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Kafka Connector Management tool

Project description

ConnectorCTL

PyPI version License Python versions

ConnectorCTL is a command-line tool for managing Kafka connectors, providing functionalities to list, restart, pause, resume, delete, and update connectors on a Kafka Connect cluster.

Features

  • List Kafka connectors: Easily retrieve a list of all connectors in the Kafka Connect cluster.
  • Restart Kafka connectors: Restart individual connectors or all connectors in one command.
  • Pause Kafka connectors: Temporarily stop individual connectors or all connectors.
  • Resume Kafka connectors: Resume previously paused connectors, either individually or all at once.
  • Delete Kafka connectors: Remove connectors from the Kafka Connect cluster.
  • Create Kafka connectors: Create new connectors from a configuration file.
  • Update Kafka connectors: Update the configuration of an existing connector.
  • Get Kafka connector details: Retrieve detailed configuration information for a specific connector.
  • Connector status check: Check the status of connectors (e.g., running, paused, failed).
  • Error logging for connector management actions: Log and store errors that occur during connector operations.
  • Supports multiple connectors through batch processing: Commands can be applied to multiple connectors at once.

Installation

Install ConnectorCTL from PyPi:

pip install connectorctl

🛠️ Configuration

ConnectorCTL allows you to configure different environments using commands like set-env, get-env, use-env, and list-env. These commands let you manage your environment configurations, making it easier to switch between different Kafka Connect setups.

1. Setting an Environment

You can define and store environment configurations using the set-env command. This command takes various options such as user credentials, Kafka Connect server address, port, and optional SSL certificates.

connectorctl set-env <env_name> [--user <user>] [--password <password>] --server <server> --port <port> [--cacert <cacert_path>] [--key <key_path>] [--cer <cer_path>]

Example 1: Setting up an environment with user credentials and SSL certificates:

connectorctl set-env dev --user my_user --password my_pass --server kafka.example.com --port 8083 --cacert /path/to/cacert.pem --key /path/to/key.pem --cer /path/to/cer.pem

Example 2: Setting up a simple environment with just the server and port:

connectorctl set-env dev --server localhost --port 8083

2. Getting Environment Configuration

To retrieve the configuration details of a specific environment, you can use the get-env command:

connectorctl get-env <env_name>

This command will output the stored configuration for the specified environment, including server details and optional SSL information.

Example:

connectorctl get-env dev

3. Using an Environment

Once you've set up multiple environments, you can switch between them using the use-env command:

connectorctl use-env <env_name>

This command sets the specified environment as the active one, which will be used for subsequent commands.

Example:

connectorctl use-env dev

4. Listing All Environments

To see all the environments you've set up, use the list-env command:

connectorctl list-env

This command will display a list of all stored environment configurations.

Example output:

Available environments:
1. dev - Active
2. staging
3. prod

Summary of Configuration Commands:

  • set-env: Set up or update environment configuration.
  • get-env: Retrieve details for a specific environment.
  • use-env: Switch to and use the specified environment.
  • list-env: List all configured environments.

💻 Usage

Once installed, you can use the connectorctl command to interact with Kafka Connect. The following commands allow you to manage connectors in the Kafka Connect cluster.

1. List Connectors

To list all connectors in the Kafka Connect cluster:

connectorctl list

This command retrieves and displays a list of all the connectors.

Example output:

Available Connectors:
+------------------+
| Connector Name   |
+------------------+
| connector1       |
| connector2       |
+------------------+

2. Get Connector Status

To retrieve the status of a specific connector:

connectorctl status --connector <connector_name>

This command displays the current status (e.g., running, paused, or failed) of the specified connector.

Example:

connectorctl status --connector my_connector

3. Get Connector Details

To get the detailed configuration of a connector:

connectorctl get --connector <connector_name>

This command retrieves and displays the full configuration details of the specified connector.

Example:

connectorctl get --connector my_connector

4. Delete Connectors

To delete a specific connector from the Kafka Connect cluster:

connectorctl delete --connector <connector_name>

Example:

connectorctl delete --connector my_connector

5. Create Connectors

To create a new connector:

connectorctl create --config <path_to_config_file>

This command creates a new Kafka connector using the provided configuration file.

Example:

connectorctl create --config ./my_connector_config.json

6. Update Connectors

To update an existing connector’s configuration:

connectorctl update --connector <connector_name> --config <path_to_config_file>

This command updates the specified Kafka connector with the new configuration details.

Example:

connectorctl update --connector my_connector --config ./updated_config.json

7. Resume Connectors

To resume a specific connector:

connectorctl resume --connector <connector_name>

To resume all connectors:

connectorctl resume

Example output:

Resume Results:
+------------------+-------------------------------------+
| Connector Name   | Result                              |
+------------------+-------------------------------------+
| connector1       | Resumed successfully                |
| connector2       | Failed to resume (Status code: 500) |
+------------------+-------------------------------------+

8. Restart Connectors

To restart a specific connector:

connectorctl restart --connector <connector_name>

To restart all connectors:

connectorctl restart
Restart Results:
+------------------+------------------------+
| Connector Name   | Result                 |
+------------------+------------------------+
| my_connector     | Restarted successfully |
+------------------+------------------------+

9. Pause Connectors

To pause a specific connector:

connectorctl pause --connector <connector_name>

To pause all connectors:

connectorctl pause
Pause Results:
+------------------+------------------------------------+
| Connector Name   | Result                             |
+------------------+------------------------------------+
| connector1       | Paused successfully                |
| connector2       | Failed to pause (Status code: 500) |
+------------------+------------------------------------+

Logging

By default, ConnectorCTL logs any errors that occur during the management of Kafka connectors to a log file located in the config/ directory.

License

This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the LICENSE file for details.

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