The Amazon Kinesis Client Library (KCL) for Java enables Java developers to easily consume and process data from Amazon Kinesis Data Streams.
After you have downloaded the code from GitHub, you can build it using Maven. To disable GPG signing in the build, use
this command: mvn clean install -Dgpg.skip=true
.
Note: This command does not run integration tests.
To disable running unit tests in the build, add the property -Dskip.ut=true
.
Note that running integration tests creates AWS resources.
Integration tests require valid AWS credentials.
This will look for a default AWS profile specified in your local .aws/credentials
.
To run all integration tests: mvn verify -DskipITs=false
.
To run one integration tests, specify the integration test class: mvn -Dit.test="BasicStreamConsumerIntegrationTest" -DskipITs=false verify
Optionally, you can provide the name of an IAM user/role to run tests with as a string using this command: mvn -DskipITs=false -DawsProfile="<PROFILE_NAME>" verify
.
For producer-side developers using the Kinesis Producer Library (KPL), the KCL integrates without additional effort. When the KCL retrieves an aggregated Amazon Kinesis record consisting of multiple KPL user records, it will automatically invoke the KPL to extract the individual user records before returning them to the user.
To make it easier for developers to write record processors in other languages, we have implemented a Java based daemon, called MultiLangDaemon that does all the heavy lifting. Our approach has the daemon spawn a sub-process, which in turn runs the record processor, which can be written in any language. The MultiLangDaemon process and the record processor sub-process communicate with each other over STDIN and STDOUT using a defined protocol. There will be a one to one correspondence amongst record processors, child processes, and shards. For Python developers specifically, we have abstracted these implementation details away and expose an interface that enables you to focus on writing record processing logic in Python. This approach enables KCL to be language agnostic, while providing identical features and similar parallel processing model across all languages.
The recommended way to use the KCL for Java is to consume it from Maven.
<dependency>
<groupId>software.amazon.kinesis</groupId>
<artifactId>amazon-kinesis-client</artifactId>
<version>3.0.1</version>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>software.amazon.kinesis</groupId>
<artifactId>amazon-kinesis-client</artifactId>
<version>2.6.0</version>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>com.amazonaws</groupId>
<artifactId>amazon-kinesis-client</artifactId>
<version>1.14.1</version>
</dependency>
IMPORTANT We recommend using the latest KCL version for improved performance and support.
KCL Version | Changelog |
---|---|
3.x | master/CHANGELOG.md |
2.x | v2.x/CHANGELOG.md |
1.x | v1.x/CHANGELOG.md |
We recommend customers to migrate to 1.14.1 or newer to avoid known bugs in 1.14.0 version
It's highly recommended for users of version 2.0 of the Amazon Kinesis Client to upgrade to version 2.0.3 or later. A bug has been identified in versions prior to 2.0.3 that could cause records to be delivered to the wrong record processor.**
Help Us Improve the Kinesis Client Library! Your involvement is crucial to enhancing the Kinesis Client Library. We invite you to join our community and contribute in the following ways:
By participating through these channels, you play a vital role in shaping the future of the Kinesis Client Library. We value your input and look forward to collaborating with you!