kafka-connect-mqsource is a Kafka Connector for copying data from IBM MQ into Apache Kafka.
The connector is supplied as source code which you can easily build into a JAR file.
To build the connector, you must have the following installed:
Download the MQ client JAR by following the instructions in Getting the IBM MQ classes for Java and JMS. Once you've accepted the license, download the IBM MQ JMS and Java redistributable client file (currently called 9.0.0.1-IBM-MQC-Redist-Java.zip
). Unpack the ZIP file.
Clone the repository with the following command:
git clone https://github.com/ibm-messaging/kafka-connect-mq-source.git
Change directory into the kafka-connect-mq-source
directory:
cd kafka-connect-mq-source
Copy the JAR file allclient-9.0.0.1.jar
that you unpacked from the ZIP file earlier into the kafka-connect-mq-source
directory.
Run the following command to create a local Maven repository containing just this file so that it can be used to build the connector:
mvn deploy:deploy-file -Durl=file://local-maven-repo -Dfile=allclient-9.0.0.1.jar -DgroupId=com.ibm.mq -DartifactId=allclient -Dpackaging=jar -Dversion=9.0.0.1
Build the connector using Maven:
mvn clean package
Once built, the output is a single JAR called target/kafka-connect-mq-source-0.1-SNAPSHOT-jar-with-dependencies.jar
which contains all of the required dependencies.
To run the connector, you must have:
- The JAR from building the connector
- A properties file containing the configuration for the connector
- Apache Kafka
- IBM MQ v8.0 or later
The connector can be run in a Kafka Connect worker in either standalone (single process) or distributed mode. It's a good idea to start in standalone mode.
You need two configuration files, one for the configuration that applies to all of the connectors such as the Kafka bootstrap servers, and another for the configuration specific to the MQ source connector such as the connection information for your queue manager. For the former, the Kafka distribution includes a file called connect-standalone.properties
that you can use as a starting point. For the latter, you can use config/mq-source.properties
in this repository.
The connector connects to MQ using a client connection. You must provide the name of the queue manager, the connection name (one or more host/port pairs) and the channel name. In addition, you can provide a user name and password if the queue manager is configured to require them for client connections. If you look at the supplied config/mq-sink.properties
, you'll see how to specify the configuration required.
To run the connector in standalone mode from the directory into which you installed Apache Kafka, you use a command like this:
bin/connect-standalone.sh connect-standalone.properties mq-source.properties
Kafka Connect is very flexible but it's important to understand the way that it processes messages to end up with a reliable system. When the connector encounters a message that it cannot process, it stops rather than throwing the message away. Therefore, you need to make sure that the configuration you use can handle the messages the connector will process.
Each message in Kafka Connect is associated with a representation of the message format known as a schema. Each Kafka message actually has two parts, key and value, and each part has its own schema. The MQ source connector does not currently use message keys, but some of the configuration options use the word Value because they refer to the Kafka message value.
When the MQ source connector reads a message from MQ, it chooses a schema to represent the message format and creates a Java object containing the message value. Each message is then processed using a converter which creates the message that's published on a Kafka topic. You need to choose a converter appropriate to the format of messages that will pass through the connector.
There's no single configuration that will always be right, but here are some high-level suggestions.
- Pass unchanged binary data as the Kafka message value
value.converter=org.apache.kafka.connect.converters.ByteArrayConverter
- Messages are JMS BytesMessage, pass byte array as the Kafka message value
mq.message.body.jms=true
value.converter=org.apache.kafka.connect.converters.ByteArrayConverter
- Messages are JMS TextMessage, pass string as the Kafka message value
mq.message.body.jms=true
value.converter=org.apache.kafka.connect.storage.StringConverter
The MQ source connector has a configuration option mq.message.body.jms that controls whether it interprets the MQ messages as JMS messages or regular MQ messages. By default, mq.message.body.jms=false which gives the following behaviour.
Incoming message format | Value schema | Value class |
---|---|---|
Any | OPTIONAL_BYTES | byte[] |
This means that all messages are treated as arrays of bytes, and the converter must be able to handle arrays of bytes.
When you set mq.message.body.jms=true, the MQ messages are interpreted as JMS messages. This is appropriate if the applications sending the messages are themselves using JMS. This gives the following behaviour.
Incoming message format | Value schema | Value class |
---|---|---|
JMS BytesMessage | null | byte[] |
JMS TextMessage | null | java.lang.String |
Anything else | EXCEPTION | EXCEPTION |
There are three basic converters built into Apache Kafka, with the likely useful combinations in bold.
Converter class | byte[] | java.lang.String |
---|---|---|
org.apache.kafka.connect.converters.ByteArrayConverter | Binary data | EXCEPTION |
org.apache.kafka.connect.storage.StringConverter | Works, not useful | String data |
org.apache.kafka.connect.json.JsonConverter | Base-64 JSON String | JSON String |
In addition, there is another converter for the Avro format that is part of the Confluent Platform. This has not been tested with the MQ source connector at this time.
The configuration options for the MQ Source Connector are as follows:
Name | Description | Type | Default | Valid values |
---|---|---|---|---|
mq.queue.manager | The name of the MQ queue manager | string | MQ queue manager name | |
mq.connection.name.list | List of connection names for queue manager | string | host(port)[,host(port),...] | |
mq.channel.name | The name of the server-connection channel | string | MQ channel name | |
mq.queue | The name of the source MQ queue | string | MQ queue name | |
mq.user.name | The user name for authenticating with the queue manager | string | User name | |
mq.password | The password for authenticating with the queue manager | string | Password | |
mq.message.body.jms | Whether to interpret the message body as a JMS message type | boolean | false | |
topic | The name of the target Kafka topic | string | Topic name |
The first version of the connector is intentionally basic. The idea is to enhance it with additional features to make it more capable. Some possible future enhancements are:
- TLS connections
- Message key support
- Configurable schema for MQ messages
- JMX metrics
- JSON parsing so that the JSON type information is supplied to the converter
- Testing with the Confluent Platform Avro converter and Schema Registry
Copyright 2017 IBM Corporation
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
(http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0)
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.The project is licensed under the Apache 2 license.