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Example project to play around with Apache Kafka Connect. There are examples to develop and deploy Kafka Connect plugins (connectors, transforms, etc.) from a Java Maven project.

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Ready, Steady, Connect - A Kafka Connect Quickstart

'Ready, Steady, Connect - A Kafka Connect Quickstart' is an example project to play around with Apache Kafka Connect. This project contains examples and tools to develop, inspect and deploy Kafka Connect plugins (connectors, transforms, etc.) from a Java Maven project.

This project uses the following versions:

  • Confluent Platform 7.5.2 (Docker images)
  • Kafka 3.5.x
  • Java 11

The following components are part of the quickstart project:

  • The Docker image (Dockerfile) has two parts. A builder image to build the example connector from the Java source code and the main image to run a Kafka Connect container with all the Kafka Connect plugin examples and some plugins from conlfuent-hub.
  • The Java source code (src) of all the Kafka Connect plugin (connectors, transforms, etc.) examples.
  • The Docker Compose (docker-compose.yaml) for setting up and running the whole infrastructure ( Kafka broker, zookeeper, etc).

The following tools are available when you run the whole infrastructure with Docker Compose:

  • Kafka Connect UI (Lenses.io) is a web tool for Kafka Connect for setting up and managing connectors for multiple connect clusters.
  • Kafka UI (Provectus) is a web UI for monitoring and management of Apache Kafka clusters.

CI Build:

  • Builds the Java code and Docker image. Build Java & Docker

Strimzi

The examples were adapted to the apache kafka Strimzi Docker images.

  • Strimzi 0.38.0 (Docker images)
  • Kafka 3.6.x
  • Java 11

When you want to run the examples with Strimzi based images just run

docker compose -f strimzi-compose.yaml up --build

For more details have a look at the files strimzi.Dockerfile and strimzi-compose.yaml.

Getting Started

Build and Startup the Environment

To use the custom sink and source connectors we have to build and start the Docker containers.

docker compose up --build

This will start the following Docker containers:

  • zookeeper => Apache Zookeeper (confluentinc/cp-zookeeper)
  • broker => Apache Kafka (confluentinc/cp-kafka)
  • schema-registry=> Confluent Schema Registry (confluentinc/cp-schema-registry)
  • connect=> Kafka Connect. This services uses a custom Docker image which is based on confluentinc/cp-kafka-connect-base.
  • connect-ui => Kafka Connect UI from Lenses.io (landoop/kafka-connect-ui)
  • kafka-ui => Kafka UI from Provectus (provectuslabs/kafka-ui)

Note The docker containers have all the prefix quickstart. To get the logs from the container connect just run docker logs quickstart-connect

When all containers are started you can access different services like

As default Avro will be used as value and key convertor. If you want to change the default settings just adapt the docker-compose.yml file for the Kafka Connect service or override the settings in connector config.

environment:
  CONNECT_KEY_CONVERTER: io.confluent.connect.avro.AvroConverter
  CONNECT_KEY_CONVERTER_SCHEMA_REGISTRY_URL: http://schema-registry:8081

  CONNECT_VALUE_CONVERTER: io.confluent.connect.avro.AvroConverter
  CONNECT_VALUE_CONVERTER_SCHEMA_REGISTRY_URL: http://schema-registry:8081

Or set the converter in connector config:

{
  "name": "random-source-schemaless",
  "config": {
    "key.converter": "org.apache.kafka.connect.storage.StringConverter",
    "value.converter": "org.apache.kafka.connect.json.JsonConverter"
  }
}

Let’s Deploy Some Connectors

First we have to check if Kafka Connect is available.

curl http://localhost:8083/

When Kafka Connect is up and running you should see a response like this.

{
  "version":"7.5.2-ccs",
  "commit":"8f1346537b7bbf271a32d604161e972ff9b9f9a3",
  "kafka_cluster_id":"IU94lDIuQ4WRpRYToeqwmA"
}

In the config directory are the connector configuration files for the custom source and sink connector.

Source Connector

Avro

This will install the RandomSourceConnector (random-source-avro.json) which publishes random data in the Kafka topic random-data-avro.

Note In our configuration Avro is set as default. So we don't have to set the value.converter in the connector configuration.

curl -X POST http://localhost:8083/connectors  \
    -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
    --data @config/random-source-avro.json
JSON (embedded schema)

The same source can be deployed with a JSON converter.

"value.converter":"org.apache.kafka.connect.json.JsonConverter",
"value.converter.schemas.enable":"true",

Here the message will contain the schema and payload as top-level elements in the JSON.

curl -X POST http://localhost:8083/connectors  \
    -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
    --data @config/random-source-json.json
JSON (schemaless)

Or as JSON without a schema.

"value.converter":"org.apache.kafka.connect.json.JsonConverter",
"value.converter.schemas.enable":"false",

This will only contain the raw JSON message.

curl -X POST http://localhost:8083/connectors  \
    -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
    --data @config/random-source-schemaless.json

Sink Connector

Avro

With the following command we install the LogSinkConnector (log-sink-avro.json) which will log the data from the Kafka topic random-data to the console.

Note In our configuration Avro is set as default. So we don't have to set the value.converter in the connector configuration.

curl -X POST http://localhost:8083/connectors \
    -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
    --data @config/log-sink-avro.json
JSON (embedded schema)

The same sink can be deployed with JSON converter. Here the message will contain the schema and payload top-level elements in the JSON.

curl -X POST http://localhost:8083/connectors \
    -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
    --data @config/log-sink-json.json
JSON (schemaless)

Or as JSON without a schema.

curl -X POST http://localhost:8083/connectors \
    -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
    --data @config/log-sink-schemaless.json

Let’s See What We Got!

With the following command you should se all the connectors we have deployed so fare.

curl http://localhost:8083/connectors

When everything went well yo should see an output like this:

[
  "random-source-json",
  "random-source-schemaless",
  "random-source-avro",
  "log-sink-json",
  "log-sink-avro",
  "log-sink-schemaless"
]

We can also display the state and configuration of all connectors with one simple command.

curl "http://localhost:8083/connectors?expand=status&expand=info"

A detail description of the Kafka Connect Rest API can be found here

How to Install Other Connectors

If you want to install a special Connect plugin you have three options:

  1. Download the JAR file and copy it in the mount directory. This directory will be automatically mounted as Docker volume to the Kafka Connect plugin path /etc/kafka-connect/jars (CONNECT_PLUGIN_PATH).
services:
  connect:
    environment:
      CONNECT_PLUGIN_PATH: "/usr/share/java,/usr/share/confluent-hub-components,/etc/kafka-connect/jars"
    volumes:
      - ./mount:/etc/kafka-connect/jars
  1. Modify the Dockerfile and install the plugin with the confluent-hub CLI.
FROM confluentinc/cp-kafka-connect-base:7.5.2

RUN confluent-hub install --no-prompt confluentinc/kafka-connect-datagen:latest
  1. Build a connector plugin fat jar with Maven and add it to Kafka Connect plugin path.
FROM confluentinc/cp-kafka-connect-base:7.5.2

COPY target/connect-quickstart-*.jar /usr/share/java/quickstart

Example Plugins (Java)

Here are some examples of Kafka Connect Plugins which can be used to build your own plugins:

  • Sink Connector - loading data from kafka and store it into an external system (eg. database).
  • Source Connector - loading data from an external system and store it into kafka.
  • Single Message Transforms (SMTs) - transforms a message when processed with a connector.
  • Predicates - Transforms can be configured with a predicate so that transforms only applies when the condition is true (KIP-585).
  • Config Providers - can load configurations for the connectors from external resources.
  • Rest Extensions - with the Connect Rest Extension Plugin (KIP-285) you can extend the existing Rest API.
  • Converters - provide support for translating between Kafka Connect's runtime data format and the raw payload of the Kafka messages.

Here are some examples of the general Kafka Plugins which can be used with Kafka Connect:

  • Kafka Consumer - the Producer / Consumer Interceptors (KIP-42) can be used to intercept Kafka messages. These are part of the Kafka Client API and not Connect Plugins, but can be used to extend Kafka Connect.
  • Producer Interceptors - the Producer / Consumer Interceptors (KIP-42) can be used to intercept Kafka messages. These are part of the Kafka Client API and not Connect Plugins, but can be used to extend Kafka Connect.
  • Metrics Reporter - can be configured to report metrics from Kafka Connect.

Source Connector

The RandomSourceConnector will create random data. The output data could look like this:

{
  "value": 5860906703091898043,
  "count": 34,
  "message": "Task Id: 0",
  "timestamp": "2020-11-06T18:28:31.314616Z"
}

The following configuration options are possible.

  • topic - the kafka topic where the data will be published.
  • poll.interval.ms - the interval in milliseconds the polling of data should happen. The default is 1000 milliseconds.

Sink Connector

LogSinkConnector

The LogSinkConnector will log the output of a message. The following configuration options exists.

  • log.level: [INFO, 'DEBUG', 'WARN', 'ERROR', 'TRACE']. The log level which should be used. Default is INFO.
  • log.content: [ALL, 'KEY', 'VALUE', 'KEY_VALUE']. Which part of the message should be logged the key, the value, key & value or the whole record (ALL). Default is ALL.
  • log.format. The format of the log message. Default is {} {}.

Single Message Transforms (SMTs)

Single Message Transformations (SMTs) are applied to messages as they go through Connect.

UUIDField

The UUIDField transforms adds a UUID field to the record. This transform can be used to add a UUID as key or value to the Kafka message.

"transforms":"UUIDField",
"transforms.UUIDField.type":"ch.yax.connect.quickstart.transforms.UUIDField$Value",
"transforms.UUIDField.field":"my-uuid"

Before the transformation the message might look like this.

{
  "value": 5860906703091898043,
  "count": 34
}

After the transform the message contains the new field my-uuid with a generated uuid as value.

{
  "value": 5860906703091898043,
  "count": 34,
  "my-uuid": "de32f3bf-b65a-41ab-a9c3-db4956a4e7db"
}

Predicates

Transformations can be configured with predicates so that the transformation is applied only to records which satisfy a condition. The EqualsField Predicate will test a spefic vale of field and apply the transformation only when the value is equal to value set by expected.value.

For example to enable the Predicate for the existing transform UUIDField you add the following configuration to your connector. This will add the UUIDField transform only when the value in the message field ìs equals to the expected value task id: 0. With ignore.case=true set to true lowercase and uppercase letters are treated as equivalent.

transforms.UUIDField.predicate=EqualsField
predicates=EqualsField
predicates.EqualsField.type=ch.yax.connect.quickstart.predicates.EqualsField$Value
predicates.EqualsField.field=message
predicates.EqualsField.expected.value=task id: 0
predicates.EqualsField.ignore.case=true

Config Provider

EnvironmentConfigProvider

The EnvironmentConfigProvider can be used to access Environment variables from the connector config.

Note: to register a Kafka Connect Config Provider you need to add the file org.apache.kafka.common.config.provider.ConfigProvider in META-INF/services which contains the full class name of your config provider.

The config provider EnvironmentConfigProvider supports the following config parameters:

  • BLACKLIST a list of env variables which should be filtered out. When set to "foo,bar"
CONNECT_CONFIG_PROVIDERS: "env"
CONNECT_CONFIG_PROVIDERS_ENV_CLASS: "ch.yax.connect.quickstart.config.provider.EnvironmentConfigProvider"
CONNECT_CONFIG_PROVIDERS_ENV_PARAM_BLACKLIST: "foo,bar"

With the pattern ${<CONFIG_RROVIDER>:<PATH>:<KEY>} you can access the config values from your config with ${env:my-path:my-value}. Note the path is ignored by EnvironmentConfigProvider and has no effect.

You could use the env CONFIG_POLL_INTERVAL_MS to set the configuration property poll.interval.ms in the RandomSourceConnector configuration.

connector.class=ch.yax.connect.quickstart.source.RandomSourceConnector
max.interval.ms=${env:CONFIG_POLL_INTERVAL_MS}
tasks.max=1
topic=foo

Rest Extension

HealthExtension

The HealthExtension is Rest extension which provides a health API (http://localhost:8083/health) to Kafka Connect.

curl "http://localhost:8083/health"

The response from the health API (/health) might look something like this:

{
  "status": "UP",
  "connectors": [
    {
      "status": "UP",
      "connectorName": "log-sink",
      "connectorType": "sink",
      "connectorState": "RUNNING",
      "connectorWorkerId": "connect:8083",
      "connectorErrors": null,
      "tasks": [
        {
          "taskId": 0,
          "status": "UP",
          "taskState": "RUNNING",
          "tasksWorkerId": "connect:8083",
          "taskErrors": null
        }
      ]
    },
    {
      "status": "UP",
      "connectorName": "random-source",
      "connectorType": "source",
      "connectorState": "RUNNING",
      "connectorWorkerId": "connect:8083",
      "connectorErrors": null,
      "tasks": [
        {
          "taskId": 0,
          "status": "UP",
          "taskState": "RUNNING",
          "tasksWorkerId": "connect:8083",
          "taskErrors": null
        }
      ]
    }
  ]
}

Note: to register a Kafka Connect Rest Extension you need to add the file org.apache.kafka.connect.rest.ConnectRestExtension in META-INF/services which contains the full class name of your rest extension.

To enable the Connect Rest Extensions add the following configuration:

CONNECT_REST_EXTENSION_CLASSES: "ch.yax.connect.quickstart.rest.HealthExtension"

Converter

AvroDebugConvertor

The AvroDebugConvertor is a Wrapper around the io.confluent.connect.avro.AvroConverter. The AvroDebugConvertor will just log the internal connect data structure which was created or received.

CONNECT_VALUE_CONVERTER: ch.yax.connect.quickstart.converter.AvroDebugConverter

This will display a log output the data structure which was created.

quickstart-connect | [2021-02-10 22:09:22,907] INFO Topic random-data-avro, created connect data 'SchemaAndValue{schema=Schema{ch.yax.connect.quickstart.source.RandomData:STRUCT}, value=Struct{value=7476346340551272290,count=632,message=Task Id: 1,timestamp=Wed Feb 10 22:09:22 GMT 2021}}' (ch.yax.connect.quickstart.converter.AvroDebugConverter)

It will also log the data structure which was received.

quickstart-connect | [2021-02-10 22:09:28,377] INFO Topic random-data-avro, got connect data 'Struct{value=6085501730739912467,count=633,message=Task Id: 1,timestamp=Wed Feb 10 22:09:28 GMT 2021}' and schema 'Schema{ch.yax.connect.quickstart.source.RandomData:STRUCT}' (ch.yax.connect.quickstart.converter.AvroDebugConverter)

JsonDebugConverter

A similar converter (JsonDebugConverter) exists also for theorg.apache.kafka.connect.json.JsonConverter.

value.converter=ch.yax.connect.quickstart.converter.JsonDebugConverter

Consumer / Producer Interceptor

LogConsumerInterceptor

The LogConsumerInterceptor logs part of the Kafka message (topic, timestamp, partition and offset).

To enable the LogConsumerInterceptor add the following configuration.

Note: In some cases you might add the JAR with your Interceptor into the CLASSPATH environment variable. Because adding your Interceptors into the CONNECT_PLUGIN_PATH might not work.

CONNECT_CONSUMER_INTERCEPTOR_CLASSES: "ch.yax.connect.quickstart.interceptor.LogConsumerInterceptor"

LogProducerInterceptor

The LogProducerInterceptor logs part of the Kafka message topic, timestamp and partition) before it's stored in the topic.

To enable the LogProducerInterceptor add the following configuration.

CONNECT_PRODUCER_INTERCEPTOR_CLASSES: "ch.yax.connect.quickstart.interceptor.LogProducerInterceptor"

Note: In some cases you might add the JAR with your Interceptor into the CLASSPATH environment variable. Because adding your Interceptors to the CONNECT_PLUGIN_PATH might not work.

ENV CLASSPATH=/usr/share/java/quickstart/*

Metric Reporter

LogMetricsReporter

The LogMetricsReporter will log various metrics from Kafka Connect.

To enable the LogMetricsReporter add the following configuration.

CONNECT_METRIC_REPORTERS: "ch.yax.connect.quickstart.metrics.LogMetricsReporter"

You have to add the JAR of the Metrics Report in the Java classpath. Because adding your JAR to the CONNECT_PLUGIN_PATH will not work. If you don't put the JAR in the classpath you get a ClassNotFoundException. For a production case you should separate Kafka Connect plugins from the MetricsReporters.

ENV CLASSPATH=/usr/share/java/quickstart/*

When you have some connectors running you might see some log statement like this.

[2021-02-10 23:09:41,815] INFO metricChange: name: MetricName [name=record-send-total, group=producer-topic-metrics, description=The total number of records sent for a topic., tags={client-id=producer-1, topic=docker-connect-offsets}], value: 0.0 (ch.yax.connect.quickstart.metrics.LogMetricsReporter)

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Example project to play around with Apache Kafka Connect. There are examples to develop and deploy Kafka Connect plugins (connectors, transforms, etc.) from a Java Maven project.

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