Skip to content

A fully asynchronous, futures-based Kafka client library for Rust based on librdkafka

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

mtekp/rust-rdkafka

 
 

Repository files navigation

rust-rdkafka

crates.io docs.rs Build Status coverate Join the chat at https://gitter.im/rust-rdkafka/Lobby

A fully asynchronous, futures-based Kafka client library for Rust based on librdkafka.

The library

rust-rdkafka provides a safe Rust interface to librdkafka. The master branch is currently based on librdkafka 0.11.6.

Documentation

Features

The main features provided at the moment are:

  • Support for all Kafka versions since 0.8.x. For more information about broker compatibility options, check the librdkafka documentation.
  • Consume from single or multiple topics.
  • Automatic consumer rebalancing.
  • Customizable rebalance, with pre and post rebalance callbacks.
  • Synchronous or asynchronous message production.
  • Customizable offset commit.
  • Access to cluster metadata (list of topic-partitions, replicas, active brokers etc).
  • Access to group metadata (list groups, list members of groups, hostnames etc).
  • Access to producer and consumer metrics, errors and callbacks.

One million messages per second

rust-rdkafka is designed to be easy and safe to use thanks to the abstraction layer written in Rust, while at the same time being extremely fast thanks to the librdkafka C library.

Here are some benchmark results using the rust-rdkafka BaseProducer, sending data to a single Kafka 0.11 process running in localhost (default configuration, 3 partitions). Hardware: Dell laptop, with Intel Core i7-4712HQ @ 2.30GHz.

  • Scenario: produce 5 million messages, 10 bytes each, wait for all of them to be acked

    • 1045413 messages/s, 9.970 MB/s (average over 5 runs)
  • Scenario: produce 100000 messages, 10 KB each, wait for all of them to be acked

    • 24623 messages/s, 234.826 MB/s (average over 5 runs)

For more numbers, check out the kafka-benchmark project.

Client types

rust-rdkafka provides low level and high level consumers and producers. Low level:

  • BaseConsumer: simple wrapper around the librdkafka consumer. It requires to be periodically poll()ed in order to execute callbacks, rebalances and to receive messages.
  • BaseProducer: simple wrapper around the librdkafka producer. As in the consumer case, the user must call poll() periodically to execute delivery callbacks.
  • ThreadedProducer: BaseProducer with a separate thread dedicated to polling the producer.

High level:

  • StreamConsumer: it returns a stream of messages and takes care of polling the consumer internally.
  • FutureProducer: it returns a future that will be completed once the message is delivered to Kafka (or failed).

For more information about consumers and producers, refer to their module-level documentation.

Warning: the library is under active development and the APIs are likely to change.

Asynchronous data processing with tokio-rs

tokio-rs is a platform for fast processing of asynchronous events in Rust. The interfaces exposed by the StreamConsumer and the FutureProducer allow rust-rdkafka users to easily integrate Kafka consumers and producers within the tokio-rs platform, and write asynchronous message processing code. Note that rust-rdkafka can be used without tokio-rs.

To see rust-rdkafka in action with tokio-rs, check out the asynchronous processing example in the examples folder.

At-least-once delivery

At-least-once delivery semantic is common in many streaming applications: every message is guaranteed to be processed at least once; in case of temporary failure, the message can be re-processed and/or re-delivered, but no message will be lost.

In order to implement at-least-once delivery the stream processing application has to carefully commit the offset only once the message has been processed. Committing the offset too early, instead, might cause message loss, since upon recovery the consumer will start from the next message, skipping the one where the failure occurred.

To see how to implement at-least-once delivery with rdkafka, check out the at-least-once delivery example in the examples folder. To know more about delivery semantics, check the message delivery semantics chapter in the Kafka documentation.

Users

Here are some of the projects using rust-rdkafka:

If you are using rust-rdkafka, please let me know!

Installation

Add this to your Cargo.toml:

[dependencies]
rdkafka = "0.17.0"

This crate will compile librdkafka from sources and link it statically to your executable. To compile librdkafka you'll need:

  • the GNU toolchain
  • GNU make
  • pthreads
  • zlib
  • libssl-dev: optional, not included by default (feature: ssl).
  • libsasl2-dev: optional, not included by default (feature: sasl).

To enable ssl and sasl, use the features field in Cargo.toml. Example:

[dependencies.rdkafka]
version = "0.17.0"
features = ["ssl", "sasl"]

By default a submodule with the librdkafka sources pinned to a specific commit will be used to compile and statically link the library.

The dynamic_linking feature can be used to link rdkafka to a locally installed version of librdkafka: if the feature is enabled, the build script will use pkg-config to check the version of the library installed in the system, and it will configure the compiler to use dynamic linking.

Compiling from sources

To compile from sources, you'll have to update the submodule containing librdkafka:

git submodule update --init

and then compile using cargo, selecting the features that you want. Example:

cargo build --features "ssl sasl"

Examples

You can find examples in the examples folder. To run them:

cargo run --example <example_name> -- <example_args>

Tests

Unit tests

The unit tests can run without a Kafka broker present:

cargo test --lib

Automatic testing

rust-rdkafka contains a suite of tests which is automatically executed by travis in docker-compose. Given the interaction with C code that rust-rdkafka has to do, tests are executed in valgrind to check eventual memory errors and leaks.

To run the full suite using docker-compose:

./test_suite.sh

To run locally, instead:

KAFKA_HOST="kafka_server:9092" cargo test

In this case there is a broker expected to be running on KAFKA_HOST. The broker must be configured with default partition number 3 and topic autocreation in order for the tests to succeed.

Debugging

rust-rdkafka uses the log and env_logger crates to handle logging. Logging can be enabled using the RUST_LOG environment variable, for example:

RUST_LOG="librdkafka=trace,rdkafka::client=debug" cargo test

This will configure the logging level of librdkafka to trace, and the level of the client module of the Rust client to debug. To actually receive logs from librdkafka, you also have to set the debug option in the producer or consumer configuration (see librdkafka configuration).

To enable debugging in your project, make sure you initialize the logger with env_logger::init() or equivalent.

rdkafka-sys

See rdkafka-sys.

Contributors

Thanks to:

Alternatives

  • kafka-rust: a pure Rust implementation of the Kafka client.

About

A fully asynchronous, futures-based Kafka client library for Rust based on librdkafka

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Rust 96.5%
  • Shell 2.0%
  • Other 1.5%