Book Image

Apache Kafka Quick Start Guide

By : Raúl Estrada
Book Image

Apache Kafka Quick Start Guide

By: Raúl Estrada

Overview of this book

Apache Kafka is a great open source platform for handling your real-time data pipeline to ensure high-speed filtering and pattern matching on the ?y. In this book, you will learn how to use Apache Kafka for efficient processing of distributed applications and will get familiar with solving everyday problems in fast data and processing pipelines. This book focuses on programming rather than the configuration management of Kafka clusters or DevOps. It starts off with the installation and setting up the development environment, before quickly moving on to performing fundamental messaging operations such as validation and enrichment. Here you will learn about message composition with pure Kafka API and Kafka Streams. You will look into the transformation of messages in different formats, such asext, binary, XML, JSON, and AVRO. Next, you will learn how to expose the schemas contained in Kafka with the Schema Registry. You will then learn how to work with all relevant connectors with Kafka Connect. While working with Kafka Streams, you will perform various interesting operations on streams, such as windowing, joins, and aggregations. Finally, through KSQL, you will learn how to retrieve, insert, modify, and delete data streams, and how to manipulate watermarks and windows.
Table of Contents (10 chapters)

Setting up the project

This time, we are going to build our project with Gradle. The first step is to download and install Gradle from http://www.gradle.org/downloads.

Gradle only requires a Java JDK (version 7 or higher).

macOS users can install Gradle with the brew command, as follows:

$ brew update && brew install gradle

The output is something like the following:

==> Downloading https://services.gradle.org/distributions/gradle-4.10.2-all.zip
==> Downloading from https://downloads.gradle.org/distributions/gradle-4.10.2-al
######################################################################## 100.0%
/usr/local/Cellar/gradle/4.10.2: 203 files, 83.7MB, built in 59 seconds

Linux users can install Gradle with the apt-get command, as follows:

$ apt-get install gradle

Unix users can install with sdkman, a tool for managing parallel versions of most Unix-based systems...