apiVersion: eventing.knative.dev/v1alpha1
kind: KafkaSink
metadata:
name: <sink-name>
namespace: <namespace>
spec:
topic: <topic-name>
bootstrapServers:
- <bootstrap-server>
Apache Kafka sinks are a type of event sink that are available if a cluster administrator has enabled Apache Kafka on your cluster. You can send events directly from an event source to a Kafka topic by using a Kafka sink.
You can create a Kafka sink that sends events to a Kafka topic. By default, a Kafka sink uses the binary content mode, which is more efficient than the structured mode. To create a Kafka sink by using YAML, you must create a YAML file that defines a KafkaSink
object, then apply it by using the oc apply
command.
The OpenShift Serverless Operator, Knative Eventing, and the KnativeKafka
custom resource (CR) are installed on your cluster.
You have created a project or have access to a project with the appropriate roles and permissions to create applications and other workloads in OpenShift Container Platform.
You have access to a Red Hat AMQ Streams (Kafka) cluster that produces the Kafka messages you want to import.
Install the OpenShift CLI (oc
).
Create a KafkaSink
object definition as a YAML file:
apiVersion: eventing.knative.dev/v1alpha1
kind: KafkaSink
metadata:
name: <sink-name>
namespace: <namespace>
spec:
topic: <topic-name>
bootstrapServers:
- <bootstrap-server>
To create the Kafka sink, apply the KafkaSink
YAML file:
$ oc apply -f <filename>
Configure an event source so that the sink is specified in its spec:
apiVersion: sources.knative.dev/v1alpha2
kind: ApiServerSource
metadata:
name: <source-name> (1)
namespace: <namespace> (2)
spec:
serviceAccountName: <service-account-name> (3)
mode: Resource
resources:
- apiVersion: v1
kind: Event
sink:
ref:
apiVersion: eventing.knative.dev/v1alpha1
kind: KafkaSink
name: <sink-name> (4)
1 | The name of the event source. |
2 | The namespace of the event source. |
3 | The service account for the event source. |
4 | The Kafka sink name. |
You can create a Kafka sink that sends events to a Kafka topic by using the Developer perspective in the OpenShift Container Platform web console. By default, a Kafka sink uses the binary content mode, which is more efficient than the structured mode.
As a developer, you can create an event sink to receive events from a particular source and send them to a Kafka topic.
You have installed the OpenShift Serverless Operator, with Knative Serving, Knative Eventing, and Knative broker for Apache Kafka APIs, from the OperatorHub.
You have created a Kafka topic in your Kafka environment.
In the Developer perspective, navigate to the +Add view.
Click Event Sink in the Eventing catalog.
Search for KafkaSink
in the catalog items and click it.
Click Create Event Sink.
In the form view, type the URL of the bootstrap server, which is a combination of host name and port.
Type the name of the topic to send event data.
Type the name of the event sink.
Click Create.
In the Developer perspective, navigate to the Topology view.
Click the created event sink to view its details in the right panel.
Transport Layer Security (TLS) is used by Apache Kafka clients and servers to encrypt traffic between Knative and Kafka, as well as for authentication. TLS is the only supported method of traffic encryption for the Knative broker implementation for Apache Kafka.
Simple Authentication and Security Layer (SASL) is used by Apache Kafka for authentication. If you use SASL authentication on your cluster, users must provide credentials to Knative for communicating with the Kafka cluster; otherwise events cannot be produced or consumed.
The OpenShift Serverless Operator, Knative Eventing, and the KnativeKafka
custom resources (CRs) are installed on your OpenShift Container Platform cluster.
Kafka sink is enabled in the KnativeKafka
CR.
You have created a project or have access to a project with the appropriate roles and permissions to create applications and other workloads in OpenShift Container Platform.
You have a Kafka cluster CA certificate stored as a .pem
file.
You have a Kafka cluster client certificate and a key stored as .pem
files.
You have installed the OpenShift (oc
) CLI.
You have chosen the SASL mechanism to use, for example, PLAIN
, SCRAM-SHA-256
, or SCRAM-SHA-512
.
Create the certificate files as a secret in the same namespace as your KafkaSink
object:
certificates and keys must be in PEM format. |
For authentication using SASL without encryption:
$ oc create secret -n <namespace> generic <secret_name> \
--from-literal=protocol=SASL_PLAINTEXT \
--from-literal=sasl.mechanism=<sasl_mechanism> \
--from-literal=user=<username> \
--from-literal=password=<password>
For authentication using SASL and encryption using TLS:
$ oc create secret -n <namespace> generic <secret_name> \
--from-literal=protocol=SASL_SSL \
--from-literal=sasl.mechanism=<sasl_mechanism> \
--from-file=ca.crt=<my_caroot.pem_file_path> \ (1)
--from-literal=user=<username> \
--from-literal=password=<password>
1 | The ca.crt can be omitted to use the system’s root CA set if you are using a public cloud managed Kafka service. |
For authentication and encryption using TLS:
$ oc create secret -n <namespace> generic <secret_name> \
--from-literal=protocol=SSL \
--from-file=ca.crt=<my_caroot.pem_file_path> \ (1)
--from-file=user.crt=<my_cert.pem_file_path> \
--from-file=user.key=<my_key.pem_file_path>
1 | The ca.crt can be omitted to use the system’s root CA set if you are using a public cloud managed Kafka service. |
Create or modify a KafkaSink
object and add a reference to your secret in the auth
spec:
apiVersion: eventing.knative.dev/v1alpha1
kind: KafkaSink
metadata:
name: <sink_name>
namespace: <namespace>
spec:
...
auth:
secret:
ref:
name: <secret_name>
...
Apply the KafkaSink
object:
$ oc apply -f <filename>