oracular (3) Net::Kafka.3pm.gz

Provided by: libnet-kafka-perl_1.06-2_amd64 bug

NAME

       Net::Kafka - High-performant Perl client for Apache Kafka

SYNOPSIS

           use Net::Kafka::Producer;
           use Net::Kafka::Consumer;
           use AnyEvent;

           # Produce 1 message into "my_topic"
           my $condvar     = AnyEvent->condvar;
           my $producer    = Net::Kafka::Producer->new(
               'bootstrap.servers' => 'localhost:9092'
           );
           $producer->produce(
               payload => "message",
               topic   => "my_topic"
           )->then(sub {
               my $delivery_report = shift;
               $condvar->send;
               print "Message successfully delivered with offset " . $delivery_report->{offset};
           }, sub {
               my $error = shift;
               $condvar->send;
               die "Unable to produce a message: " . $error->{error} . ", code: " . $error->{code};
           });
           $condvar->recv;

           # Consume message from "my_topic"
           my $consumer    = Net::Kafka::Consumer->new(
               'bootstrap.servers'     => 'localhost:9092',
               'group.id'              => 'my_consumer_group',
               'enable.auto.commit'    => 'true',
           );

           $consumer->subscribe( [ "my_topic" ] );
           while (1) {
               my $msg = $kafka->consumer_poll(1000);
               if ($msg) {
                   if ( $msg->err ) {
                       say "Error: ", Net::Kafka::Error::to_string($err);
                   }
                   else {
                       say $msg->payload;
                   }
               }
           }

DESCRIPTION

       This module provides Perl bindings to librdkafka <https://github.com/edenhill/librdkafka> C client
       library.  It is heavily inspired by Kafka::Librd module originally developed by Pavel Shaydo.

       Please refer to the following modules documentation in order to understand how to use it:

       •   "Net::Kafka::Producer" - asynchronous producer interface

       •   "Net::Kafka::Consumer" - consumer interface that supports both Simple and Distributed modes

REQUIREMENTS

       •   GNU make

       •   librdkafka >= 1.0.0

INSTALLATION

       First install librdkafka (<https://github.com/edenhill/librdkafka#installation>).

   BUILD FROM CPAN
           cpanm install Net::Kafka

   BUILD FROM SOURCE
       Sources are available on Github: <https://github.com/bookingcom/perl-Net-Kafka>.

           perl Makefile.pl
           make
           make test
           make install

Net::Kafka::Producer

       The Net::Kafka::Producer module provides interface to librdkafka's producer methods. It utilizes signal
       pipes, AnyEvent watcher and AnyEvent::XSPromises to make its behaviour asynchronous. Taking that into
       consideration you need to make sure to properly create condvar and "send"/"recv" in order to collect all
       outstanding promises.  It is highly suggested to familirize yourself with both AnyEvent and
       AnyEvent::XSPromises modules. See "SYNOPSIS" for example.

   METHODS
       new()
               my $producer = Net::Kafka::Producer->new(
                   'bootstrap.servers' => 'localhost:9092'
               );

           Create an instance of Net::Kafka::Producer. Accept hash where keys are equal to property names of
           librdkafka (see <https://github.com/edenhill/librdkafka/blob/master/CONFIGURATION.md>).  Note that
           only "error_cb" and "stats_cb" callbacks are supported for Producer. Message delivery reports are
           served automatically through "Promise" based "produce" method (see below).

       produce()
               my $promise = $producer->produce(
                   payload     => "my_message",
                   topic       => "my_topic",
                   key         => "my_key",    # optional
                   timestamp   => 1234567,   # optional, if not specified current local timestamp will be used
                   partition   => 0          # optional, if not specified internal librdkafka partitioner will be used
                   headers     => $headers,  # Optional, see Net::Kafka::Headers
               )->then(sub {
                   my $delivery_report = shift;
                   print "Message is sent with offset " . $delivery_report->{offset};
               })->catch(sub {
                   my $error = shift;
                   print $error->{error} . "\n";
               });

           Sends a message to Kafka. Accepts hash with parameters.

           Returns back an instance of "Promise" that will be resolved/rejected later. In case message is
           successfully send "resolve" callback will receive a delievry report in the form of the hash that
           contains "offset", "partition" and "timestamp". If message delivery has failed "reject" callback will
           receive a hash that contains "error" (a human readable error description) and (optionally)
           "error_code" that is equal to librdkafka's error code. All error codes are mapped and exported by
           "Net::Kafka" module as constants (e.g. "Net::Kafka::RD_KAFKA_RESP_ERR__PREV_IN_PROGRESS") for
           simplicity.

       partitions_for()
               my $partitions = $producer->partitions_for("my_topic", $timeout_ms);

           Returns an "ARRAYREF" that contains partition metadata information about the given topic (leader,
           replicas, ISR replicas);

       close()
               $producer->close();

           Explicitly closees "Net::Kafka::Producer" instance and underlying librdkafka handles.

Net::Kafka::Consumer

       The Net::Kafka::Consumer class provides interface to librdkafka's consumer functionality. It supports
       both "distributed" (subscription based) and "simple" (manual partition assignment) modes of work.

   METHODS
       new()
               my $consumer = Net::Kafka::Consumer->new(
                   'bootstrap.servers'  => 'localhost:9092',
                   'group.id'           => "my_consumer_group",
                   'enable.auto.commit' => "true",
               );

           Create an instance of Net::Kafka::Consumer. Accept hash where keys are equal to property names of
           librdkafka (see <https://github.com/edenhill/librdkafka/blob/master/CONFIGURATION.md>).  Note that
           not all callbacks are supported at the moment. Supported ones are: "error_cb", "rebalance_cb",
           "commit_cb" and "stats_cb".

       subscribe()
               $consumer->subscribe([ 'my_topic' ]);

           Subscribe to topic set using balanced consumer groups. The main entry-point for "distributed"
           consumer mode - partitions will be assigned automatically using Kafka's GroupApi semantics.
           Wildcard/regex topics are supported so matching topics will be added to the subscription list.

       unsubscribe()
               $consumer->unsubscribe();

           Unsubscribe from the current subscription set.

       assign()
               # manually assign partitions 0 and 1 to be consumed
               my $tp_list = Net::Kafka::TopicPartitionList->new();
               $tp_list->add("my_topic", 0);
               $tp_list->add("my_topic", 1);
               $consumer->assign($tp_list);

           Atomic assignment of partitions to consume. The main entry-point for "simple" consumer mode -
           partitions are assigned manually.

       poll()
               my $message = $consumer->poll($timeout_ms);

           Poll the consumer for messages or events. Returns instance of "Net::Kafka::Message". Will block for
           at most "timeout_ms" milliseconds. An application should make sure to call "poll" at regular
           intervals.

       committed()
               my $tp_list = Net::Kafka::TopicPartitionList->new();
               $tp_list->add("my_topic", 0);
               $consumer->committed($tp_list);
               my $offset = $tp_list->offset("my_topic_, 0);

           Retrieve committed offsets for topics+partitions.

       offsets_for_times()
               my $tp_list = Net::Kafka::TopicPartitionList->new();
               $tp_list->add("my_topic", 0);
               $tp_list->set_offset("my_topic", 0, 958349923); # timestamp if passed through offset field
               $consumer->offsets_for_times($tp_list);
               my $offset = $tp_list->offset("my_topic");

           Look up the offsets for the given partitions by timestamp.

       pause()
               my $tp_list = Net::Kafka::TopicPartitionList->new();
               $tp_list->add("my_topic", 0);
               $consumer->pause($tp_list); # pauses consumption of partition 0 of "my_topic"

           Pause consumption for the provided list of partitions.

       resume()
               my $tp_list = Net::Kafka::TopicPartitionList->new();
               $tp_list->add("my_topic", 0);
               $consumer->resume($tp_list); # resumes consumption of partition 0 of "my_topic"

           Resume consumption for the provided list of partitions.

       subscription()
               my $topics = $consumer->subscription();

           Returns the current topic subscription

       partitions_for()
               my $partitions = $producer->partitions_for("my_topic");

           Returns an "ARRAYREF" that contains partition metadata information about the given topic (leader,
           replicas, ISR replicas);

       commit()
               $consumer->commit(); # commit current partition assignment (blocking call)
               $consumer->commit(1); # commit current partition assignment (non-blocking call)
               my $tp_list = Net::Kafka::TopicPartitionList->new();
               $tp_list->add("my_topic", 0);
               $tp_list->set_offset("my_topic", 0, 12345);
               $consumer->commit(0, $tp_list); # commit $tp_list assignment (blocking call);

           Commit offsets on broker for the provided list of partitions. If no partitions provided current
           assignment is committed instead.

       commit_message();
               my $message = $consumer->poll(1000);
               $consumer->commit_message(0, $message); # commit message (blocking call);
               $consumer->commit_message(1, $message); # commit message (non-blocking call);

           Commit message's offset on broker for the message's partition.

       position()
               my $position_list = Net::Kafka::TopicPartitionList->new();
               $position_list->add("my_topic", 0);
               $consumer->position($position_list);
               my $position = $position_list->offset("my_topic", 0);

           Retrieve current positions (offsets) for topics+partitions. The \p offset field of each requested
           partition will be set to the offset of the last consumed message + 1, or RD_KAFKA_OFFSET_INVALID in
           case there was no previous message.

           Note: in this context the last consumed message is the offset consumed by the current librdkafka
           instance and, in case of rebalancing, not necessarily the last message fetched from the partition.

       seek()
               $consumer->seek("my_topic", 0, 12345); # seek partition 0 of "my_topic" to offset "12345"
               $consumer->seek("my_topic", 0, RD_KAFKA_OFFSET_BEGINNING); # seek to the beginning of "my_topic" partition 0
               $consumer->seek("my_topic", 0, RD_KAFKA_OFFSET_END); # seek to the end of "my_topic" partition 0

           Seek consumer for topic+partition to offset which is either an absolute or logical offset.

       query_watermark_offsets()
               my ($low, $high) = $consumer->query_watermark_offsets("my_topic", 0);

           Queries Kafka Broker for lowest and highest watermark offsets in the given topic-partition.

       close()
               $consumer->close();

           Close all consumer handles. Make sure to call it before destroying your application to make sure that
           all outstanding requests to be flushed.

Net::Kafka::Message

       This class maps to "rd_kafka_message_t" structure from librdkafka and represents message or event.
       Objects of this class have the following methods:

       err()
           return error code from the message

       topic()
           return topic name

       partition()
           return partition number

       offset()
           return offset. Note, that the value is truncated to 32 bit if your perl doesn't support 64 bit
           integers.

       key()
           return message key

       payload()
           return message payload

       headers()
           return a copy of message headers

       detach_headers()
           return message headers and removes them from the message

Net::Kafka::Headers

       This class contains a list of Kafka headers (it allows duplicates).  Objects of this class have the
       following methods:

       new()
           create a new instance

       add(name, value)
           append a new name/value pair to the header list

       remove(name)
           remove all headers with the given name, if any

       get_last(name)
           return the last value associated with a given name

       to_hash()
           return an hash-of-arrays containing all headers

Net::Kafka::Err

       This class provides static methods to convert error codes into names and descriptions.

       rd_kafka_get_err_descs()
               rd_kafka_get_err_descs()

           returns a hash mapping error codes to description strings.

       to_string()
               to_string($code)

           return the description string for this error code.

       to_name()
               to_name($code)

           return the name of this error code.

CAVEATS

       Message offset is truncated to 32 bit if perl is compiled without support for 64 bit integers.

SEE ALSO

       •   <https://github.com/edenhill/librdkafka>

       •   <https://github.com/trinitum/perl-Kafka-Librd>

       Copyright (C) 2016, 2017 Pavel Shaydo

       Copyright (C) 2018, 2019 Booking.com

       This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of either: the
       GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; or the Artistic License.

       See http://dev.perl.org/licenses/ for more information.