Configure ksqlDB Server
- Configure Security for ksqlDB
- ksqlDB Configuration Parameter Reference
- Configure ksqlDB for Avro, Protobuf, and JSON schemas
ksqlDB configuration parameters can be set for ksqlDB Server and for queries, as well as for the underlying Kafka Streams and Kafka Clients (producer and consumer).
Tip
These instructions assume you are installing Confluent Platform by using ZIP or TAR archives. For more information, see On-Premises Deployments.
Setting ksqlDB Server Parameters¶
You can specify ksqlDB Server configuration parameters by using the server
configuration file (ksql-server.properties
) or the KSQL_OPTS
environment variable. Properties set with KSQL_OPTS
take precedence
over those specified in the ksqlDB configuration file. A recommended
approach is to configure a common set of properties using the ksqlDB
configuration file and override specific properties as needed, using the
KSQL_OPTS
environment variable.
Tip
If you deploy Confluent Platform by using Docker containers, you can specify configuration parameters as environment variables to the ksqlDB Server image. For more information, see Install ksqlDB with Docker.
ksqlDB Server Configuration File¶
By default, the ksqlDB server configuration file is located at
<path-to-confluent>/etc/ksqldb/ksql-server.properties
. The file follows
the syntax conventions of
Java properties files.
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For example:
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After you have updated the server configuration file, you can start the ksqlDB Server with the configuration file specified.
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For more information, see ksqlDB Configuration Parameter Reference.
KSQL_OPTS Environment Variable¶
You can override ksqlDB Server configuration parameters by using the
KSQL_OPTS
environment variable. The properties are standard Java
system properties. For example, to set
ksql.streams.num.streams.threads
to 1
:
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You can specify multiple parameters at the same time. For example, to
configure ksql.streams.auto.offset.reset
and
ksql.streams.num.stream.threads
:
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ksqlDB Server Runtime Environment Variables¶
When ksqlDB Server starts, it checks for shell environment variables that control the host Java Virtual Machine (JVM). Set the following environment variables to control options like heap size and Log4j configuration. These settings are applied by the ksql-run-class shell script when ksqlDB Server starts.
- KSQL_CLASSPATH
-
Path to the Java deployment of ksqlDB Server and related Java classes. The following command shows an example KSQL_CLASSPATH setting.
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export CLASSPATH=/usr/share/java/my-base/*:/usr/share/java/my-ksql-server/*:/opt/my-company/lib/ksql/*:$CLASSPATH export KSQL_CLASSPATH="${CLASSPATH}"
- KSQL_LOG4J_OPTS
-
Specifies ksqlDB Server logging options by using the Log4j configuration settings. The following example command sets the default Log4j configuration.
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export KSQL_LOG4J_OPTS="-Dlog4j.configuration=file:$KSQL_CONFIG_DIR/log4j-rolling.properties"
For more information, see Log4j Configuration.
- KSQL_JMX_OPTS
-
Specifies ksqlDB metrics options by using Java Management Extensions (JMX). The following example command sets the default JMX configuration.
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export KSQL_JMX_OPTS="-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote -Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.authenticate=false -Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.ssl=false "
For more information, see Monitoring and Management Using JMX Technology.
- KSQL_HEAP_OPTS
-
Specifies the initial size and maximum size of the JVM heap for the ksqlDB Server process. The following example command sets the initial size and maximum size to 15GB.
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export KSQL_HEAP_OPTS="-Xms15G -Xmx15G"
For more information, see JRockit JVM Heap Size Options.
- KSQL_JVM_PERFORMANCE_OPTS
-
Specifies performance tuning options for the JVM that runs ksqlDB Server. The following example command sets the default JVM configuration.
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export KSQL_JVM_PERFORMANCE_OPTS="-server -XX:+UseConcMarkSweepGC -XX:+CMSClassUnload ingEnabled -XX:+CMSScavengeBeforeRemark -XX:+ExplicitGCInvokesConcurrent -XX:New Ratio=1 -Djava.awt.headless=true"
For more information, see D Command-Line Options.
- JMX_PORT
-
Specifies the port that JMX uses to report metrics.
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export JMX_PORT=1099
- JAVA_HOME
-
Specifies the location of the
java
executable file.1
export JAVA_HOME=<jdk-install-directory>
Non-interactive (Headless) ksqlDB Usage¶
ksqlDB supports locked-down, "headless" deployment scenarios where interactive use of the ksqlDB cluster is disabled. For example, the CLI enables a team of users to develop and verify their queries interactively on a shared testing ksqlDB cluster. But when you deploy these queries in your production environment, you want to lock down access to ksqlDB servers, version-control the exact queries, and store them in a .sql file. This prevents users from interacting directly with the production ksqlDB cluster. For more information, see Headless Deployment.
You can configure servers to exclusively run a predefined script (.sql
file) via the --queries-file
command line argument, or the
ksql.queries.file
setting in the
ksqlDB configuration file. If a
server is running a predefined script, it will automatically disable its
REST endpoint and interactive use.
Note
In headless mode, you must start all ksqlDB servers with the same queries file. If the queries files differ across ksqlDB servers, the behavior is undefined.
Tip
When both the ksql.queries.file
property and the --queries-file
argument are present, the --queries-file
argument takes
precedence.
Schema resolution¶
When you run a ksqlDB application that uses Avro or Protobuf, ksqlDB infers schemas from Schema Registry automatically, but the behavior after restarting ksqlDB Server differs between interactive and non-interactive mode.
- Interactive mode: after ksqlDB Server restarts, it doesn't contact Schema Registry again to resolve schemas, because it has previously persisted the information to the command topic.
- Non-interactive mode: after ksqlDB Server restarts, it does contact Schema Registry again to resolve schemas. If schemas have changed, unexpected behavior in your ksqlDB applications may occur.
Important
If your ksqlDB applications use Avro or Protobuf, and you run them in non-interactive mode, ensure that the schemas don't change between ksqlDB Server restarts, or provide the schema explicitly. If the schema may evolve, it's safer to provide the schema explicitly.
Start headless ksqlDB Server from the command line¶
To start the ksqlDB Server in headless, non-interactive configuration via the
--queries-file
command line argument:
Create a predefined script and save as an .sql
file.
Start the ksqlDB Server with the predefined script specified by using the
--queries-file
argument.
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Start headless ksqlDB Server by using the configuration file¶
To start the ksqlDB Server in headless, non-interactive configuration via the
ksql.queries.file
in the server configuration file:
Configure the ksql-server.properties
file. The
bootstrap.servers
and ksql.queries.file
are required. For
more information about configuration, see
ksqlDB configuration file.
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Start the ksqlDB server with the configuration file specified.
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Configuring Listeners of a ksqlDB Cluster¶
Multiple hosts are required to scale ksqlDB processing power and to do that, they must
form a cluster. ksqlDB requires all hosts of a cluster to use the same ksql.service.id
.
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Once formed, many operations can be run using the client APIs exposed on listeners
.
In order to utilize pull queries and their high availability functionality, the nodes within the cluster must be able to communicate with each other. ksqlDB supports setups with either a single shared listener for both client and internal communication, or dual single-purpose listeners. The following section describes how to configure listeners depending on the nature of your environment and requirements.
Single listener¶
Single routable listener¶
If you want to configure your listener with an IP address or hostname that is resolvable and routable from within the cluster, you might do the following:
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In this setup, the node shares the first URL in the listeners
config as its internal
endpoint, which other nodes use for inter-node communication. Inter-node communication
uses the same listener as client communication.
Single non-routable listener¶
It's common to set up a service using special hostnames, like localhost
, or wildcard addresses,
like 0.0.0.0
or [::]
. These special hostnames have special meanings and are not appropriate for
inter-node communication, because they're not routable from other machines. This is also the case if your
network is set up such that the IP or hostname you bind isn't resolvable or routable.
If you choose to use a non-routable listener, you must set ksql.advertised.listener
and specify a
URL that is externally accessible and which resolves to an endpoint defined in listeners
.
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In this setup, the node shares the URL in the ksql.advertised.listener
config as its
internal endpoint, which other nodes use for inter-node communication. Inter-node
communication uses the same listener as client communication.
Dual listeners¶
You may choose to configure internal communication to use a different listener to client communication, which enables port filtering rules to deny clients access to the internal listener or the use of a different network interface for internal communication, for security or QoS reasons.
This can be achieved by setting the ksql.internal.listener
configuration to start a second
listener that is used exclusively for inter-node communication.
If you're running dual listeners to improve security, you may also wish to enable authentication and other security measures.
Dual routable listeners¶
If the internal IP address or hostname used in the ksql.internal.listener
configuration is externally
resolvable and routable, you only need to configure ksql.internal.listener
to set the internal
listener, for example:
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Note
Only the ksql.internal.listener
needs to be resolvable and routable from servers running other
nodes in the cluster. The listener
configuration can be non-resolvable and non-routable, because
clients can connect using whatever URL you choose.
In this setup, the node shares the URL in the ksql.internal.listener
config as its
internal endpoint, which other nodes use for inter-node communication. Inter-node
communication uses a different listener to client communication.
Dual non-routable listeners¶
If the internal IP address or hostname used in the ksql.internal.listener
configuration is not
externally resolvable and routable, for example where it uses localhost
or wildcard IPs such as
0.0.0.0
or [::]
, you must configure both ksql.internal.listener
and ksql.advertised.listener
to set the internal listener:
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Note
Only the ksql.advertised.listener
needs to be resolvable and routable from servers running
other nodes in the cluster. The listener
configuration can be non-resolvable and non-routable,
because clients can connect using whatever URL you choose, and ksql.internal.listener
is only used
to start the listener.
In this setup, the node shares the url in the ksql.advertised.listener
config as its
internal endpoint, which other nodes use for inter-node communication. Inter-node
communication uses a different listener to client communication.