config.go 32 KB

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  1. package sarama
  2. import (
  3. "compress/gzip"
  4. "crypto/tls"
  5. "fmt"
  6. "io/ioutil"
  7. "net"
  8. "regexp"
  9. "time"
  10. "github.com/rcrowley/go-metrics"
  11. "golang.org/x/net/proxy"
  12. )
  13. const defaultClientID = "sarama"
  14. var validID = regexp.MustCompile(`\A[A-Za-z0-9._-]+\z`)
  15. // Config is used to pass multiple configuration options to Sarama's constructors.
  16. type Config struct {
  17. // Admin is the namespace for ClusterAdmin properties used by the administrative Kafka client.
  18. Admin struct {
  19. Retry struct {
  20. // The total number of times to retry sending (retriable) admin requests (default 5).
  21. // Similar to the `retries` setting of the JVM AdminClientConfig.
  22. Max int
  23. // Backoff time between retries of a failed request (default 100ms)
  24. Backoff time.Duration
  25. }
  26. // The maximum duration the administrative Kafka client will wait for ClusterAdmin operations,
  27. // including topics, brokers, configurations and ACLs (defaults to 3 seconds).
  28. Timeout time.Duration
  29. }
  30. // Net is the namespace for network-level properties used by the Broker, and
  31. // shared by the Client/Producer/Consumer.
  32. Net struct {
  33. // How many outstanding requests a connection is allowed to have before
  34. // sending on it blocks (default 5).
  35. MaxOpenRequests int
  36. // All three of the below configurations are similar to the
  37. // `socket.timeout.ms` setting in JVM kafka. All of them default
  38. // to 30 seconds.
  39. DialTimeout time.Duration // How long to wait for the initial connection.
  40. ReadTimeout time.Duration // How long to wait for a response.
  41. WriteTimeout time.Duration // How long to wait for a transmit.
  42. TLS struct {
  43. // Whether or not to use TLS when connecting to the broker
  44. // (defaults to false).
  45. Enable bool
  46. // The TLS configuration to use for secure connections if
  47. // enabled (defaults to nil).
  48. Config *tls.Config
  49. }
  50. // SASL based authentication with broker. While there are multiple SASL authentication methods
  51. // the current implementation is limited to plaintext (SASL/PLAIN) authentication
  52. SASL struct {
  53. // Whether or not to use SASL authentication when connecting to the broker
  54. // (defaults to false).
  55. Enable bool
  56. // SASLMechanism is the name of the enabled SASL mechanism.
  57. // Possible values: OAUTHBEARER, PLAIN (defaults to PLAIN).
  58. Mechanism SASLMechanism
  59. // Version is the SASL Protocol Version to use
  60. // Kafka > 1.x should use V1, except on Azure EventHub which use V0
  61. Version int16
  62. // Whether or not to send the Kafka SASL handshake first if enabled
  63. // (defaults to true). You should only set this to false if you're using
  64. // a non-Kafka SASL proxy.
  65. Handshake bool
  66. // AuthIdentity is an (optional) authorization identity (authzid) to
  67. // use for SASL/PLAIN authentication (if different from User) when
  68. // an authenticated user is permitted to act as the presented
  69. // alternative user. See RFC4616 for details.
  70. AuthIdentity string
  71. // User is the authentication identity (authcid) to present for
  72. // SASL/PLAIN or SASL/SCRAM authentication
  73. User string
  74. // Password for SASL/PLAIN authentication
  75. Password string
  76. // authz id used for SASL/SCRAM authentication
  77. SCRAMAuthzID string
  78. // SCRAMClientGeneratorFunc is a generator of a user provided implementation of a SCRAM
  79. // client used to perform the SCRAM exchange with the server.
  80. SCRAMClientGeneratorFunc func() SCRAMClient
  81. // TokenProvider is a user-defined callback for generating
  82. // access tokens for SASL/OAUTHBEARER auth. See the
  83. // AccessTokenProvider interface docs for proper implementation
  84. // guidelines.
  85. TokenProvider AccessTokenProvider
  86. GSSAPI GSSAPIConfig
  87. }
  88. // KeepAlive specifies the keep-alive period for an active network connection (defaults to 0).
  89. // If zero or positive, keep-alives are enabled.
  90. // If negative, keep-alives are disabled.
  91. KeepAlive time.Duration
  92. // LocalAddr is the local address to use when dialing an
  93. // address. The address must be of a compatible type for the
  94. // network being dialed.
  95. // If nil, a local address is automatically chosen.
  96. LocalAddr net.Addr
  97. Proxy struct {
  98. // Whether or not to use proxy when connecting to the broker
  99. // (defaults to false).
  100. Enable bool
  101. // The proxy dialer to use enabled (defaults to nil).
  102. Dialer proxy.Dialer
  103. }
  104. }
  105. // Metadata is the namespace for metadata management properties used by the
  106. // Client, and shared by the Producer/Consumer.
  107. Metadata struct {
  108. Retry struct {
  109. // The total number of times to retry a metadata request when the
  110. // cluster is in the middle of a leader election (default 3).
  111. Max int
  112. // How long to wait for leader election to occur before retrying
  113. // (default 250ms). Similar to the JVM's `retry.backoff.ms`.
  114. Backoff time.Duration
  115. // Called to compute backoff time dynamically. Useful for implementing
  116. // more sophisticated backoff strategies. This takes precedence over
  117. // `Backoff` if set.
  118. BackoffFunc func(retries, maxRetries int) time.Duration
  119. }
  120. // How frequently to refresh the cluster metadata in the background.
  121. // Defaults to 10 minutes. Set to 0 to disable. Similar to
  122. // `topic.metadata.refresh.interval.ms` in the JVM version.
  123. RefreshFrequency time.Duration
  124. // Whether to maintain a full set of metadata for all topics, or just
  125. // the minimal set that has been necessary so far. The full set is simpler
  126. // and usually more convenient, but can take up a substantial amount of
  127. // memory if you have many topics and partitions. Defaults to true.
  128. Full bool
  129. // How long to wait for a successful metadata response.
  130. // Disabled by default which means a metadata request against an unreachable
  131. // cluster (all brokers are unreachable or unresponsive) can take up to
  132. // `Net.[Dial|Read]Timeout * BrokerCount * (Metadata.Retry.Max + 1) + Metadata.Retry.Backoff * Metadata.Retry.Max`
  133. // to fail.
  134. Timeout time.Duration
  135. }
  136. // Producer is the namespace for configuration related to producing messages,
  137. // used by the Producer.
  138. Producer struct {
  139. Serde Serde
  140. // The maximum permitted size of a message (defaults to 1000000). Should be
  141. // set equal to or smaller than the broker's `message.max.bytes`.
  142. MaxMessageBytes int
  143. // The level of acknowledgement reliability needed from the broker (defaults
  144. // to WaitForLocal). Equivalent to the `request.required.acks` setting of the
  145. // JVM producer.
  146. RequiredAcks RequiredAcks
  147. // The maximum duration the broker will wait the receipt of the number of
  148. // RequiredAcks (defaults to 10 seconds). This is only relevant when
  149. // RequiredAcks is set to WaitForAll or a number > 1. Only supports
  150. // millisecond resolution, nanoseconds will be truncated. Equivalent to
  151. // the JVM producer's `request.timeout.ms` setting.
  152. Timeout time.Duration
  153. // The type of compression to use on messages (defaults to no compression).
  154. // Similar to `compression.codec` setting of the JVM producer.
  155. Compression CompressionCodec
  156. // The level of compression to use on messages. The meaning depends
  157. // on the actual compression type used and defaults to default compression
  158. // level for the codec.
  159. CompressionLevel int
  160. // Generates partitioners for choosing the partition to send messages to
  161. // (defaults to hashing the message key). Similar to the `partitioner.class`
  162. // setting for the JVM producer.
  163. Partitioner PartitionerConstructor
  164. // If enabled, the producer will ensure that exactly one copy of each message is
  165. // written.
  166. Idempotent bool
  167. // Return specifies what channels will be populated. If they are set to true,
  168. // you must read from the respective channels to prevent deadlock. If,
  169. // however, this config is used to create a `SyncProducer`, both must be set
  170. // to true and you shall not read from the channels since the producer does
  171. // this internally.
  172. Return struct {
  173. // If enabled, successfully delivered messages will be returned on the
  174. // Successes channel (default disabled).
  175. Successes bool
  176. // If enabled, messages that failed to deliver will be returned on the
  177. // Errors channel, including error (default enabled).
  178. Errors bool
  179. }
  180. // The following config options control how often messages are batched up and
  181. // sent to the broker. By default, messages are sent as fast as possible, and
  182. // all messages received while the current batch is in-flight are placed
  183. // into the subsequent batch.
  184. Flush struct {
  185. // The best-effort number of bytes needed to trigger a flush. Use the
  186. // global sarama.MaxRequestSize to set a hard upper limit.
  187. Bytes int
  188. // The best-effort number of messages needed to trigger a flush. Use
  189. // `MaxMessages` to set a hard upper limit.
  190. Messages int
  191. // The best-effort frequency of flushes. Equivalent to
  192. // `queue.buffering.max.ms` setting of JVM producer.
  193. Frequency time.Duration
  194. // The maximum number of messages the producer will send in a single
  195. // broker request. Defaults to 0 for unlimited. Similar to
  196. // `queue.buffering.max.messages` in the JVM producer.
  197. MaxMessages int
  198. }
  199. Retry struct {
  200. // The total number of times to retry sending a message (default 3).
  201. // Similar to the `message.send.max.retries` setting of the JVM producer.
  202. Max int
  203. // How long to wait for the cluster to settle between retries
  204. // (default 100ms). Similar to the `retry.backoff.ms` setting of the
  205. // JVM producer.
  206. Backoff time.Duration
  207. // Called to compute backoff time dynamically. Useful for implementing
  208. // more sophisticated backoff strategies. This takes precedence over
  209. // `Backoff` if set.
  210. BackoffFunc func(retries, maxRetries int) time.Duration
  211. }
  212. }
  213. // Consumer is the namespace for configuration related to consuming messages,
  214. // used by the Consumer.
  215. Consumer struct {
  216. Serde Serde
  217. // Group is the namespace for configuring consumer group.
  218. Group struct {
  219. Session struct {
  220. // The timeout used to detect consumer failures when using Kafka's group management facility.
  221. // The consumer sends periodic heartbeats to indicate its liveness to the broker.
  222. // If no heartbeats are received by the broker before the expiration of this session timeout,
  223. // then the broker will remove this consumer from the group and initiate a rebalance.
  224. // Note that the value must be in the allowable range as configured in the broker configuration
  225. // by `group.min.session.timeout.ms` and `group.max.session.timeout.ms` (default 10s)
  226. Timeout time.Duration
  227. }
  228. Heartbeat struct {
  229. // The expected time between heartbeats to the consumer coordinator when using Kafka's group
  230. // management facilities. Heartbeats are used to ensure that the consumer's session stays active and
  231. // to facilitate rebalancing when new consumers join or leave the group.
  232. // The value must be set lower than Consumer.Group.Session.Timeout, but typically should be set no
  233. // higher than 1/3 of that value.
  234. // It can be adjusted even lower to control the expected time for normal rebalances (default 3s)
  235. Interval time.Duration
  236. }
  237. Rebalance struct {
  238. // Strategy for allocating topic partitions to members (default BalanceStrategyRange)
  239. Strategy BalanceStrategy
  240. // The maximum allowed time for each worker to join the group once a rebalance has begun.
  241. // This is basically a limit on the amount of time needed for all tasks to flush any pending
  242. // data and commit offsets. If the timeout is exceeded, then the worker will be removed from
  243. // the group, which will cause offset commit failures (default 60s).
  244. Timeout time.Duration
  245. Retry struct {
  246. // When a new consumer joins a consumer group the set of consumers attempt to "rebalance"
  247. // the load to assign partitions to each consumer. If the set of consumers changes while
  248. // this assignment is taking place the rebalance will fail and retry. This setting controls
  249. // the maximum number of attempts before giving up (default 4).
  250. Max int
  251. // Backoff time between retries during rebalance (default 2s)
  252. Backoff time.Duration
  253. }
  254. }
  255. Member struct {
  256. // Custom metadata to include when joining the group. The user data for all joined members
  257. // can be retrieved by sending a DescribeGroupRequest to the broker that is the
  258. // coordinator for the group.
  259. UserData []byte
  260. }
  261. }
  262. Retry struct {
  263. // How long to wait after a failing to read from a partition before
  264. // trying again (default 2s).
  265. Backoff time.Duration
  266. // Called to compute backoff time dynamically. Useful for implementing
  267. // more sophisticated backoff strategies. This takes precedence over
  268. // `Backoff` if set.
  269. BackoffFunc func(retries int) time.Duration
  270. }
  271. // Fetch is the namespace for controlling how many bytes are retrieved by any
  272. // given request.
  273. Fetch struct {
  274. // The minimum number of message bytes to fetch in a request - the broker
  275. // will wait until at least this many are available. The default is 1,
  276. // as 0 causes the consumer to spin when no messages are available.
  277. // Equivalent to the JVM's `fetch.min.bytes`.
  278. Min int32
  279. // The default number of message bytes to fetch from the broker in each
  280. // request (default 1MB). This should be larger than the majority of
  281. // your messages, or else the consumer will spend a lot of time
  282. // negotiating sizes and not actually consuming. Similar to the JVM's
  283. // `fetch.message.max.bytes`.
  284. Default int32
  285. // The maximum number of message bytes to fetch from the broker in a
  286. // single request. Messages larger than this will return
  287. // ErrMessageTooLarge and will not be consumable, so you must be sure
  288. // this is at least as large as your largest message. Defaults to 0
  289. // (no limit). Similar to the JVM's `fetch.message.max.bytes`. The
  290. // global `sarama.MaxResponseSize` still applies.
  291. Max int32
  292. }
  293. // The maximum amount of time the broker will wait for Consumer.Fetch.Min
  294. // bytes to become available before it returns fewer than that anyways. The
  295. // default is 250ms, since 0 causes the consumer to spin when no events are
  296. // available. 100-500ms is a reasonable range for most cases. Kafka only
  297. // supports precision up to milliseconds; nanoseconds will be truncated.
  298. // Equivalent to the JVM's `fetch.wait.max.ms`.
  299. MaxWaitTime time.Duration
  300. // The maximum amount of time the consumer expects a message takes to
  301. // process for the user. If writing to the Messages channel takes longer
  302. // than this, that partition will stop fetching more messages until it
  303. // can proceed again.
  304. // Note that, since the Messages channel is buffered, the actual grace time is
  305. // (MaxProcessingTime * ChannelBufferSize). Defaults to 100ms.
  306. // If a message is not written to the Messages channel between two ticks
  307. // of the expiryTicker then a timeout is detected.
  308. // Using a ticker instead of a timer to detect timeouts should typically
  309. // result in many fewer calls to Timer functions which may result in a
  310. // significant performance improvement if many messages are being sent
  311. // and timeouts are infrequent.
  312. // The disadvantage of using a ticker instead of a timer is that
  313. // timeouts will be less accurate. That is, the effective timeout could
  314. // be between `MaxProcessingTime` and `2 * MaxProcessingTime`. For
  315. // example, if `MaxProcessingTime` is 100ms then a delay of 180ms
  316. // between two messages being sent may not be recognized as a timeout.
  317. MaxProcessingTime time.Duration
  318. // Return specifies what channels will be populated. If they are set to true,
  319. // you must read from them to prevent deadlock.
  320. Return struct {
  321. // If enabled, any errors that occurred while consuming are returned on
  322. // the Errors channel (default disabled).
  323. Errors bool
  324. }
  325. // Offsets specifies configuration for how and when to commit consumed
  326. // offsets. This currently requires the manual use of an OffsetManager
  327. // but will eventually be automated.
  328. Offsets struct {
  329. // Deprecated: CommitInterval exists for historical compatibility
  330. // and should not be used. Please use Consumer.Offsets.AutoCommit
  331. CommitInterval time.Duration
  332. // AutoCommit specifies configuration for commit messages automatically.
  333. AutoCommit struct {
  334. // Whether or not to auto-commit updated offsets back to the broker.
  335. // (default enabled).
  336. Enable bool
  337. // How frequently to commit updated offsets. Ineffective unless
  338. // auto-commit is enabled (default 1s)
  339. Interval time.Duration
  340. }
  341. // The initial offset to use if no offset was previously committed.
  342. // Should be OffsetNewest or OffsetOldest. Defaults to OffsetNewest.
  343. Initial int64
  344. // The retention duration for committed offsets. If zero, disabled
  345. // (in which case the `offsets.retention.minutes` option on the
  346. // broker will be used). Kafka only supports precision up to
  347. // milliseconds; nanoseconds will be truncated. Requires Kafka
  348. // broker version 0.9.0 or later.
  349. // (default is 0: disabled).
  350. Retention time.Duration
  351. Retry struct {
  352. // The total number of times to retry failing commit
  353. // requests during OffsetManager shutdown (default 3).
  354. Max int
  355. }
  356. }
  357. // IsolationLevel support 2 mode:
  358. // - use `ReadUncommitted` (default) to consume and return all messages in message channel
  359. // - use `ReadCommitted` to hide messages that are part of an aborted transaction
  360. IsolationLevel IsolationLevel
  361. }
  362. // A user-provided string sent with every request to the brokers for logging,
  363. // debugging, and auditing purposes. Defaults to "sarama", but you should
  364. // probably set it to something specific to your application.
  365. ClientID string
  366. // A rack identifier for this client. This can be any string value which
  367. // indicates where this client is physically located.
  368. // It corresponds with the broker config 'broker.rack'
  369. RackID string
  370. // The number of events to buffer in internal and external channels. This
  371. // permits the producer and consumer to continue processing some messages
  372. // in the background while user code is working, greatly improving throughput.
  373. // Defaults to 256.
  374. ChannelBufferSize int
  375. // The version of Kafka that Sarama will assume it is running against.
  376. // Defaults to the oldest supported stable version. Since Kafka provides
  377. // backwards-compatibility, setting it to a version older than you have
  378. // will not break anything, although it may prevent you from using the
  379. // latest features. Setting it to a version greater than you are actually
  380. // running may lead to random breakage.
  381. Version KafkaVersion
  382. // The registry to define metrics into.
  383. // Defaults to a local registry.
  384. // If you want to disable metrics gathering, set "metrics.UseNilMetrics" to "true"
  385. // prior to starting Sarama.
  386. // See Examples on how to use the metrics registry
  387. MetricRegistry metrics.Registry
  388. }
  389. // NewConfig returns a new configuration instance with sane defaults.
  390. func NewConfig() *Config {
  391. c := &Config{}
  392. c.Admin.Retry.Max = 5
  393. c.Admin.Retry.Backoff = 100 * time.Millisecond
  394. c.Admin.Timeout = 3 * time.Second
  395. c.Net.MaxOpenRequests = 5
  396. c.Net.DialTimeout = 30 * time.Second
  397. c.Net.ReadTimeout = 30 * time.Second
  398. c.Net.WriteTimeout = 30 * time.Second
  399. c.Net.SASL.Handshake = true
  400. c.Net.SASL.Version = SASLHandshakeV0
  401. c.Metadata.Retry.Max = 3
  402. c.Metadata.Retry.Backoff = 250 * time.Millisecond
  403. c.Metadata.RefreshFrequency = 10 * time.Minute
  404. c.Metadata.Full = true
  405. c.Producer.MaxMessageBytes = 1000000
  406. c.Producer.RequiredAcks = WaitForLocal
  407. c.Producer.Timeout = 10 * time.Second
  408. c.Producer.Partitioner = NewHashPartitioner
  409. c.Producer.Retry.Max = 3
  410. c.Producer.Retry.Backoff = 100 * time.Millisecond
  411. c.Producer.Return.Errors = true
  412. c.Producer.CompressionLevel = CompressionLevelDefault
  413. serde, err := NewSerde(c)
  414. if err == nil {
  415. c.Producer.Serde = serde
  416. }
  417. c.Consumer.Fetch.Min = 1
  418. c.Consumer.Fetch.Default = 1024 * 1024
  419. c.Consumer.Retry.Backoff = 2 * time.Second
  420. c.Consumer.MaxWaitTime = 250 * time.Millisecond
  421. c.Consumer.MaxProcessingTime = 100 * time.Millisecond
  422. c.Consumer.Return.Errors = false
  423. c.Consumer.Offsets.AutoCommit.Enable = true
  424. c.Consumer.Offsets.AutoCommit.Interval = 1 * time.Second
  425. c.Consumer.Offsets.Initial = OffsetNewest
  426. c.Consumer.Offsets.Retry.Max = 3
  427. serde, err = NewSerde(c)
  428. if err == nil {
  429. c.Consumer.Serde = serde
  430. }
  431. c.Consumer.Group.Session.Timeout = 10 * time.Second
  432. c.Consumer.Group.Heartbeat.Interval = 3 * time.Second
  433. c.Consumer.Group.Rebalance.Strategy = BalanceStrategyRange
  434. c.Consumer.Group.Rebalance.Timeout = 60 * time.Second
  435. c.Consumer.Group.Rebalance.Retry.Max = 4
  436. c.Consumer.Group.Rebalance.Retry.Backoff = 2 * time.Second
  437. c.ClientID = defaultClientID
  438. c.ChannelBufferSize = 256
  439. c.Version = MinVersion
  440. c.MetricRegistry = metrics.NewRegistry()
  441. return c
  442. }
  443. // Validate checks a Config instance. It will return a
  444. // ConfigurationError if the specified values don't make sense.
  445. func (c *Config) Validate() error {
  446. // some configuration values should be warned on but not fail completely, do those first
  447. if !c.Net.TLS.Enable && c.Net.TLS.Config != nil {
  448. Logger.Println("Net.TLS is disabled but a non-nil configuration was provided.")
  449. }
  450. if !c.Net.SASL.Enable {
  451. if c.Net.SASL.User != "" {
  452. Logger.Println("Net.SASL is disabled but a non-empty username was provided.")
  453. }
  454. if c.Net.SASL.Password != "" {
  455. Logger.Println("Net.SASL is disabled but a non-empty password was provided.")
  456. }
  457. }
  458. if c.Producer.RequiredAcks > 1 {
  459. Logger.Println("Producer.RequiredAcks > 1 is deprecated and will raise an exception with kafka >= 0.8.2.0.")
  460. }
  461. if c.Producer.MaxMessageBytes >= int(MaxRequestSize) {
  462. Logger.Println("Producer.MaxMessageBytes must be smaller than MaxRequestSize; it will be ignored.")
  463. }
  464. if c.Producer.Flush.Bytes >= int(MaxRequestSize) {
  465. Logger.Println("Producer.Flush.Bytes must be smaller than MaxRequestSize; it will be ignored.")
  466. }
  467. if (c.Producer.Flush.Bytes > 0 || c.Producer.Flush.Messages > 0) && c.Producer.Flush.Frequency == 0 {
  468. Logger.Println("Producer.Flush: Bytes or Messages are set, but Frequency is not; messages may not get flushed.")
  469. }
  470. if c.Producer.Timeout%time.Millisecond != 0 {
  471. Logger.Println("Producer.Timeout only supports millisecond resolution; nanoseconds will be truncated.")
  472. }
  473. if c.Consumer.MaxWaitTime < 100*time.Millisecond {
  474. Logger.Println("Consumer.MaxWaitTime is very low, which can cause high CPU and network usage. See documentation for details.")
  475. }
  476. if c.Consumer.MaxWaitTime%time.Millisecond != 0 {
  477. Logger.Println("Consumer.MaxWaitTime only supports millisecond precision; nanoseconds will be truncated.")
  478. }
  479. if c.Consumer.Offsets.Retention%time.Millisecond != 0 {
  480. Logger.Println("Consumer.Offsets.Retention only supports millisecond precision; nanoseconds will be truncated.")
  481. }
  482. if c.Consumer.Group.Session.Timeout%time.Millisecond != 0 {
  483. Logger.Println("Consumer.Group.Session.Timeout only supports millisecond precision; nanoseconds will be truncated.")
  484. }
  485. if c.Consumer.Group.Heartbeat.Interval%time.Millisecond != 0 {
  486. Logger.Println("Consumer.Group.Heartbeat.Interval only supports millisecond precision; nanoseconds will be truncated.")
  487. }
  488. if c.Consumer.Group.Rebalance.Timeout%time.Millisecond != 0 {
  489. Logger.Println("Consumer.Group.Rebalance.Timeout only supports millisecond precision; nanoseconds will be truncated.")
  490. }
  491. if c.ClientID == defaultClientID {
  492. Logger.Println("ClientID is the default of 'sarama', you should consider setting it to something application-specific.")
  493. }
  494. // validate Net values
  495. switch {
  496. case c.Net.MaxOpenRequests <= 0:
  497. return ConfigurationError("Net.MaxOpenRequests must be > 0")
  498. case c.Net.DialTimeout <= 0:
  499. return ConfigurationError("Net.DialTimeout must be > 0")
  500. case c.Net.ReadTimeout <= 0:
  501. return ConfigurationError("Net.ReadTimeout must be > 0")
  502. case c.Net.WriteTimeout <= 0:
  503. return ConfigurationError("Net.WriteTimeout must be > 0")
  504. case c.Net.SASL.Enable:
  505. if c.Net.SASL.Mechanism == "" {
  506. c.Net.SASL.Mechanism = SASLTypePlaintext
  507. }
  508. switch c.Net.SASL.Mechanism {
  509. case SASLTypePlaintext:
  510. if c.Net.SASL.User == "" {
  511. return ConfigurationError("Net.SASL.User must not be empty when SASL is enabled")
  512. }
  513. if c.Net.SASL.Password == "" {
  514. return ConfigurationError("Net.SASL.Password must not be empty when SASL is enabled")
  515. }
  516. case SASLTypeOAuth:
  517. if c.Net.SASL.TokenProvider == nil {
  518. return ConfigurationError("An AccessTokenProvider instance must be provided to Net.SASL.TokenProvider")
  519. }
  520. case SASLTypeSCRAMSHA256, SASLTypeSCRAMSHA512:
  521. if c.Net.SASL.User == "" {
  522. return ConfigurationError("Net.SASL.User must not be empty when SASL is enabled")
  523. }
  524. if c.Net.SASL.Password == "" {
  525. return ConfigurationError("Net.SASL.Password must not be empty when SASL is enabled")
  526. }
  527. if c.Net.SASL.SCRAMClientGeneratorFunc == nil {
  528. return ConfigurationError("A SCRAMClientGeneratorFunc function must be provided to Net.SASL.SCRAMClientGeneratorFunc")
  529. }
  530. case SASLTypeGSSAPI:
  531. if c.Net.SASL.GSSAPI.ServiceName == "" {
  532. return ConfigurationError("Net.SASL.GSSAPI.ServiceName must not be empty when GSS-API mechanism is used")
  533. }
  534. if c.Net.SASL.GSSAPI.AuthType == KRB5_USER_AUTH {
  535. if c.Net.SASL.GSSAPI.Password == "" {
  536. return ConfigurationError("Net.SASL.GSSAPI.Password must not be empty when GSS-API " +
  537. "mechanism is used and Net.SASL.GSSAPI.AuthType = KRB5_USER_AUTH")
  538. }
  539. } else if c.Net.SASL.GSSAPI.AuthType == KRB5_KEYTAB_AUTH {
  540. if c.Net.SASL.GSSAPI.KeyTabPath == "" {
  541. return ConfigurationError("Net.SASL.GSSAPI.KeyTabPath must not be empty when GSS-API mechanism is used" +
  542. " and Net.SASL.GSSAPI.AuthType = KRB5_KEYTAB_AUTH")
  543. }
  544. } else {
  545. return ConfigurationError("Net.SASL.GSSAPI.AuthType is invalid. Possible values are KRB5_USER_AUTH and KRB5_KEYTAB_AUTH")
  546. }
  547. if c.Net.SASL.GSSAPI.KerberosConfigPath == "" {
  548. return ConfigurationError("Net.SASL.GSSAPI.KerberosConfigPath must not be empty when GSS-API mechanism is used")
  549. }
  550. if c.Net.SASL.GSSAPI.Username == "" {
  551. return ConfigurationError("Net.SASL.GSSAPI.Username must not be empty when GSS-API mechanism is used")
  552. }
  553. if c.Net.SASL.GSSAPI.Realm == "" {
  554. return ConfigurationError("Net.SASL.GSSAPI.Realm must not be empty when GSS-API mechanism is used")
  555. }
  556. default:
  557. msg := fmt.Sprintf("The SASL mechanism configuration is invalid. Possible values are `%s`, `%s`, `%s`, `%s` and `%s`",
  558. SASLTypeOAuth, SASLTypePlaintext, SASLTypeSCRAMSHA256, SASLTypeSCRAMSHA512, SASLTypeGSSAPI)
  559. return ConfigurationError(msg)
  560. }
  561. }
  562. // validate the Admin values
  563. switch {
  564. case c.Admin.Timeout <= 0:
  565. return ConfigurationError("Admin.Timeout must be > 0")
  566. }
  567. // validate the Metadata values
  568. switch {
  569. case c.Metadata.Retry.Max < 0:
  570. return ConfigurationError("Metadata.Retry.Max must be >= 0")
  571. case c.Metadata.Retry.Backoff < 0:
  572. return ConfigurationError("Metadata.Retry.Backoff must be >= 0")
  573. case c.Metadata.RefreshFrequency < 0:
  574. return ConfigurationError("Metadata.RefreshFrequency must be >= 0")
  575. }
  576. // validate the Producer values
  577. switch {
  578. case c.Producer.MaxMessageBytes <= 0:
  579. return ConfigurationError("Producer.MaxMessageBytes must be > 0")
  580. case c.Producer.RequiredAcks < -1:
  581. return ConfigurationError("Producer.RequiredAcks must be >= -1")
  582. case c.Producer.Timeout <= 0:
  583. return ConfigurationError("Producer.Timeout must be > 0")
  584. case c.Producer.Partitioner == nil:
  585. return ConfigurationError("Producer.Partitioner must not be nil")
  586. case c.Producer.Flush.Bytes < 0:
  587. return ConfigurationError("Producer.Flush.Bytes must be >= 0")
  588. case c.Producer.Flush.Messages < 0:
  589. return ConfigurationError("Producer.Flush.Messages must be >= 0")
  590. case c.Producer.Flush.Frequency < 0:
  591. return ConfigurationError("Producer.Flush.Frequency must be >= 0")
  592. case c.Producer.Flush.MaxMessages < 0:
  593. return ConfigurationError("Producer.Flush.MaxMessages must be >= 0")
  594. case c.Producer.Flush.MaxMessages > 0 && c.Producer.Flush.MaxMessages < c.Producer.Flush.Messages:
  595. return ConfigurationError("Producer.Flush.MaxMessages must be >= Producer.Flush.Messages when set")
  596. case c.Producer.Retry.Max < 0:
  597. return ConfigurationError("Producer.Retry.Max must be >= 0")
  598. case c.Producer.Retry.Backoff < 0:
  599. return ConfigurationError("Producer.Retry.Backoff must be >= 0")
  600. }
  601. if c.Producer.Compression == CompressionLZ4 && !c.Version.IsAtLeast(V0_10_0_0) {
  602. return ConfigurationError("lz4 compression requires Version >= V0_10_0_0")
  603. }
  604. if c.Producer.Compression == CompressionGZIP {
  605. if c.Producer.CompressionLevel != CompressionLevelDefault {
  606. if _, err := gzip.NewWriterLevel(ioutil.Discard, c.Producer.CompressionLevel); err != nil {
  607. return ConfigurationError(fmt.Sprintf("gzip compression does not work with level %d: %v", c.Producer.CompressionLevel, err))
  608. }
  609. }
  610. }
  611. if c.Producer.Compression == CompressionZSTD && !c.Version.IsAtLeast(V2_1_0_0) {
  612. return ConfigurationError("zstd compression requires Version >= V2_1_0_0")
  613. }
  614. if c.Producer.Idempotent {
  615. if !c.Version.IsAtLeast(V0_11_0_0) {
  616. return ConfigurationError("Idempotent producer requires Version >= V0_11_0_0")
  617. }
  618. if c.Producer.Retry.Max == 0 {
  619. return ConfigurationError("Idempotent producer requires Producer.Retry.Max >= 1")
  620. }
  621. if c.Producer.RequiredAcks != WaitForAll {
  622. return ConfigurationError("Idempotent producer requires Producer.RequiredAcks to be WaitForAll")
  623. }
  624. if c.Net.MaxOpenRequests > 1 {
  625. return ConfigurationError("Idempotent producer requires Net.MaxOpenRequests to be 1")
  626. }
  627. }
  628. // validate the Consumer values
  629. switch {
  630. case c.Consumer.Fetch.Min <= 0:
  631. return ConfigurationError("Consumer.Fetch.Min must be > 0")
  632. case c.Consumer.Fetch.Default <= 0:
  633. return ConfigurationError("Consumer.Fetch.Default must be > 0")
  634. case c.Consumer.Fetch.Max < 0:
  635. return ConfigurationError("Consumer.Fetch.Max must be >= 0")
  636. case c.Consumer.MaxWaitTime < 1*time.Millisecond:
  637. return ConfigurationError("Consumer.MaxWaitTime must be >= 1ms")
  638. case c.Consumer.MaxProcessingTime <= 0:
  639. return ConfigurationError("Consumer.MaxProcessingTime must be > 0")
  640. case c.Consumer.Retry.Backoff < 0:
  641. return ConfigurationError("Consumer.Retry.Backoff must be >= 0")
  642. case c.Consumer.Offsets.AutoCommit.Interval <= 0:
  643. return ConfigurationError("Consumer.Offsets.AutoCommit.Interval must be > 0")
  644. case c.Consumer.Offsets.Initial != OffsetOldest && c.Consumer.Offsets.Initial != OffsetNewest:
  645. return ConfigurationError("Consumer.Offsets.Initial must be OffsetOldest or OffsetNewest")
  646. case c.Consumer.Offsets.Retry.Max < 0:
  647. return ConfigurationError("Consumer.Offsets.Retry.Max must be >= 0")
  648. case c.Consumer.IsolationLevel != ReadUncommitted && c.Consumer.IsolationLevel != ReadCommitted:
  649. return ConfigurationError("Consumer.IsolationLevel must be ReadUncommitted or ReadCommitted")
  650. }
  651. if c.Consumer.Offsets.CommitInterval != 0 {
  652. Logger.Println("Deprecation warning: Consumer.Offsets.CommitInterval exists for historical compatibility" +
  653. " and should not be used. Please use Consumer.Offsets.AutoCommit, the current value will be ignored")
  654. }
  655. // validate IsolationLevel
  656. if c.Consumer.IsolationLevel == ReadCommitted && !c.Version.IsAtLeast(V0_11_0_0) {
  657. return ConfigurationError("ReadCommitted requires Version >= V0_11_0_0")
  658. }
  659. // validate the Consumer Group values
  660. switch {
  661. case c.Consumer.Group.Session.Timeout <= 2*time.Millisecond:
  662. return ConfigurationError("Consumer.Group.Session.Timeout must be >= 2ms")
  663. case c.Consumer.Group.Heartbeat.Interval < 1*time.Millisecond:
  664. return ConfigurationError("Consumer.Group.Heartbeat.Interval must be >= 1ms")
  665. case c.Consumer.Group.Heartbeat.Interval >= c.Consumer.Group.Session.Timeout:
  666. return ConfigurationError("Consumer.Group.Heartbeat.Interval must be < Consumer.Group.Session.Timeout")
  667. case c.Consumer.Group.Rebalance.Strategy == nil:
  668. return ConfigurationError("Consumer.Group.Rebalance.Strategy must not be empty")
  669. case c.Consumer.Group.Rebalance.Timeout <= time.Millisecond:
  670. return ConfigurationError("Consumer.Group.Rebalance.Timeout must be >= 1ms")
  671. case c.Consumer.Group.Rebalance.Retry.Max < 0:
  672. return ConfigurationError("Consumer.Group.Rebalance.Retry.Max must be >= 0")
  673. case c.Consumer.Group.Rebalance.Retry.Backoff < 0:
  674. return ConfigurationError("Consumer.Group.Rebalance.Retry.Backoff must be >= 0")
  675. }
  676. // validate misc shared values
  677. switch {
  678. case c.ChannelBufferSize < 0:
  679. return ConfigurationError("ChannelBufferSize must be >= 0")
  680. case !validID.MatchString(c.ClientID):
  681. return ConfigurationError("ClientID is invalid")
  682. }
  683. return nil
  684. }
  685. func (c *Config) getDialer() proxy.Dialer {
  686. if c.Net.Proxy.Enable {
  687. Logger.Printf("using proxy %s", c.Net.Proxy.Dialer)
  688. return c.Net.Proxy.Dialer
  689. } else {
  690. return &net.Dialer{
  691. Timeout: c.Net.DialTimeout,
  692. KeepAlive: c.Net.KeepAlive,
  693. LocalAddr: c.Net.LocalAddr,
  694. }
  695. }
  696. }