Apache Kafka Channel Example¶
You can install and configure the Apache Kafka Channel as the default Channel configuration for Knative Eventing.
Prerequisites¶
- A Kubernetes cluster with Knative Eventing, as well as the optional Broker and Kafka Channel components.
Creating a Kafka Channel¶
-
Create a Kafka Channel that contains the following YAML:
apiVersion: messaging.knative.dev/v1beta1 kind: KafkaChannel metadata: name: my-kafka-channel spec: numPartitions: 3 replicationFactor: 1
-
Apply the YAML file by running the command:
Wherekubectl apply -f <filename>.yaml
<filename>
is the name of the file you created in the previous step.
Specifying Kafka as the default Channel implementation¶
-
To configure Kafka Channel as the default channel configuration, modify the
default-ch-webhook
ConfigMap so that it contains the following YAML:apiVersion: v1 kind: ConfigMap metadata: name: default-ch-webhook namespace: knative-eventing data: # Configuration for defaulting channels that do not specify CRD implementations. default-ch-config: | clusterDefault: apiVersion: messaging.knative.dev/v1beta1 kind: KafkaChannel spec: numPartitions: 3 replicationFactor: 1
-
Apply the YAML file by running the command:
kubectl apply -f <filename>.yaml
Where
<filename>
is the name of the file you created in the previous step.
Creating an Apache Kafka channel¶
-
After
KafkaChannel
is set as the default Channel type, you can create a Kafka Channel by creating a generic Channel object that contains the following YAML:apiVersion: messaging.knative.dev/v1 kind: Channel metadata: name: testchannel-one
-
Apply the YAML file by running the command:
kubectl apply -f <filename>.yaml
Where
<filename>
is the name of the file you created in the previous step. -
Verify that the Channel was created properly by checking that your Kafka cluster has a
testchannel-one
Topic. If you are using Strimzi, you can run the command:kubectl -n kafka exec -it my-cluster-kafka-0 -- bin/kafka-topics.sh --bootstrap-server my-cluster-kafka-bootstrap:9092 --list
The output looks similar to the following:
... __consumer_offsets knative-messaging-kafka.default.my-kafka-channel knative-messaging-kafka.default.testchannel-one ...
The Kafka Topic that is created by the Channel contains the name of the namespace,
default
in this example, followed by the name of the Channel. In the consolidated Channel implementation, it is also prefixed withknative-messaging-kafka
to indicate that it is a Kafka Channel from Knative.Note
The topic of a Kafka Channel is an implementation detail and records from it should not be consumed from different applications.
Creating a Service and Trigger that use the Apache Kafka Broker¶
The following example uses a ApiServerSource to publish events to an existing Broker, and a Trigger that routes those events to a Knative Service.
-
Create a Knative Service:
apiVersion: serving.knative.dev/v1 kind: Service metadata: name: broker-kafka-display spec: template: spec: containers: - image: gcr.io/knative-releases/knative.dev/eventing/cmd/event_display
-
Apply the YAML file by running the command:
kubectl apply -f <filename>.yaml
Where
<filename>
is the name of the file you created in the previous step. -
Create a ServiceAccount, ClusterRole, and ClusterRoleBinding for the ApiServerSource:
apiVersion: v1 kind: ServiceAccount metadata: name: events-sa namespace: default --- apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1 kind: ClusterRole metadata: name: event-watcher rules: - apiGroups: - "" resources: - events verbs: - get - list - watch --- apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1 kind: ClusterRoleBinding metadata: name: k8s-ra-event-watcher roleRef: apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io kind: ClusterRole name: event-watcher subjects: - kind: ServiceAccount name: events-sa namespace: default
-
Apply the YAML file by running the command:
kubectl apply -f <filename>.yaml
Where
<filename>
is the name of the file you created in the previous step. -
Create an ApiServerSource that sends events to the default Broker:
apiVersion: sources.knative.dev/v1 kind: ApiServerSource metadata: name: testevents-kafka-03 namespace: default spec: serviceAccountName: events-sa mode: Resource resources: - apiVersion: v1 kind: Event sink: ref: apiVersion: eventing.knative.dev/v1 kind: Broker name: default
-
Apply the YAML file by running the command:
kubectl apply -f <filename>.yaml
Where
<filename>
is the name of the file you created in the previous step. -
Create a Trigger that filters events from the Broker to the Service:
apiVersion: eventing.knative.dev/v1 kind: Trigger metadata: name: testevents-trigger namespace: default spec: broker: default subscriber: ref: apiVersion: serving.knative.dev/v1 kind: Service name: broker-kafka-display
-
Apply the YAML file by running the command:
kubectl apply -f <filename>.yaml
Where
<filename>
is the name of the file you created in the previous step. -
Verifying the Kafka Channel is working, by observing events in the log of the Service, by running the command:
kubectl logs --selector='serving.knative.dev/service=broker-kafka-display' -c user-container
Authentication against an Apache Kafka cluster¶
In production environments it is common that the Apache Kafka cluster is secured using TLS or SASL. This section shows how to configure a Kafka Channel to work against a protected Apache Kafka cluster, with the two supported TLS and SASL authentication methods.
Note
Kafka Channels require certificates to be in .pem
format. If your files
are in a different format, you must convert them to .pem
.
TLS authentication¶
-
Edit the
config-kafka
ConfigMap:kubectl -n knative-eventing edit configmap config-kafka
-
Set the
TLS.Enable
field totrue
:... data: sarama: | config: | Net: TLS: Enable: true ...
-
Optional: If you are using a custom CA certificate, add your certificate data to the ConfigMap in the
data.sarama.config.Net.TLS.Config.RootPEMs
field:... data: sarama: | config: | Net: TLS: Config: RootPEMs: # Array of Root Certificate PEM Files (Use '|-' Syntax To Preserve Linefeeds & Avoiding Terminating \n) - |- -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE----- MIIGDzCCA/egAwIBAgIUWq6j7u/25wPQiNMPZqL6Vy0rkvQwDQYJKoZIhvcNAQEL ... 771uezZAFqd1GLLL8ZYRmCsAMg== -----END CERTIFICATE----- ...
SASL authentication¶
To use SASL authentication, you will need the following information:
- A username and password.
- The type of SASL mechanism you wish to use. For example;
PLAIN
,SCRAM-SHA-256
orSCRAM-SHA-512
.
Note
It is recommended to also enable TLS as described in the previous section.
-
Edit the
config-kafka
ConfigMap:kubectl -n knative-eventing edit configmap config-kafka
-
Set the
SASL.Enable
field totrue
:... data: sarama: | config: | Net: SASL: Enable: true ...
-
Create a secret that uses the username, password, and SASL mechanism:
kubectl create secret --namespace <namespace> generic <kafka-auth-secret> \ --from-literal=password="SecretPassword" \ --from-literal=saslType="PLAIN" \ --from-literal=username="my-sasl-user"
All authentication methods¶
-
If you have created a secret for your desired authentication method by using the previous steps, reference the secret and the namespace of the secret in the
config-kafka
ConfigMap:... data: eventing-kafka: | kafka: authSecretName: <kafka-auth-secret> authSecretNamespace: <namespace> ...
Note
The default secret name and namespace are
kafka-cluster
andknative-eventing
respectively. If you reference a secret in a different namespace, make sure you configure your roles and bindings so that theknative-eventing
Pods can access it.
Channel configuration¶
The config-kafka
ConfigMap allows for a variety of Channel options such as:
-
CPU and Memory requests and limits for the dispatcher (and receiver for the distributed Channel type) deployments created by the controller
-
Kafka Topic default values (number of partitions, replication factor, and retention time)
-
Maximum idle connections/connections per host for Knative cloudevents
-
The brokers string for your Kafka connection
-
The name and namespace of your TLS/SASL authentication secret
-
The Kafka admin type (distributed channel only)
-
Nearly all the settings exposed in a Sarama Config Struct
-
Sarama debugging assistance (via sarama.enableLogging)
For detailed information (particularly for the distributed channel), see the Distributed Channel README