Kafka: configuration by partition or by topic? - apache-kafka

I created a topic in my kafka cluster with the following command.
/opt/kafka/bin/kafka-topics.sh --zookeeper kaf1:2181,kaf2:2181,kaf3:2181 --create --topic mytopic --partitions 10 --replication-factor 2 --config retention.bytes=1074000000 --config delete.retention.ms=6000 --config segment.bytes=105000000
So, if I understand correctly the documentation, I have a topic with 10 partitions replicate 2 times beetween my 3 kafka hosts.
Next, each kafka host must retain 1Go of data. Each segment has a size of 100Mo and all old logs will be delete after 1 minute.
Now, when I do a du -h on my logs directory on a kafka hosts, I have this:
1,2G ./mytopic-2
1,1G ./mytopic-8
1,2G ./mytopic-9
1,1G ./mytopic-6
1,1G ./mytopic-3
1,1G ./mytopic-0
1,2G ./mytopic-4
7,6G .
I thought get 1Go for the directory entirely and not for each partition.
So my question is simple, the topic configuration is for each partition or for the all topic ?
Thanks.

Please, see the picture below (distribution of partitions by the cluster nodes might be different):

Related

How to get log end offset of all partitions for a given kafka topic using kafka command line?

When I describe a kafka topic it doesn't show the log end offset of any partition but show all the other metadata such as ISR,Replicas,Leader.
How do I see a log end offset of the partition for a given topic?
Ran this: ./kafka-topics.sh --zookeeper zk-service:2181 --describe --topic "__consumer_offsets"
Output Doesn't have a offset column.
Note: Need Only the log end offset.
Since you're only looking for the log end offset for a topic, you can use kafka-run-class with the kafka.tools.GetOffsetShell class.
Assuming your topic is __consumer_offsets, you would get the end offset by running:
./kafka-run-class.sh kafka.tools.GetOffsetShell --broker-list localhost:9092 --time -1 --topic __consumer_offsets
Change the --broker-list localhost:9092 to your desired Kafka address. This will list all of the log end offsets for each partition in the topic.
install kafkacat, its an easy to use kafka tool:
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install kafkacat
kafkacat -C -b <kafka-broker-ip-and-port> -t <topic> -o -1
This will not consume anything because the offset is incremented after a message is added. But it will give you the offsets for all the partitions. Note however that this isn't the current offset that you are consuming at... The above answers will help you more in terms of looking into partition lag.
Following is the command you would need to get the offset of all partitions for a given kafka topic for a given consumer group:
kafka-consumer-groups --bootstrap-server <kafka-broker-list-with-ports> --describe --group <consumer-group-name>
Please note that the <consumer-group-name> at the end is important as the offsets are committed by consumers that are typically a part of a consumer group.
The output of this command may look something like:
TOPIC PARTITION CURRENT-OFFSET LOG-END-OFFSET LAG CONSUMER-ID HOST CLIENT-ID
<topic-name> 0 62 62 0 <consumer-id> <host> <client>
In your post however, you're trying to get this information for the internal topic __consumer_offsets so you would need a consumer group which would have consumers consuming from this internal topic. You could perhaps do the following:
kafka-console-consumer --bootstrap-server <kafka-broker-list-with-ports> --topic __consumer_offsets --formatter "kafka.coordinator.group.GroupMetadataManager\$OffsetsMessageFormatter" --max-messages 5
Output of the above command:
[<consumer-group-name>,<topic-name>,0]::[OffsetMetadata[481690879,NO_METADATA],CommitTime 1479708539051,ExpirationTime 1480313339051]
Just use the <consumer-group-name> from the output and put it in the kafka-consumer-groups command mentioned in the beginning and you'll get the offset details for all the 50 partitions for the given consumer group only.
I hope this helps.

kafka how to delete topic with no leader

I can't delete / reassign / make any change to topics without leader
reproduce:
Create a topic with ReplicationFactor=1
Shutdown the only one broker host
Use kafka-topic --delete to delete the topic
Delete process will never end (I waited for more than 6 month, and it starting to get hurt)
describe of topic
Topic:topic_73 PartitionCount:1 ReplicationFactor:1
Configs:unclean.leader.election.enable=true
Topic: topic_73 Partition: 0 Leader: -1 Replicas: 755 Isr:
broker 755 can never gone back
how can i fix this?
You can try this script to clear metadata from zookeeper and directly delete the kafka logs.
./clear.sh /path-to-kafka-logs sampletopic /path-to-kafka-bin-dir
clear.sh content is as below:
#!/bin/bash
# this script is for the situation that leader is set to -1 and there is no ISR
ZK_HOST=`hostname`
ROOT_DIR=$1
TOPIC=$2
KAFKA_LOG_DIR=$3
# make sure kafka service is stopped while running this
rm -rf ${KAFKA_LOG_DIR}/${TOPIC}*
${ROOT_DIR}/kafka/bin/kafka-topics.sh --zookeeper ${ZK_HOST}:2181 --topic ${TOPIC} --delete
${ROOT_DIR}/kafka/bin/zookeeper-shell.sh ${ZK_HOST}:2181 rmr /brokers/topics/${TOPIC}
${ROOT_DIR}/kafka/bin/zookeeper-shell.sh ${ZK_HOST}:2181 rmr /admin/delete_topics/${TOPIC}
make sure chmod +x clear.sh before using it.

Not able to create a topic on stand alone Kafka broker

I am trying to create a new topic on Kafka server. but getting below error.
Please not its a stand-alone system where there is only one broker set up.
It was working fine earlier , what i changed is just new topic name to be created. Whats wrong all of sudden ? and how it worked earlier ?
/usr/kafka_2.11-0.9.0.0# bin/kafka-topics.sh --create --zookeeper localhost:2181 --replication-factor 1 --partitions 1 --topic test00
Error while executing topic command : replication factor: 1 larger than available brokers: 0
[2016-01-25 15:42:59,115] ERROR kafka.admin.AdminOperationException: replication factor: 1 larger than available brokers: 0
Thank you.
~Sha
The replication factor needs to be of at most the number of brokers you have in your cluster - 1, this is how replication works. kafka-replication
In your example --replication-factor should be zero.

Where kafka stores partitions for the topics?

I installed kafka on a linux server. I defined a topic with a few partitions. I know that each partition is mapped to a physical file on disk, but I don't know where it is.
Where are the partition files saved ?
In your config/server.properties you'll find a section on "Log Basics". The property log.dirs is defining where your logs/partitions will be stored on disk.
By default on Linux it is stored in /tmp/kafka-logs. If you will navigate to this folder you will see something like this:
recovery-point-offset-checkpoint
replication-offset-checkpoint
topic-0
msg-0
msg-1
Which means that you have two topics (topic which has 1 partition and msg which has 2).
As it was noted by Ludd, you can find the location inside config/server.properties file by looking for log.dirs.
Try running this command
bin/kafka-topics.sh --zookeeper localhost:2181 --describe --topic test
you will get output
Topic:test Partition: 0 Leader: 1 Replicas: 1,2,0 Isr: 1,2,0
now try going to \config file
cat server.properties
and search for broker_id
if broker_id matches with leader number then topic partition is stored in that broker

Is there a way to delete all the data from a topic or delete the topic before every run?

Is there a way to delete all the data from a topic or delete the topic before every run?
Can I modify the KafkaConfig.scala file to change the logRetentionHours property? Is there a way the messages gets deleted as soon as the consumer reads it?
I am using producers to fetch the data from somewhere and sending the data to a particular topic where a consumer consumes, can I delete all the data from that topic on every run? I want only new data every time in the topic. Is there a way to reinitialize the topic somehow?
As I mentioned here Purge Kafka Queue:
Tested in Kafka 0.8.2, for the quick-start example: First, Add one line to server.properties file under config folder:
delete.topic.enable=true
then, you can run this command:
bin/kafka-topics.sh --zookeeper localhost:2181 --delete --topic test
Don't think it is supported yet. Take a look at this JIRA issue "Add delete topic support".
To delete manually:
Shutdown the cluster
Clean kafka log dir (specified by the log.dir attribute in kafka config file ) as well the zookeeper data
Restart the cluster
For any given topic what you can do is
Stop kafka
Clean kafka log specific to partition, kafka stores its log file in a format of "logDir/topic-partition" so for a topic named "MyTopic" the log for partition id 0 will be stored in /tmp/kafka-logs/MyTopic-0 where /tmp/kafka-logs is specified by the log.dir attribute
Restart kafka
This is NOT a good and recommended approach but it should work.
In the Kafka broker config file the log.retention.hours.per.topic attribute is used to define The number of hours to keep a log file before deleting it for some specific topic
Also, is there a way the messages gets deleted as soon as the consumer reads it?
From the Kafka Documentation :
The Kafka cluster retains all published messages—whether or not they have been consumed—for a configurable period of time. For example if the log retention is set to two days, then for the two days after a message is published it is available for consumption, after which it will be discarded to free up space. Kafka's performance is effectively constant with respect to data size so retaining lots of data is not a problem.
In fact the only metadata retained on a per-consumer basis is the position of the consumer in in the log, called the "offset". This offset is controlled by the consumer: normally a consumer will advance its offset linearly as it reads messages, but in fact the position is controlled by the consumer and it can consume messages in any order it likes. For example a consumer can reset to an older offset to reprocess.
For finding the start offset to read in Kafka 0.8 Simple Consumer example they say
Kafka includes two constants to help, kafka.api.OffsetRequest.EarliestTime() finds the beginning of the data in the logs and starts streaming from there, kafka.api.OffsetRequest.LatestTime() will only stream new messages.
You can also find the example code there for managing the offset at your consumer end.
public static long getLastOffset(SimpleConsumer consumer, String topic, int partition,
long whichTime, String clientName) {
TopicAndPartition topicAndPartition = new TopicAndPartition(topic, partition);
Map<TopicAndPartition, PartitionOffsetRequestInfo> requestInfo = new HashMap<TopicAndPartition, PartitionOffsetRequestInfo>();
requestInfo.put(topicAndPartition, new PartitionOffsetRequestInfo(whichTime, 1));
kafka.javaapi.OffsetRequest request = new kafka.javaapi.OffsetRequest(requestInfo, kafka.api.OffsetRequest.CurrentVersion(),clientName);
OffsetResponse response = consumer.getOffsetsBefore(request);
if (response.hasError()) {
System.out.println("Error fetching data Offset Data the Broker. Reason: " + response.errorCode(topic, partition) );
return 0;
}
long[] offsets = response.offsets(topic, partition);
return offsets[0];
}
Tested with kafka 0.10
1. stop zookeeper & Kafka server,
2. then go to 'kafka-logs' folder , there you will see list of kafka topic folders, delete folder with topic name
3. go to 'zookeeper-data' folder , delete data inside that.
4. start zookeeper & kafka server again.
Note : if you are deleting topic folder/s inside kafka-logs but not from zookeeper-data folder, then you will see topics are still there.
Below are scripts for emptying and deleting a Kafka topic assuming localhost as the zookeeper server and Kafka_Home is set to the install directory:
The script below will empty a topic by setting its retention time to 1 second and then removing the configuration:
#!/bin/bash
echo "Enter name of topic to empty:"
read topicName
/$Kafka_Home/bin/kafka-configs --zookeeper localhost:2181 --alter --entity-type topics --entity-name $topicName --add-config retention.ms=1000
sleep 5
/$Kafka_Home/bin/kafka-configs --zookeeper localhost:2181 --alter --entity-type topics --entity-name $topicName --delete-config retention.ms
To fully delete topics you must stop any applicable kafka broker(s) and remove it's directory(s) from the kafka log dir (default: /tmp/kafka-logs) and then run this script to remove the topic from zookeeper. To verify it's been deleted from zookeeper the output of ls /brokers/topics should no longer include the topic:
#!/bin/bash
echo "Enter name of topic to delete from zookeeper:"
read topicName
/$Kafka_Home/bin/zookeeper-shell localhost:2181 <<EOF
rmr /brokers/topics/$topicName
ls /brokers/topics
quit
EOF
As a dirty workaround, you can adjust per-topic runtime retention settings, e.g. bin/kafka-topics.sh --zookeeper localhost:2181 --alter --topic my_topic --config retention.bytes=1 (retention.bytes=0 might also work)
After a short while kafka should free the space. Not sure if this has any implications compared to re-creating the topic.
ps. Better bring retention settings back, once kafka done with cleaning.
You can also use retention.ms to persist historical data
We tried pretty much what the other answers are describing with moderate level of success.
What really worked for us (Apache Kafka 0.8.1) is the class command
sh kafka-run-class.sh kafka.admin.DeleteTopicCommand --topic yourtopic --zookeeper localhost:2181
For brew users
If you're using brew like me and wasted a lot of time searching for the infamous kafka-logs folder, fear no more. (and please do let me know if that works for you and multiple different versions of Homebrew, Kafka etc :) )
You're probably going to find it under:
Location:
/usr/local/var/lib/kafka-logs
How to actually find that path
(this is also helpful for basically every app you install through brew)
1) brew services list
kafka started matbhz
/Users/matbhz/Library/LaunchAgents/homebrew.mxcl.kafka.plist
2) Open and read that plist you found above
3) Find the line defining server.properties location open it, in my case:
/usr/local/etc/kafka/server.properties
4) Look for the log.dirs line:
log.dirs=/usr/local/var/lib/kafka-logs
5) Go to that location and delete the logs for the topics you wish
6) Restart Kafka with brew services restart kafka
All data about topics and its partitions are stored in tmp/kafka-logs/. Moreover they are stored in a format topic-partionNumber, so if you want to delete a topic newTopic, you can:
stop kafka
delete the files rm -rf /tmp/kafka-logs/newTopic-*
As of kafka 2.3.0 version, there is an alternate way to soft deletion of Kafka (old approach are deprecated ).
Update retention.ms to 1 sec (1000ms) then set it again after a min, to default setting i.e 7 days (168 hours, 604,800,000 in ms )
Soft deletion:- (rentention.ms=1000) (using kafka-configs.sh)
bin/kafka-configs.sh --zookeeper 192.168.1.10:2181 --alter --entity-name kafka_topic3p3r --entity-type topics --add-config retention.ms=1000
Completed Updating config for entity: topic 'kafka_topic3p3r'.
Setting to default:- 7 days (168 hours , retention.ms= 604800000)
bin/kafka-configs.sh --zookeeper 192.168.1.10:2181 --alter --entity-name kafka_topic3p3r --entity-type topics --add-config retention.ms=604800000
Simplest way without restarting servers(I am using this with AWS MSK seamlessly):
cd kafka_2.12-2.6.2/bin
Topic Deletion:
Please replace $topic_name:
./kafka-topics.sh \
--bootstrap-server $kafka_bootstrap_servers \
--command-config client.properties \
--delete \
--topic $topic_name
Here is the client.properties file:
kafka_2.12-2.6.2/bin/client.properties
ssl.truststore.location=/usr/lib/jvm/java-11-openjdk-amd64/lib/security/cacerts
security.protocol=SASL_SSL
sasl.mechanism=AWS_MSK_IAM
sasl.jaas.config=software.amazon.msk.auth.iam.IAMLoginModule required;
sasl.client.callback.handler.class=software.amazon.msk.auth.iam.IAMClientCallbackHandler
max.request.size=104857600
Topic Data Deletion:
Option A:
./kafka-delete-records.sh \
--bootstrap-server $kafka_bootstrap_servers \
--command-config client.properties \
--offset-json-file ./delete-records.json
This is most clean way to delete the data immediately rather than waiting for Kafka to do this as a background job. But there is one time extra effort on specifiying all the partitions for a particular topic in the delete JSON file.
Here is the delete-records.json content is:
{
"partitions": [
{
"topic": $topic_name,
"partition": 0,
"offset": -1
},
{
"topic": $topic_name,
"partition": 1,
"offset": -1
},
{
"topic": $topic_name,
"partition": 2,
"offset": -1
}
],
"version": 1
}
Option B:
Step1:
./kafka-configs.sh \
--bootstrap-server $kafka_bootstrap_servers \
--command-config client.properties
--alter \
--entity-type topics \
--add-config retention.ms=1 \
--entity-name $topic_name
Now, wait for couple of minutes to let Kafka delete the data from topic and now come back and revert to default 7 days data retention.
Step2:
./kafka-configs.sh \
--bootstrap-server $kafka_bootstrap_servers \
--command-config client.properties
--alter \
--entity-type topics \
--add-config retention.ms=604800000 \
--entity-name $topic_name
Stop ZooKeeper and Kafka
In server.properties, change log.retention.hours value. You can comment log.retention.hours and add log.retention.ms=1000. It would keep the record on Kafka Topic for only one second.
Start zookeeper and kafka.
Check on consumer console. When I opened the console for the first time, record was there. But when I opened the console again, the record was removed.
Later on, you can set the value of log.retention.hours to your desired figure.
I use the utility below to cleanup after my integration test run.
It uses the latest AdminZkClient api. The older api has been deprecated.
import javax.inject.Inject
import kafka.zk.{AdminZkClient, KafkaZkClient}
import org.apache.kafka.common.utils.Time
class ZookeeperUtils #Inject() (config: AppConfig) {
val testTopic = "users_1"
val zkHost = config.KafkaConfig.zkHost
val sessionTimeoutMs = 10 * 1000
val connectionTimeoutMs = 60 * 1000
val isSecure = false
val maxInFlightRequests = 10
val time: Time = Time.SYSTEM
def cleanupTopic(config: AppConfig) = {
val zkClient = KafkaZkClient.apply(zkHost, isSecure, sessionTimeoutMs, connectionTimeoutMs, maxInFlightRequests, time)
val zkUtils = new AdminZkClient(zkClient)
val pp = new Properties()
pp.setProperty("delete.retention.ms", "10")
pp.setProperty("file.delete.delay.ms", "1000")
zkUtils.changeTopicConfig(testTopic , pp)
// zkUtils.deleteTopic(testTopic)
println("Waiting for topic to be purged. Then reset to retain records for the run")
Thread.sleep(60000L)
val resetProps = new Properties()
resetProps.setProperty("delete.retention.ms", "3000000")
resetProps.setProperty("file.delete.delay.ms", "4000000")
zkUtils.changeTopicConfig(testTopic , resetProps)
}
}
There is an option delete topic. But, it marks the topic for deletion. Zookeeper later deletes the topic. Since this can be unpredictably long, I prefer the retention.ms approach
do:
cd /path/to/kafkaInstallation/kafka-server
bin/kafka-topics.sh --bootstrap-server localhost:9092 --delete --topic name_of_kafka_topic
then you can recreate it using:
bin/kafka-topics.sh --create --bootstrap-server localhost:9092 --replication-factor 1 --partitions 1 --topic name_of_kafka_topic
In manually deleting a topic from a kafka cluster , you just might check this out https://github.com/darrenfu/bigdata/issues/6
A vital step missed a lot in most solution is in deleting the /config/topics/<topic_name> in ZK.
I use this script:
#!/bin/bash
topics=`kafka-topics --list --zookeeper zookeeper:2181`
for t in $topics; do
for p in retention.ms retention.bytes segment.ms segment.bytes; do
kafka-topics --zookeeper zookeeper:2181 --alter --topic $t --config ${p}=100
done
done
sleep 60
for t in $topics; do
for p in retention.ms retention.bytes segment.ms segment.bytes; do
kafka-topics --zookeeper zookeeper:2181 --alter --topic $t --delete-config ${p}
done
done
There are two solutions to clean up topics data
Change the zookeeper dataDir path "dataDir=/dataPath" to some other
value, delete kafka logs folder and restart zookeeper and kafka
server
Run zkCleanup.sh from zookeeper server