I am looking for some clarification on the subject. In Kafka documentations I found the following:
Kafka only provides a total order over messages within a partition, no
Igor,
Partitions increase parallelism of Kafka topic. Any number of consumers/producers can use the same partition. Its up to application layer to define the protocol. Kafka guarantees delivery. Regarding the API, you may want to look at Java docs as they may be more complete. Based on my experience:
Does it mean if i want to have more than 1 consumer (from the same group) reading from one topic I need to have more than 1 partition?
Let's see the following properties of kafka:
With these properties, kafka is smartly able to provide both ordering guarantees
and load balancing
over a pool of consumer processes.
To answer your question, yes, in the context of the same group, if you want to have N consumers
, you have to have at least N partitions
.
Does it mean I need same amount of partitions as amount of consumers for the same group?
I think this has been explained in the first answer.
How many consumers can read from one partition?
The number of consumers
that can read from one partition is always equal to the number of consumer groups
subscribing to that topic.
Relationship between keys and partitions with regard to API
First, we must understand that the producer
is responsible for choosing which record to assign to which partition within the topic.
Now, lets see how producer does so. First, lets see the class definition of ProducerRecord.java
:
public class ProducerRecord<K, V> {
private final String topic;
private final Integer partition;
private final Headers headers;
private final K key;
private final V value;
private final Long timestamp;
}
Here, the field that we have to understand from the class is partition
.
From the ProducerRecord docs,
partition number
is specified, that partition
will be used when sending the record.key
is present a partition will be chosen using a hash of the key
.key
nor partition
is present a partition will be assigned in a round-robin fashion
.