See our web site for details on the project.
You need to have Java installed.
We build and test Apache Kafka with Java 8, 11 and 16. We set the release
parameter in javac and scalac
to 8
to ensure the generated binaries are compatible with Java 8 or higher (independently of the Java version
used for compilation).
Scala 2.13 is used by default, see below for how to use a different Scala version or all of the supported Scala versions.
./gradlew jar
Follow instructions in https://kafka.apache.org/quickstart
./gradlew srcJar
./gradlew aggregatedJavadoc
./gradlew javadoc
./gradlew javadocJar # builds a javadoc jar for each module
./gradlew scaladoc
./gradlew scaladocJar # builds a scaladoc jar for each module
./gradlew docsJar # builds both (if applicable) javadoc and scaladoc jars for each module
./gradlew test # runs both unit and integration tests
./gradlew unitTest
./gradlew integrationTest
./gradlew cleanTest test
./gradlew cleanTest unitTest
./gradlew cleanTest integrationTest
./gradlew clients:test --tests RequestResponseTest
./gradlew core:test --tests kafka.api.ProducerFailureHandlingTest.testCannotSendToInternalTopic
./gradlew clients:test --tests org.apache.kafka.clients.MetadataTest.testMetadataUpdateWaitTime
Change the log4j setting in either clients/src/test/resources/log4j.properties
or core/src/test/resources/log4j.properties
./gradlew clients:test --tests RequestResponseTest
By default, each failed test is retried once up to a maximum of five retries per test run. Tests are retried at the end of the test task. Adjust these parameters in the following way:
./gradlew test -PmaxTestRetries=1 -PmaxTestRetryFailures=5
See Test Retry Gradle Plugin for more details.
Generate coverage reports for the whole project:
./gradlew reportCoverage -PenableTestCoverage=true -Dorg.gradle.parallel=false
Generate coverage for a single module, i.e.:
./gradlew clients:reportCoverage -PenableTestCoverage=true -Dorg.gradle.parallel=false
./gradlew clean releaseTarGz
The release file can be found inside ./core/build/distributions/
.
Sometimes it is only necessary to rebuild the RPC auto-generated message data when switching between branches, as they could fail due to code changes. You can just run:
./gradlew processMessages processTestMessages
./bin/zookeeper-server-start.sh config/zookeeper.properties
./bin/kafka-server-start.sh config/server.properties
./gradlew clean
Note that if building the jars with a version other than 2.13.x, you need to set the SCALA_VERSION
variable or change it in bin/kafka-run-class.sh
to run the quick start.
You can pass either the major version (eg 2.12) or the full version (eg 2.12.7):
./gradlew -PscalaVersion=2.12 jar
./gradlew -PscalaVersion=2.12 test
./gradlew -PscalaVersion=2.12 releaseTarGz
Invoke the gradlewAll
script followed by the task(s):
./gradlewAll test
./gradlewAll jar
./gradlewAll releaseTarGz
This is for core
, examples
and clients
./gradlew core:jar
./gradlew core:test
Streams has multiple sub-projects, but you can run all the tests:
./gradlew :streams:testAll
./gradlew tasks
Note that this is not strictly necessary (IntelliJ IDEA has good built-in support for Gradle projects, for example).
./gradlew eclipse
./gradlew idea
The eclipse
task has been configured to use ${project_dir}/build_eclipse
as Eclipse's build directory. Eclipse's default
build directory (${project_dir}/bin
) clashes with Kafka's scripts directory and we don't use Gradle's build directory
to avoid known issues with this configuration.
The recommended command is:
./gradlewAll publish
For backwards compatibility, the following also works:
./gradlewAll uploadArchives
Please note for this to work you should create/update ${GRADLE_USER_HOME}/gradle.properties
(typically, ~/.gradle/gradle.properties
) and assign the following variables
mavenUrl=
mavenUsername=
mavenPassword=
signing.keyId=
signing.password=
signing.secretKeyRingFile=
For the Streams archetype project, one cannot use gradle to upload to maven; instead the mvn deploy
command needs to be called at the quickstart folder:
cd streams/quickstart
mvn deploy
Please note for this to work you should create/update user maven settings (typically, ${USER_HOME}/.m2/settings.xml
) to assign the following variables
<settings xmlns="http://maven.apache.org/SETTINGS/1.0.0"
xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
xsi:schemaLocation="http://maven.apache.org/SETTINGS/1.0.0
https://maven.apache.org/xsd/settings-1.0.0.xsd">
...
<servers>
...
<server>
<id>apache.snapshots.https</id>
<username>${maven_username}</username>
<password>${maven_password}</password>
</server>
<server>
<id>apache.releases.https</id>
<username>${maven_username}</username>
<password>${maven_password}</password>
</server>
...
</servers>
...
The recommended command is:
./gradlewAll publishToMavenLocal
For backwards compatibility, the following also works:
./gradlewAll install
./gradlew testJar
./gradlew core:dependencies --configuration runtime
./gradlew dependencyUpdates
There are two code quality analysis tools that we regularly run, spotbugs and checkstyle.
Checkstyle enforces a consistent coding style in Kafka. You can run checkstyle using:
./gradlew checkstyleMain checkstyleTest
The checkstyle warnings will be found in reports/checkstyle/reports/main.html
and reports/checkstyle/reports/test.html
files in the
subproject build directories. They are also printed to the console. The build will fail if Checkstyle fails.
Spotbugs uses static analysis to look for bugs in the code. You can run spotbugs using:
./gradlew spotbugsMain spotbugsTest -x test
The spotbugs warnings will be found in reports/spotbugs/main.html
and reports/spotbugs/test.html
files in the subproject build
directories. Use -PxmlSpotBugsReport=true to generate an XML report instead of an HTML one.
We use JMH to write microbenchmarks that produce reliable results in the JVM.
See jmh-benchmarks/README.md for details on how to run the microbenchmarks.
The following options should be set with a -P
switch, for example ./gradlew -PmaxParallelForks=1 test
.
commitId
: sets the build commit ID as .git/HEAD might not be correct if there are local commits added for build purposes.mavenUrl
: sets the URL of the maven deployment repository (file://path/to/repo
can be used to point to a local repository).maxParallelForks
: limits the maximum number of processes for each task.ignoreFailures
: ignore test failures from junitshowStandardStreams
: shows standard out and standard error of the test JVM(s) on the console.skipSigning
: skips signing of artifacts.testLoggingEvents
: unit test events to be logged, separated by comma. For example./gradlew -PtestLoggingEvents=started,passed,skipped,failed test
.xmlSpotBugsReport
: enable XML reports for spotBugs. This also disables HTML reports as only one can be enabled at a time.maxTestRetries
: the maximum number of retries for a failing test case.maxTestRetryFailures
: maximum number of test failures before retrying is disabled for subsequent tests.enableTestCoverage
: enables test coverage plugins and tasks, including bytecode enhancement of classes required to track said coverage. Note that this introduces some overhead when running tests and hence why it's disabled by default (the overhead varies, but 15-20% is a reasonable estimate).scalaOptimizerMode
: configures the optimizing behavior of the scala compiler, the value should be one ofnone
,method
,inline-kafka
orinline-scala
(the default isinline-kafka
).none
is the scala compiler default, which only eliminates unreachable code.method
also includes method-local optimizations.inline-kafka
adds inlining of methods within the kafka packages. Finally,inline-scala
also includes inlining of methods within the scala library (which avoids lambda allocations for methods likeOption.exists
).inline-scala
is only safe if the Scala library version is the same at compile time and runtime. Since we cannot guarantee this for all cases (for example, users may depend on the kafka jar for integration tests where they may include a scala library with a different version), we don't enable it by default. See https://www.lightbend.com/blog/scala-inliner-optimizer for more details.
The gradle dependency debugging documentation mentions using the dependencies
or dependencyInsight
tasks to debug dependencies for the root project or individual subprojects.
Alternatively, use the allDeps
or allDepInsight
tasks for recursively iterating through all subprojects:
./gradlew allDeps
./gradlew allDepInsight --configuration runtime --dependency com.fasterxml.jackson.core:jackson-databind
These take the same arguments as the builtin variants.
See tests/README.md.
See vagrant/README.md.
Apache Kafka is interested in building the community; we would welcome any thoughts or patches. You can reach us on the Apache mailing lists.
To contribute follow the instructions here: