Apache Kafka vs. Integration Middleware (MQ, ETL, ESB)
Explore the differences between Apache Kafka as an Event Streaming Platform and integration middleware.
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Join For FreeLearn the differences between an event-driven streaming platform like Apache Kafka and middleware like Message Queues (MQ), Extract-Transform-Load (ETL), and Enterprise Service Bus (ESB). Including best practices and anti-patterns, but also how these concepts and tools complement each other in an enterprise architecture.
This post shares my slide deck and video recording. I discuss the differences between Apache Kafka as Event Streaming Platform and integration middleware. Learn if they are friends, enemies, or frenemies.
Problems of Legacy Middleware
Extract-Transform-Load (ETL) is still a widely-used pattern to move data between different systems via batch processing. Due to its challenges in today’s world where real-time is the new standard, an Enterprise Service Bus (ESB) is used in many enterprises as integration backbone between any kind of microservice, legacy application, or cloud service to move data via SOAP/REST Web Services or other technologies. Stream Processing is often added as its own component in the enterprise architecture for correlation of different events to implement contextual rules and stateful analytics. Using all these components introduces challenges and complexities in development and operations.
Apache Kafka: An Open Source Event Streaming Platform
This session discusses how teams in different industries solve these challenges by building a native event streaming platform from the ground up instead of using ETL and ESB tools in their architecture. This allows us to build and deploy independent, mission-critical streaming, real-time applications, and microservices. The architecture leverages distributed processing and fault-tolerance with fast failover, no-downtime, rolling deployments, and the ability to reprocess events, so you can recalculate output when your code changes. Integration and Stream Processing are still key functionality but can be realized in real time natively instead of using additional ETL, ESB or Stream Processing tools.
A concrete example architecture shows how to build a complete streaming platform leveraging the widely-adopted open-source framework Apache Kafka to build a mission-critical, scalable, highly performant streaming platform. Messaging, integration, and stream processing are all built on top of the same strong foundation of Kafka; deployed on-premise, in the cloud, or in hybrid environments. In addition, the open source Confluent projects, based on top of Apache Kafka, add additional features like a Schema Registry, additional clients for programming languages like Go or C, or many pre-built connectors for various technologies.
Slides: Apache Kafka vs. Integration Middleware
Here is the slide deck:
https://www.slideshare.net/KaiWaehner/apache-kafka-vs-integration-middleware-mq-etl-esb
Video Recording: Kafka vs. MQ/ETL/ESB: Friends, Enemies or Frenemies?
Here is the video recording where I walk you through the above slide deck:
Article: Apache Kafka vs. Enterprise Service Bus (ESB)
I also published a detailed blog post on Confluent blog about this topic in 2018:
Apache Kafka vs. Enterprise Service Bus (ESB)
Why Apache Kafka Instead of Traditional Middleware?
If you don't want to spend a lot of time on the slides and recording, here is a short summary of the differences of Apache Kafka compared to traditional middleware:
Questions and Discussion
Please share your thoughts!
Does your infrastructure see similar architectures? Do you face similar challenges? Do you like the concepts behind an Event Streaming Platform (aka Apache Kafka)? How do you combine legacy middleware with Kafka? What's your strategy to integrate the modern and the old (technology) world? Is Kafka part of that architecture?
Please let me know either via a comment or via LinkedIn, Twitter, email, etc. I am curious about other opinions and experiences (and people who disagree with my presentation).
Published at DZone with permission of Kai Wähner, DZone MVB. See the original article here.
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