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Kafka

This engine works with Apache Kafka.

Kafka lets you:

  • Publish or subscribe to data flows.
  • Organize fault-tolerant storage.
  • Process streams as they become available.

Creating a Table

CREATE TABLE [IF NOT EXISTS] [db.]table_name [ON CLUSTER cluster]
(
name1 [type1] [ALIAS expr1],
name2 [type2] [ALIAS expr2],
...
) ENGINE = Kafka()
SETTINGS
kafka_broker_list = 'host:port',
kafka_topic_list = 'topic1,topic2,...',
kafka_group_name = 'group_name',
kafka_format = 'data_format'[,]
[kafka_row_delimiter = 'delimiter_symbol',]
[kafka_schema = '',]
[kafka_num_consumers = N,]
[kafka_max_block_size = 0,]
[kafka_skip_broken_messages = N,]
[kafka_commit_every_batch = 0,]
[kafka_client_id = '',]
[kafka_poll_timeout_ms = 0,]
[kafka_poll_max_batch_size = 0,]
[kafka_flush_interval_ms = 0,]
[kafka_thread_per_consumer = 0,]
[kafka_handle_error_mode = 'default',]
[kafka_commit_on_select = false,]
[kafka_max_rows_per_message = 1];

Required parameters:

  • kafka_broker_list — A comma-separated list of brokers (for example, localhost:9092).
  • kafka_topic_list — A list of Kafka topics.
  • kafka_group_name — A group of Kafka consumers. Reading margins are tracked for each group separately. If you do not want messages to be duplicated in the cluster, use the same group name everywhere.
  • kafka_format — Message format. Uses the same notation as the SQL FORMAT function, such as JSONEachRow. For more information, see the Formats section.

Optional parameters:

  • kafka_row_delimiter — Delimiter character, which ends the message. This setting is deprecated and is no longer used, not left for compatibility reasons.
  • kafka_schema — Parameter that must be used if the format requires a schema definition. For example, Cap’n Proto requires the path to the schema file and the name of the root schema.capnp:Message object.
  • kafka_num_consumers — The number of consumers per table. Specify more consumers if the throughput of one consumer is insufficient. The total number of consumers should not exceed the number of partitions in the topic, since only one consumer can be assigned per partition, and must not be greater than the number of physical cores on the server where ClickHouse is deployed. Default: 1.
  • kafka_max_block_size — The maximum batch size (in messages) for poll. Default: max_insert_block_size.
  • kafka_skip_broken_messages — Kafka message parser tolerance to schema-incompatible messages per block. If kafka_skip_broken_messages = N then the engine skips N Kafka messages that cannot be parsed (a message equals a row of data). Default: 0.
  • kafka_commit_every_batch — Commit every consumed and handled batch instead of a single commit after writing a whole block. Default: 0.
  • kafka_client_id — Client identifier. Empty by default.
  • kafka_poll_timeout_ms — Timeout for single poll from Kafka. Default: stream_poll_timeout_ms.
  • kafka_poll_max_batch_size — Maximum amount of messages to be polled in a single Kafka poll. Default: max_block_size.
  • kafka_flush_interval_ms — Timeout for flushing data from Kafka. Default: stream_flush_interval_ms.
  • kafka_thread_per_consumer — Provide independent thread for each consumer. When enabled, every consumer flush the data independently, in parallel (otherwise — rows from several consumers squashed to form one block). Default: 0.
  • kafka_handle_error_mode — How to handle errors for Kafka engine. Possible values: default, stream.
  • kafka_commit_on_select — Commit messages when select query is made. Default: false.
  • kafka_max_rows_per_message — The maximum number of rows written in one kafka message for row-based formats. Default : 1.

Examples:

  CREATE TABLE queue (
timestamp UInt64,
level String,
message String
) ENGINE = Kafka('localhost:9092', 'topic', 'group1', 'JSONEachRow');

SELECT * FROM queue LIMIT 5;

CREATE TABLE queue2 (
timestamp UInt64,
level String,
message String
) ENGINE = Kafka SETTINGS kafka_broker_list = 'localhost:9092',
kafka_topic_list = 'topic',
kafka_group_name = 'group1',
kafka_format = 'JSONEachRow',
kafka_num_consumers = 4;

CREATE TABLE queue3 (
timestamp UInt64,
level String,
message String
) ENGINE = Kafka('localhost:9092', 'topic', 'group1')
SETTINGS kafka_format = 'JSONEachRow',
kafka_num_consumers = 4;
Deprecated Method for Creating a Table
note

Do not use this method in new projects. If possible, switch old projects to the method described above.

Kafka(kafka_broker_list, kafka_topic_list, kafka_group_name, kafka_format
[, kafka_row_delimiter, kafka_schema, kafka_num_consumers, kafka_max_block_size, kafka_skip_broken_messages, kafka_commit_every_batch, kafka_client_id, kafka_poll_timeout_ms, kafka_poll_max_batch_size, kafka_flush_interval_ms, kafka_thread_per_consumer, kafka_handle_error_mode, kafka_commit_on_select, kafka_max_rows_per_message]);
info

The Kafka table engine doesn't support columns with default value. If you need columns with default value, you can add them at materialized view level (see below).

Description

The delivered messages are tracked automatically, so each message in a group is only counted once. If you want to get the data twice, then create a copy of the table with another group name.

Groups are flexible and synced on the cluster. For instance, if you have 10 topics and 5 copies of a table in a cluster, then each copy gets 2 topics. If the number of copies changes, the topics are redistributed across the copies automatically. Read more about this at http://kafka.apache.org/intro.

SELECT is not particularly useful for reading messages (except for debugging), because each message can be read only once. It is more practical to create real-time threads using materialized views. To do this:

  1. Use the engine to create a Kafka consumer and consider it a data stream.
  2. Create a table with the desired structure.
  3. Create a materialized view that converts data from the engine and puts it into a previously created table.

When the MATERIALIZED VIEW joins the engine, it starts collecting data in the background. This allows you to continually receive messages from Kafka and convert them to the required format using SELECT. One kafka table can have as many materialized views as you like, they do not read data from the kafka table directly, but receive new records (in blocks), this way you can write to several tables with different detail level (with grouping - aggregation and without).

Example:

  CREATE TABLE queue (
timestamp UInt64,
level String,
message String
) ENGINE = Kafka('localhost:9092', 'topic', 'group1', 'JSONEachRow');

CREATE TABLE daily (
day Date,
level String,
total UInt64
) ENGINE = SummingMergeTree(day, (day, level), 8192);

CREATE MATERIALIZED VIEW consumer TO daily
AS SELECT toDate(toDateTime(timestamp)) AS day, level, count() as total
FROM queue GROUP BY day, level;

SELECT level, sum(total) FROM daily GROUP BY level;

To improve performance, received messages are grouped into blocks the size of max_insert_block_size. If the block wasn’t formed within stream_flush_interval_ms milliseconds, the data will be flushed to the table regardless of the completeness of the block.

To stop receiving topic data or to change the conversion logic, detach the materialized view:

  DETACH TABLE consumer;
ATTACH TABLE consumer;

If you want to change the target table by using ALTER, we recommend disabling the material view to avoid discrepancies between the target table and the data from the view.

Configuration

Similar to GraphiteMergeTree, the Kafka engine supports extended configuration using the ClickHouse config file. There are two configuration keys that you can use: global (below <kafka>) and topic-level (below <kafka><kafka_topic>). The global configuration is applied first, and then the topic-level configuration is applied (if it exists).

  <kafka>
<!-- Global configuration options for all tables of Kafka engine type -->
<debug>cgrp</debug>
<auto_offset_reset>smallest</auto_offset_reset>
<statistics_interval_ms>600</statistics_interval_ms>

<!-- Configuration specific to topics "logs" and "stats" -->

<kafka_topic>
<name>logs</name>
<retry_backoff_ms>250</retry_backoff_ms>
<fetch_min_bytes>100000</fetch_min_bytes>
</kafka_topic>

<kafka_topic>
<name>stats</name>
<retry_backoff_ms>400</retry_backoff_ms>
<fetch_min_bytes>50000</fetch_min_bytes>
</kafka_topic>
</kafka>

Example in deprecated syntax
  <kafka>
<!-- Global configuration options for all tables of Kafka engine type -->
<debug>cgrp</debug>
<auto_offset_reset>smallest</auto_offset_reset>
</kafka>

<!-- Configuration specific to topics "logs" and "stats" -->
<!-- Does NOT support periods in topic names, e.g. "logs.security"> -->

<kafka_logs>
<retry_backoff_ms>250</retry_backoff_ms>
<fetch_min_bytes>100000</fetch_min_bytes>
</kafka_logs>

<kafka_stats>
<retry_backoff_ms>400</retry_backoff_ms>
<fetch_min_bytes>50000</fetch_min_bytes>
</kafka_stats>

For a list of possible configuration options, see the librdkafka configuration reference. Use the underscore (_) instead of a dot in the ClickHouse configuration. For example, check.crcs=true will be <check_crcs>true</check_crcs>.

Kerberos support

To deal with Kerberos-aware Kafka, add security_protocol child element with sasl_plaintext value. It is enough if Kerberos ticket-granting ticket is obtained and cached by OS facilities. ClickHouse is able to maintain Kerberos credentials using a keytab file. Consider sasl_kerberos_service_name, sasl_kerberos_keytab and sasl_kerberos_principal child elements.

Example:

  <!-- Kerberos-aware Kafka -->
<kafka>
<security_protocol>SASL_PLAINTEXT</security_protocol>
<sasl_kerberos_keytab>/home/kafkauser/kafkauser.keytab</sasl_kerberos_keytab>
<sasl_kerberos_principal>kafkauser/kafkahost@EXAMPLE.COM</sasl_kerberos_principal>
</kafka>

Virtual Columns

  • _topic — Kafka topic.
  • _key — Key of the message.
  • _offset — Offset of the message.
  • _timestamp — Timestamp of the message.
  • _timestamp_ms — Timestamp in milliseconds of the message.
  • _partition — Partition of Kafka topic.
  • _headers.name — Array of message's headers keys.
  • _headers.value — Array of message's headers values.

Data formats support

Kafka engine supports all formats supported in ClickHouse. The number of rows in one Kafka message depends on whether the format is row-based or block-based:

  • For row-based formats the number of rows in one Kafka message can be controlled by setting kafka_max_rows_per_message.
  • For block-based formats we cannot divide block into smaller parts, but the number of rows in one block can be controlled by general setting max_block_size.

See Also