This project is sponsored by Conduktor.io, a graphical desktop user interface for Apache Kafka.
Once you have started your cluster, you can use Conduktor to easily manage it.
Just connect against localhost:9092
if using Docker, or 192.168.99.100
if using Docker Toolbox
This replicates as well as possible real deployment configurations, where you have your zookeeper servers and kafka servers actually all distinct from each other. This solves all the networking hurdles that comes with Docker and docker-compose, and is compatible cross platform.
UPDATE: No /etc/hosts file changes are necessary anymore. Explanations at: https://rmoff.net/2018/08/02/kafka-listeners-explained/
- Zookeeper version: 3.4.9
- Kafka version: 2.5.0 (Confluent 5.5.1)
- Kafka Schema Registry: Confluent 5.5.1
- Kafka Schema Registry UI: 0.9.5
- Kafka Rest Proxy: Confluent 5.5.1
- Kafka Topics UI: 0.9.4
- Kafka Connect: Confluent 5.5.1
- Kafka Connect UI: 0.9.7
- ksqlDB Server: Confluent 5.5.1
- Zoonavigator: 0.8.0
Please export your environment before starting the stack:
export DOCKER_HOST_IP=127.0.0.1
(that's the default value and you actually don't need to do a thing)
If you are using Docker for Mac <= 1.11, or Docker Toolbox for Windows
(your docker machine IP is usually 192.168.99.100
)
Please export your environment before starting the stack:
export DOCKER_HOST_IP=192.168.99.100
This configuration fits most development requirements.
- Zookeeper will be available at
$DOCKER_HOST_IP:2181
- Kafka will be available at
$DOCKER_HOST_IP:9092
Run with:
docker-compose -f zk-single-kafka-single.yml up
docker-compose -f zk-single-kafka-single.yml down
If you want to have three brokers and experiment with kafka replication / fault-tolerance.
- Zookeeper will be available at
$DOCKER_HOST_IP:2181
- Kafka will be available at
$DOCKER_HOST_IP:9092,$DOCKER_HOST_IP:9093,$DOCKER_HOST_IP:9094
Run with:
docker-compose -f zk-single-kafka-multiple.yml up
docker-compose -f zk-single-kafka-multiple.yml down
If you want to have three zookeeper nodes and experiment with zookeeper fault-tolerance.
- Zookeeper will be available at
$DOCKER_HOST_IP:2181,$DOCKER_HOST_IP:2182,$DOCKER_HOST_IP:2183
- Kafka will be available at
$DOCKER_HOST_IP:9092
Run with:
docker-compose -f zk-multiple-kafka-single.yml up
docker-compose -f zk-multiple-kafka-single.yml down
If you want to have three zookeeper nodes and three kafka brokers to experiment with production setup.
- Zookeeper will be available at
$DOCKER_HOST_IP:2181,$DOCKER_HOST_IP:2182,$DOCKER_HOST_IP:2183
- Kafka will be available at
$DOCKER_HOST_IP:9092,$DOCKER_HOST_IP:9093,$DOCKER_HOST_IP:9094
Run with:
docker-compose -f zk-multiple-kafka-multiple.yml up
docker-compose -f zk-multiple-kafka-multiple.yml down
- Single Zookeeper:
$DOCKER_HOST_IP:2181
- Single Kafka:
$DOCKER_HOST_IP:9092
- Kafka Schema Registry:
$DOCKER_HOST_IP:8081
- Kafka Schema Registry UI:
$DOCKER_HOST_IP:8001
- Kafka Rest Proxy:
$DOCKER_HOST_IP:8082
- Kafka Topics UI:
$DOCKER_HOST_IP:8000
- Kafka Connect:
$DOCKER_HOST_IP:8083
- Kafka Connect UI:
$DOCKER_HOST_IP:8003
- KSQL Server:
$DOCKER_HOST_IP:8088
- Zoonavigator Web:
$DOCKER_HOST_IP:8004
Run with:
docker-compose -f full-stack.yml up
docker-compose -f full-stack.yml down
Q: Kafka's log is too verbose, how can I reduce it?
A: Add the following line to your docker-compose environment variables: KAFKA_LOG4J_LOGGERS: "kafka.controller=INFO,kafka.producer.async.DefaultEventHandler=INFO,state.change.logger=INFO"
. Full logging control can be accessed here: https://github.com/confluentinc/cp-docker-images/blob/master/debian/kafka/include/etc/confluent/docker/log4j.properties.template
Q: How do I delete data to start fresh?
A: Your data is persisted from within the docker compose folder, so if you want for example to reset the data in the full-stack docker compose, first do a docker-compose -f full-stack.yml down
, then remove the directory full-stack
, for example by doing rm -r -f full-stack
.
Q: Can I change the zookeeper ports?
A: yes. Say you want to change zoo1
port to 12181
(only relevant lines are shown):
zoo1:
ports:
- "12181:12181"
environment:
ZOO_PORT: 12181
kafka1:
environment:
KAFKA_ZOOKEEPER_CONNECT: "zoo1:12181"
Q: Can I change the Kafka ports?
A: yes. Say you want to change kafka1
port to 12345
(only relevant lines are shown). Note only LISTENER_DOCKER_EXTERNAL
changes:
kafka1:
image: confluentinc/cp-kafka:5.5.1
hostname: kafka1
ports:
- "12345:12345"
environment:
KAFKA_ADVERTISED_LISTENERS: LISTENER_DOCKER_INTERNAL://kafka1:19092,LISTENER_DOCKER_EXTERNAL://${DOCKER_HOST_IP:-127.0.0.1}:12345
Q: Kafka is using a lot of disk space for testing. Can I reduce it?
A: yes. This is for testing only!!! Reduce the KAFKA_LOG_SEGMENT_BYTES to 16MB and the KAFKA_LOG_RETENTION_BYTES to 128MB
kafka1:
image: confluentinc/cp-kafka:5.5.1
...
environment:
...
# For testing small segments 16MB and retention of 128MB
KAFKA_LOG_SEGMENT_BYTES: 16777216
KAFKA_LOG_RETENTION_BYTES: 134217728
Q: How do I expose kafka?
A: If you want to expose kafka outside of your local machine, you must set KAFKA_ADVERTISED_LISTENERS
to the IP of the machine so that kafka is externally accessible. To achieve this you can set LISTENER_DOCKER_EXTERNAL
to the IP of the machine.
For example, if the IP of your machine is 50.10.2.3
, follow the sample mapping below:
kafka1:
image: confluentinc/cp-kafka:5.5.1
...
environment:
...
KAFKA_ADVERTISED_LISTENERS: LISTENER_DOCKER_INTERNAL://kafka2:19093,LISTENER_DOCKER_EXTERNAL://50.10.2.3:9093