Introduction:
This document gives overview
about the installation of Kafka on Windows, along with Apache Zookeeper (and
Java).
Overview of Apache Kafka:
Apache
Kafka is a fast and scalable messaging queue, capable of handeling heavy loads
in context of read and write, i.e. IO-related stuff. You can find more about
Kafka on http://kafka.apache.org/.
Apache Kafka requires a running Zookeeper instance, which is used for reliable
distributed cordination. Please find more about Zookeeper on https://zookeeper.apache.org/.
Steps:
1. Download the required files for installation:
·
Download Server JRE according to your OS and
CPU architecture from http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/downloads/jre8-downloads-2133155.html
For this tutorial we are
assuming that Zookeeper and Kafka are unzipped in C: drive, but you can unzip
them in any location.
Here
we are using full-fledged zookeeper and not the one packaged with Kafka because
it will be single-node Zookeeper instance. If you want you can run Kafka with
packaged zookeeper located in Kafka package inside \kafka\bin\windows directory.
2. Installation:
2.1 JDK Setup:
1. Start JRE installation and hit the check box “Change destination folder”, then click install.
2. Change the installation directory to any path without spaces in folder name. E.g. C:\Java\jre1.8.0_xx\. (By default it will be C:\Program Files\Java\jre1.8.0_xx) then click Next.
3. Now open the system environment variables dialogue by opening Control Panel -> System -> Advanced system settings -> Environment Variables.
4. Hit the New User Variable button in User variables section then type JAVA_HOME in Variable name and give your jre path in Variable value. It should look like:
5. Now click OK.
6. Search for a Path variable in the “System Variable” section in “Environment Variables” dialogue box you just opened.
7. Edit the path and type “;%JAVA_HOME%\bin” at the end of the text already written there just like image below
8. To confirm the Java installation just open cmd and type “java –version”, you should be able to see version of the java you just installed.
If your command prompt somewhat looks like the image above, you are good to go. Otherwise you need to recheck whether your setup version is matching with the correct OS architecture (x86, x64), or if the environment variables path is correct.or this tutorial we are assuming that Zookeeper and Kafka are unzipped in C: drive, but you can unzip them in any location.
2.2 Zooker Installation:
1. Goto your Zookeeper config directory. For me its D:\Zookeper\zookeeper-3.4.10\conf
2. Rename file “zoo_sample.cfg” to “zoo.cfg”
3. Open zoo.cfg in any text editor like notepad but I prefer notepad++.
4. Find & edit dataDir=/tmp/zookeeper to :\zookeeper-3.4.7\data (i.e in my case, it is D:\Zookeper\zookeeper-3.4.10\data)
5. Add entry in System Environment Variables as we did for Java
a. Add in System Variables ZOOKEEPER_HOME = D:\Zookeper\zookeeper-3.4.10
b. Edit System Variable named “Path” add ;%ZOOKEEPER_HOME%\bin;
6. You can change the default Zookeeper port in zoo.cfg file (Default port 2181).
7. Run Zookeeper by opening a new cmd and type zkserver.
8. You will see the command prompt with some details like the image below.
Congratulations, your Zookeeper is up and running on port 2181!
2.3 Kafka Setup:
1. Go to your Kafka config directory. For me its D:\kafka\kafka_2.12-0.11.0.0\config
2. Edit file “server.properties”
3. Find & edit line “log.dirs=/tmp/kafka-logs” to “log.dir= D:\kafka\kafka_2.12-0.11.0.0\kafka-logs”.
4. If your Zookeeper is running on some other machine or cluster you can edit “zookeeper.connect:2181” to your custom IP and port. For this demo we are using same machine so no need to change. Also Kafka port & broker.id are configurable in this file. Leave other settings as it is.
5. Your Kafka will run on default port 9092 & connect to zookeeper’s default port which is 2181.
2.4 Running Kafka Server:
Important: Please ensure that your Zookeeper instance is up and running before starting a Kafka server.
1. Go to your Kafka installation directory D:\kafka\kafka_2.12-0.11.0.0
2. Open a command prompt here by pressing Shift + right click and choose“Open command window here” option)
3. Now type .\bin\windows\kafka-server-start.bat .\config\server.properties and press Enter.
.\bin\windows\kafka-server-start.bat .\config\server.properties
4. If everything went fine, your command prompt will look like this one:
5. Now your Kafka is up and running, you can create topics to store messages. Also we can produce or consume data from Java or Scala code or directly from the command prompt.
2.5 Creating Topics:
1. Now create a topic with name “test” and replication factor 1, as we have only one Kafka server running. If you have a cluster with more than 1 Kafka server running, you can increase the replication-factor accordingly which will increase the data availability and act like a fault-tolerant system.
2. Open a new command prompt in the location D:\kafka\kafka_2.12-0.11.0.0\bin\windows
3. Type following command and hit Enter:
kafka-topics.bat --create --zookeeper localhost:2181 --replication-factor 1 --partitions 1 --topic test
2.6 Creating a Producer and Consumer to Test Server:
1. Open a new command prompt in the location D:\kafka\kafka_2.12-0.11.0.0\bin\windows
2. To start a producer type the following command:
kafka-console-producer.bat --broker-list localhost:9092 --topic test
3. Again open a new command prompt in the same location as D:\kafka\kafka_2.12-0.11.0.0\bin\windows
4. Now start a consumer by typing the following command:
kafka-console-consumer.bat --zookeeper localhost:2181 --topic test
5. Now type anything in the producer command prompt and press Enter, and you should be able to see the message in the other consumer command prompt.
6. If you are able to push & see your messages in the consumer side, you are done with Kafka setup.
2.7 Some other useful commands:
1.List Topics:
kafka-topics.bat --list --zookeeper localhost:2181
In this case, it lists the topic test that we created.
2.Describe Topic:
kafka-topics.bat --describe --zookeeper localhost:2181 --topic [Topic Name]
Replace [Topic Name] with test in our case, which makes the command as follows:
3.Read messages from beginning:
kafka-console-consumer.bat --zookeeper localhost:2181 --topic [Topic Name] --from-beginning
Replace [Topic Name] with test in our case, which makes the command as follows:
kafka-console-consumer.bat --zookeeper localhost:2181 --topic test --from-beginning
4.Delete Topic:
kafka-run-class.bat kafka.admin.TopicCommand --delete --topic [topic_to_delete] --zookeeper localhost:2181
Replace [Topic Name] with test in our case, which makes the command as follows:
kafka-run-class.bat kafka.admin.TopicCommand --delete --topic test --zookeeper localhost:2181
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