Data Streaming Using Apache Flink and Apache Ignite
How to build a simple data streaming application using Apache Flink and Apache Ignite and create stream processing topology.
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Repo: https://github.com/samaitra/streamers
Apache IgniteSink offers a streaming connector to inject Flink data into the Ignite cache. The sink emits its input data to the Ignite cache. The key feature to note is the performance and scale both Apache Flink and Apache Ignite offer. Apache Flink can process unbounded and bounded data sets and has been designed to run stateful streaming applications at scale. Application computation is distributed and concurrently executed in clusters. Apache Flink is also optimized for local state access for tasks and does checkpointing of local state for durability. Apache Ignite provides streaming capabilities that allow data ingestion at a high scale in its in-memory data grid.
In this article, we will discuss how we can build a data streaming application using Apache Flink and Apache Ignite. Building a data streaming application offers the benefit of ingesting large finite and infinite volumes of data in an optimized and fault tolerant way into the Ignite cluster. The data ingestion rate is very high and can scale up to millions of events per second.
Setup: Download and Start Flink
Download a binary from the downloads page. You can pick any Hadoop/Scala combination you like. If you plan to just use the local file system, any Hadoop version will work fine. Go to the download directory.
Unpack the Downloaded Archive
$ cd ~/Downloads # Go to download directory
$ tar xzf flink-*.tgz # Unpack the downloaded archive
$ cd flink-1.5.0
Start a Local Flink Cluster
$ ./bin/start-cluster.sh # Start Flink
Check the Dispatcher’s web front-end at http://localhost:8081 and make sure everything is up and running. The web front-end should report a single available TaskManager instance.
Dispatcher: Overview
You can also verify that the system is running by checking the log files in the logs directory:
$ tail log/flink-*-standalonesession-*.log
Download Kafka
Download a binary from the downloads page (https://kafka.apache.org/downloads). You can pick Apache Kafka 0.10.2.2
version with scala 2.11
.
Start a Zookeeper Server
$./bin/zookeeper-server-start.sh ./config/zookeeper.properties
Start Broker
./bin/kafka-server-start.sh ./config/server.properties
Create Topic “mytopic”
$ ./bin/kafka-topics.sh --create --topic mytopic --zookeeper localhost:2181 --partitions 1 --replication-factor 1
Describe the Topic "mytopic"
$ ./bin/kafka-topics.sh --describe --zookeeper localhost:2181 --topic mytopic
Produce Something Into the Topic (Write Something and Hit Enter)
$ ./bin/kafka-console-producer.sh --topic mytopic --broker-list localhost:9092
Consume From the Topic Using the Console Producer
$ ./bin/kafka-console-consumer.sh --topic mytopic --zookeeper localhost:2181
Clone Apache Ignite
As of writing this document, the IgniteSink support for data streaming application in Flink cluster is available in the master
branch.
$ git clone https://github.com/apache/ignite
Build Apache Ignite
$ mvn clean package install -DskipTests
Build the Flink Program
$ mvn clean package
Submit the Flink Program
$ ./bin/flink run streamers-1.0-SNAPSHOT.jar
Produce Something in the Topic (Write Something and Hit Enter)
$ ./bin/kafka-console-producer.sh --topic mytopic --broker-list localhost:9092
The .out file will print the counts at the end of each time window as long as words are floating in, for example:
$ tail -f log/flink-*-taskexecutor-*.out
lorem : 1
bye : 1
ipsum : 4
Ignite REST Service
To check the cache key values you can use the Ignite REST service
$ curl -X GET http://localhost:8080/ignite\?cmd\=getall\&k1\=jam\&cacheName\=testCache
Scan Cache
To check all the keys from an Ignite cache the following REST service can be used
$ curl -X GET http://localhost:8080/ignite?cmd=qryscanexe&pageSize=10&cacheName=testCache
Ignite Web Console
Ignite Web Console Build Instructions
- Install MongoDB (version >=3.2.0 <=3.4.15) using instructions from http://docs.mongodb.org/manual/installation.
- Install Node.js (version >=8.0.0) using the installer from https://nodejs.org/en/download/current for your OS.
- Change directory to 'modules/web-console/backend' and run "npm install --no-optional" for download backend dependencies.
- Change the directory to 'modules/web-console/frontend' and run
npm install --no-optional
for downloading front-end dependencies. - Build an ignite-web-agent module to follow instructions from 'modules/web-console/web-agent/README.txt'.
- Copy ignite-web-agent-.zip from 'modules/web-console/web-agent/target' to the 'modules/web-console/backend/agent_dists' folder.
- Unzip ignite-web-agent-.zip in 'modules/web-console/backend/agent_dists'.
- Run './ignite-web-agent.sh' inside the ignite-web-agent- folder
Steps 1-4 should be executed once.
Run Ignite Web Console in Development Mode
- Configure MongoDB to run as a service or in the terminal change dir to $MONGO_INSTALL_DIR/server/3.2/bin and start MongoDB by executing
mongod
. - In a new terminal, change the directory to 'modules/web-console/backend'. If needed run
npm install --no-optional
(if dependencies changed) and runnpm start
to start the backend. - In a new terminal, change the directory to 'modules/web-console/frontend'. If needed run
npm install --no-optional
(if dependencies changed) and start Webpack in development modenpm run dev
. - In the browser open: http://localhost:9000
The web console can be used to scan cache and view all the cache contents.
To stop Flink when you’re done, type:
$ ./bin/stop-cluster.sh
Summary
We covered how we can build a simple data streaming application using Apache Flink and Apache Ignite and create stream processing topology that will allow data streaming in a distributed, scalable, and fault tolerant way that can process unbounded data sets consisting of millions of events.
Published at DZone with permission of Saikat Maitra. See the original article here.
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