2016-01-06 00:27:52 -05:00
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---
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layout: doc_page
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---
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# Tutorial: Load from Kafka
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## Getting started
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This tutorial shows you how to load data from Kafka into Druid.
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2016-02-04 14:53:09 -05:00
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For this tutorial, we'll assume you've already downloaded Druid and Tranquility as described in
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the [single-machine quickstart](quickstart.html) and have it running on your local machine. You
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don't need to have loaded any data yet.
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<div class="note info">
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This tutorial will show you how to load data from Kafka into Druid, but Druid additionally supports
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a wide variety of batch and streaming loading methods. See the <a href="../ingestion/batch-ingestion.html">Loading files</a>
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and <a href="../ingestion/stream-ingestion.html">Loading streams</a> pages for more information about other options,
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including from Hadoop, HTTP, Storm, Samza, Spark Streaming, and your own JVM apps.
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</div>
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## Start Kafka
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2016-02-04 14:53:09 -05:00
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[Apache Kafka](http://kafka.apache.org/) is a high throughput message bus that works well with
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Druid. For this tutorial, we will use Kafka 0.9.0.0. To download Kafka, issue the following
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commands in your terminal:
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```bash
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curl -O http://www.us.apache.org/dist/kafka/0.9.0.0/kafka_2.11-0.9.0.0.tgz
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tar -xzf kafka_2.11-0.9.0.0.tgz
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cd kafka_2.11-0.9.0.0
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```
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Start a Kafka broker by running the following command in a new terminal:
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```bash
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./bin/kafka-server-start.sh config/server.properties
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```
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Run this command to create a Kafka topic called *metrics*, to which we'll send data:
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```bash
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./bin/kafka-topics.sh --create --zookeeper localhost:2181 --replication-factor 1 --partitions 1 --topic metrics
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```
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## Send example data
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Let's launch a console producer for our topic and send some data!
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In your Druid directory, generate some metrics by running:
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```bash
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bin/generate-example-metrics
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```
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In your Kafka directory, run:
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```bash
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./bin/kafka-console-producer.sh --broker-list localhost:9092 --topic metrics
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```
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The *kafka-console-producer* command is now awaiting input. Copy the generated example metrics,
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paste them into the *kafka-console-producer* terminal, and press enter. If you like, you can also
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paste more messages into the producer, or you can press CTRL-D to exit the console producer.
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You can immediately query this data, or you can skip ahead to the
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[Loading your own data](#loading-your-own-data) section if you'd like to load your own dataset.
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## Querying your data
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After sending data, you can immediately query it using any of the
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[supported query methods](../querying/querying.html).
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## Loading your own data
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So far, you've loaded data into Druid from Kafka using an ingestion spec that we've included in the
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distribution. Each ingestion spec is designed to work with a particular dataset. You load your own
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data types into Imply by writing a custom ingestion spec.
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You can write a custom ingestion spec by starting from the bundled configuration in
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`conf-quickstart/tranquility/kafka.json` and modifying it for your own needs.
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The most important questions are:
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* What should the dataset be called? This is the "dataSource" field of the "dataSchema".
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* Which field should be treated as a timestamp? This belongs in the "column" of the "timestampSpec".
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* Which fields should be treated as dimensions? This belongs in the "dimensions" of the "dimensionsSpec".
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* Which fields should be treated as measures? This belongs in the "metricsSpec".
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Let's use a small JSON pageviews dataset in the topic *pageviews* as an example, with records like:
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```json
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{"time": "2000-01-01T00:00:00Z", "url": "/foo/bar", "user": "alice", "latencyMs": 32}
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```
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First, create the topic:
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```bash
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./bin/kafka-topics.sh --create --zookeeper localhost:2181 --replication-factor 1 --partitions 1 --topic pageviews
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```
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Next, edit `conf-quickstart/tranquility/kafka.json`:
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* Let's call the dataset "pageviews-kafka".
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* The timestamp is the "time" field.
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* Good choices for dimensions are the string fields "url" and "user".
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* Good choices for measures are a count of pageviews, and the sum of "latencyMs". Collecting that
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sum when we load the data will allow us to compute an average at query time as well.
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You can edit the existing `conf-quickstart/tranquility/kafka.json` file by altering these
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sections:
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1. Change the key `"metrics-kafka"` under `"dataSources"` to `"pageviews-kafka"`
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2. Alter these sections under the new `"pageviews-kafka"` key:
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```json
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"dataSource": "pageviews-kafka"
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```
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```json
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"timestampSpec": {
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"format": "auto",
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"column": "time"
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}
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```
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```json
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"dimensionsSpec": {
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"dimensions": ["url", "user"]
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}
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```
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```json
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"metricsSpec": [
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{"name": "views", "type": "count"},
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{"name": "latencyMs", "type": "doubleSum", "fieldName": "latencyMs"}
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]
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```
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```json
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"properties" : {
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"task.partitions" : "1",
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"task.replicants" : "1",
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"topicPattern" : "pageviews"
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}
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```
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Next, start Druid Kafka ingestion:
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```bash
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bin/tranquility kafka -configFile ../druid-#{DRUIDVERSION}/conf-quickstart/tranquility/kafka.json
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```
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- If your Tranquility server or Kafka is already running, stop it (CTRL-C) and
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start it up again.
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Finally, send some data to the Kafka topic. Let's start with these messages:
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```json
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{"time": "2000-01-01T00:00:00Z", "url": "/foo/bar", "user": "alice", "latencyMs": 32}
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{"time": "2000-01-01T00:00:00Z", "url": "/", "user": "bob", "latencyMs": 11}
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{"time": "2000-01-01T00:00:00Z", "url": "/foo/bar", "user": "bob", "latencyMs": 45}
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```
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Druid streaming ingestion requires relatively current messages (relative to a slack time controlled by the
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[windowPeriod](../ingestion/stream-ingestion.html#segmentgranularity-and-windowperiod) value), so you should
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replace `2000-01-01T00:00:00Z` in these messages with the current time in ISO8601 format. You can
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get this by running:
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```bash
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python -c 'import datetime; print(datetime.datetime.utcnow().strftime("%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%SZ"))'
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```
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Update the timestamps in the JSON above, then copy and paste these messages into this console
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producer and press enter:
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```bash
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./bin/kafka-console-producer.sh --broker-list localhost:9092 --topic pageviews
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```
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2016-02-04 14:53:09 -05:00
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That's it, your data should now be in Druid. You can immediately query it using any of the
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[supported query methods](../querying/querying.html).
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## Further reading
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To read more about loading streams, see our [streaming ingestion documentation](../ingestion/stream-ingestion.html).
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