
public static GetWeatherStationDataResult found(WeatherStationData data) {
return new GetWeatherStationDataResult(data, null, null);
}
public static GetWeatherStationDataResult foundRemotely(String host, int port) {
return new GetWeatherStationDataResult(null, host, port);
}
public static GetWeatherStationDataResult notFound() {
return NOT_FOUND;
}
public Optional<WeatherStationData> getResult() {
return Optional.ofNullable(result);
}
public Optional<String> getHost() {
return Optional.ofNullable(host);
}
public OptionalInt getPort() {
return port != null ? OptionalInt.of(port) : OptionalInt.empty();
}
}
Also, the return type for getMetaData()
must be defined
(aggregator/src/main/java/org/acme/kafka/streams/aggregator/streams/PipelineMetadata.java
):
package org.acme.kafka.streams.aggregator.streams;
import java.util.Set;
public class PipelineMetadata {
public String host;
public Set<String> partitions;
public PipelineMetadata(String host, Set<String> partitions) {
this.host = host;
this.partitions = partitions;
}
}
Lastly, the REST endpoint class must be updated:
package org.acme.kafka.streams.aggregator.rest;
import java.net.URI;
import java.net.URISyntaxException;
import java.util.List;
import jakarta.enterprise.context.ApplicationScoped;
import jakarta.inject.Inject;
import jakarta.ws.rs.Consumes;
import jakarta.ws.rs.GET;
import jakarta.ws.rs.Path;
import jakarta.ws.rs.Produces;
import jakarta.ws.rs.core.MediaType;
import jakarta.ws.rs.core.Response;
import jakarta.ws.rs.core.Response.Status;
import org.acme.kafka.streams.aggregator.streams.GetWeatherStationDataResult;
import org.acme.kafka.streams.aggregator.streams.KafkaStreamsPipeline;
import org.acme.kafka.streams.aggregator.streams.PipelineMetadata;
@ApplicationScoped
@Path("/weather-stations")
public class WeatherStationEndpoint {
@Inject
InteractiveQueries interactiveQueries;
@GET
@Path("/data/{id}")
@Consumes(MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON)
@Produces(MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON)
public Response getWeatherStationData(int id) {
GetWeatherStationDataResult result = interactiveQueries.getWeatherStationData(id);
if (result.getResult().isPresent()) { (1)
return Response.ok(result.getResult().get()).build();
}
else if (result.getHost().isPresent()) { (2)
URI otherUri = getOtherUri(result.getHost().get(), result.getPort().getAsInt(),
id);
return Response.seeOther(otherUri).build();
}
else { (3)
return Response.status(Status.NOT_FOUND.getStatusCode(),
"No data found for weather station " + id).build();
}
}
@GET
@Path("/meta-data")
@Produces(MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON)
public List<PipelineMetadata> getMetaData() { (4)
return interactiveQueries.getMetaData();
}
private URI getOtherUri(String host, int port, int id) {
try {
return new URI("http://" + host + ":" + port + "/weather-stations/data/" + id);
}
catch (URISyntaxException e) {
throw new RuntimeException(e);
}
}
}
1 | The data was found locally, so return it |
2 | The data is maintained by another node, so reply with a redirect (HTTP status code 303) if the data for the given key is stored on one of the other nodes. |
3 | No data was found for the given weather station id |
4 | Exposes information about all the hosts forming the application cluster |
Now stop the aggregator
service again and rebuild it.
Then let’s spin up three instances of it:
./mvnw clean package -f aggregator/pom.xml
docker-compose stop aggregator
docker-compose up --build -d --scale aggregator=3
When invoking the REST API on any of the three instances, it might either be that the aggregation for the requested weather station id is stored locally on the node receiving the query, or it could be stored on one of the other two nodes.
As the load balancer of Docker Compose will distribute requests to the aggregator
service in a round-robin fashion,
we’ll invoke the actual nodes directly.
The application exposes information about all the host names via REST:
http aggregator:8080/weather-stations/meta-data
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Connection: keep-alive
Content-Length: 202
Content-Type: application/json
Date: Tue, 18 Jun 2019 20:00:23 GMT
[
{
"host": "2af13fe516a9:8080",
"partitions": [
"temperature-values-2"
]
},
{
"host": "32cc8309611b:8080",
"partitions": [
"temperature-values-1"
]
},
{
"host": "1eb39af8d587:8080",
"partitions": [
"temperature-values-0"
]
}
]
Retrieve the data from one of the three hosts shown in the response (your actual host names will differ):
http 2af13fe516a9:8080/weather-stations/data/1
If that node holds the data for key "1", you’ll get a response like this:
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Connection: keep-alive
Content-Length: 74
Content-Type: application/json
Date: Tue, 11 Jun 2019 19:16:31 GMT
{
"avg": 11.9,
"count": 259,
"max": 50.0,
"min": -30.1,
"stationId": 1,
"stationName": "Hamburg"
}
Otherwise, the service will send a redirect:
HTTP/1.1 303 See Other
Connection: keep-alive
Content-Length: 0
Date: Tue, 18 Jun 2019 20:01:03 GMT
Location: http://1eb39af8d587:8080/weather-stations/data/1
You can also have httpie automatically follow the redirect by passing the --follow option
:
http --follow 2af13fe516a9:8080/weather-stations/data/1
Running Natively
The Quarkus extension for Kafka Streams enables the execution of stream processing applications natively via GraalVM without further configuration.
To run both the producer
and aggregator
applications in native mode,
the Maven builds can be executed using -Dnative
:
./mvnw clean package -f producer/pom.xml -Dnative -Dnative-image.container-runtime=docker
./mvnw clean package -f aggregator/pom.xml -Dnative -Dnative-image.container-runtime=docker
Now create an environment variable named QUARKUS_MODE
and with value set to "native":
export QUARKUS_MODE=native
This is used by the Docker Compose file to use the correct Dockerfile
when building the producer
and aggregator
images.
The Kafka Streams application can work with less than 50 MB RSS in native mode.
To do so, add the Xmx
option to the program invocation in aggregator/src/main/docker/Dockerfile.native
:
CMD ["./application", "-Dquarkus.http.host=0.0.0.0", "-Xmx32m"]
Now start Docker Compose as described above (don’t forget to rebuild the container images).
Kafka Streams Health Checks
If you are using the quarkus-smallrye-health
extension, quarkus-kafka-streams
will automatically add:
-
a readiness health check to validate that all topics declared in the
quarkus.kafka-streams.topics
property are created, -
a liveness health check based on the Kafka Streams state.
So when you access the /q/health
endpoint of your application you will have information about the state of the Kafka Streams and the available and/or missing topics.
This is an example of when the status is DOWN
:
curl -i http://aggregator:8080/q/health
HTTP/1.1 503 Service Unavailable
content-type: application/json; charset=UTF-8
content-length: 454
{
"status": "DOWN",
"checks": [
{
"name": "Kafka Streams state health check", (1)
"status": "DOWN",
"data": {
"state": "CREATED"
}
},
{
"name": "Kafka Streams topics health check", (2)
"status": "DOWN",
"data": {
"available_topics": "weather-stations,temperature-values",
"missing_topics": "hygrometry-values"
}
}
]
}
1 | Liveness health check. Also available at /q/health/live endpoint. |
2 | Readiness health check. Also available at /q/health/ready endpoint. |
So as you can see, the status is DOWN
as soon as one of the quarkus.kafka-streams.topics
is missing or the Kafka Streams state
is not RUNNING
.
If no topics are available, the available_topics
key will not be present in the data
field of the Kafka Streams topics health check
.
As well as if no topics are missing, the missing_topics
key will not be present in the data
field of the Kafka Streams topics health check
.
You can of course disable the health check of the quarkus-kafka-streams
extension by setting the quarkus.kafka-streams.health.enabled
property to false
in your application.properties
.
Obviously you can create your liveness and readiness probes based on the respective endpoints /q/health/live
and /q/health/ready
.
Liveness health check
Here is an example of the liveness check:
curl -i http://aggregator:8080/q/health/live
HTTP/1.1 503 Service Unavailable
content-type: application/json; charset=UTF-8
content-length: 225
{
"status": "DOWN",
"checks": [
{
"name": "Kafka Streams state health check",
"status": "DOWN",
"data": {
"state": "CREATED"
}
}
]
}
The state
is coming from the KafkaStreams.State
enum.
Readiness health check
Here is an example of the readiness check:
curl -i http://aggregator:8080/q/health/ready
HTTP/1.1 503 Service Unavailable
content-type: application/json; charset=UTF-8
content-length: 265
{
"status": "DOWN",
"checks": [
{
"name": "Kafka Streams topics health check",
"status": "DOWN",
"data": {
"missing_topics": "weather-stations,temperature-values"
}
}
]
}
Going Further
This guide has shown how you can build stream processing applications using Quarkus and the Kafka Streams APIs, both in JVM and native modes. For running your KStreams application in production, you could also add health checks and metrics for the data pipeline. Refer to the Quarkus guides on Micrometer, SmallRye Metrics, and SmallRye Health to learn more.
配置参考
Configuration property fixed at build time - All other configuration properties are overridable at runtime
Configuration property |
类型 |
默认 |
---|---|---|
Whether a health check is published in case the smallrye-health extension is present (defaults to true). Environment variable: Show more |
boolean |
|
A unique identifier for this Kafka Streams application. If not set, defaults to quarkus.application.name. Environment variable: Show more |
string |
|
A comma-separated list of host:port pairs identifying the Kafka bootstrap server(s). If not set, fallback to Environment variable: Show more |
list of host:port |
|
A unique identifier of this application instance, typically in the form host:port. Environment variable: Show more |
string |
|
A comma-separated list of topic names. The pipeline will only be started once all these topics are present in the Kafka cluster and Environment variable: Show more |
list of string |
|
Timeout to wait for topic names to be returned from admin client. If set to 0 (or negative), Environment variable: Show more |
|
|
The schema registry key. Different schema registry libraries expect a registry URL in different configuration properties. For Apicurio Registry, use Environment variable: Show more |
string |
|
The schema registry URL. Environment variable: Show more |
string |
|
The security protocol to use See https://docs.confluent.io/current/streams/developer-guide/security.html#security-example Environment variable: Show more |
string |
|
SASL mechanism used for client connections Environment variable: Show more |
string |
|
JAAS login context parameters for SASL connections in the format used by JAAS configuration files Environment variable: Show more |
string |
|
The fully qualified name of a SASL client callback handler class Environment variable: Show more |
string |
|
The fully qualified name of a SASL login callback handler class Environment variable: Show more |
string |
|
The fully qualified name of a class that implements the Login interface Environment variable: Show more |
string |
|
The Kerberos principal name that Kafka runs as Environment variable: Show more |
string |
|
Kerberos kinit command path Environment variable: Show more |
string |
|
Login thread will sleep until the specified window factor of time from last refresh Environment variable: Show more |
double |
|
Percentage of random jitter added to the renewal time Environment variable: Show more |
double |
|
Percentage of random jitter added to the renewal time Environment variable: Show more |
long |
|
Login refresh thread will sleep until the specified window factor relative to the credential’s lifetime has been reached- Environment variable: Show more |
double |
|
The maximum amount of random jitter relative to the credential’s lifetime Environment variable: Show more |
double |
|
The desired minimum duration for the login refresh thread to wait before refreshing a credential Environment variable: Show more |
||
The amount of buffer duration before credential expiration to maintain when refreshing a credential Environment variable: Show more |
||
The SSL protocol used to generate the SSLContext Environment variable: Show more |
string |
|
The name of the security provider used for SSL connections Environment variable: Show more |
string |
|
A list of cipher suites Environment variable: Show more |
string |
|
The list of protocols enabled for SSL connections Environment variable: Show more |
string |
|
Trust store type Environment variable: Show more |
string |
|
Trust store location Environment variable: Show more |
string |
|
Trust store password Environment variable: Show more |
string |
|
Trust store certificates Environment variable: Show more |
string |
|
Key store type Environment variable: Show more |
string |
|
Key store location Environment variable: Show more |
string |
|
Key store password Environment variable: Show more |
string |
|
Key store private key Environment variable: Show more |
string |
|
Key store certificate chain Environment variable: Show more |
string |
|
Password of the private key in the key store Environment variable: Show more |
string |
|
The algorithm used by key manager factory for SSL connections Environment variable: Show more |
string |
|
The algorithm used by trust manager factory for SSL connections Environment variable: Show more |
string |
|
The endpoint identification algorithm to validate server hostname using server certificate Environment variable: Show more |
string |
|
The SecureRandom PRNG implementation to use for SSL cryptography operations Environment variable: Show more |
string |
About the Duration format
To write duration values, use the standard You can also use a simplified format, starting with a number:
In other cases, the simplified format is translated to the
|