| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123 | # Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more# contributor license agreements.  See the NOTICE file distributed with# this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership.# The ASF licenses this file to You under the Apache License, Version 2.0# (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with# the License.  You may obtain a copy of the License at##    http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0## Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and# limitations under the License.# see kafka.server.KafkaConfig for additional details and defaults############################# Server Basics ############################## The id of the broker. This must be set to a unique integer for each broker.broker.id=1############################# Socket Server Settings #############################listeners=PLAINTEXT://:9092# The port the socket server listens onport=9092# Hostname the broker will bind to. If not set, the server will bind to all interfaces#host.name=localhost# Hostname the broker will advertise to producers and consumers. If not set, it uses the# value for "host.name" if configured.  Otherwise, it will use the value returned from# java.net.InetAddress.getCanonicalHostName().#advertised.host.name=<hostname routable by clients># The port to publish to ZooKeeper for clients to use. If this is not set,# it will publish the same port that the broker binds to.#advertised.port=<port accessible by clients># The number of threads handling network requestsnum.network.threads=3# The number of threads doing disk I/Onum.io.threads=8# The send buffer (SO_SNDBUF) used by the socket serversocket.send.buffer.bytes=102400# The receive buffer (SO_RCVBUF) used by the socket serversocket.receive.buffer.bytes=102400# The maximum size of a request that the socket server will accept (protection against OOM)socket.request.max.bytes=104857600############################# Log Basics ############################## A comma seperated list of directories under which to store log fileslog.dirs=/root/kafka/logs# The default number of log partitions per topic. More partitions allow greater# parallelism for consumption, but this will also result in more files across# the brokers.num.partitions=1# The number of threads per data directory to be used for log recovery at startup and flushing at shutdown.# This value is recommended to be increased for installations with data dirs located in RAID array.num.recovery.threads.per.data.dir=1############################# Log Flush Policy ############################## Messages are immediately written to the filesystem but by default we only fsync() to sync# the OS cache lazily. The following configurations control the flush of data to disk.# There are a few important trade-offs here:#    1. Durability: Unflushed data may be lost if you are not using replication.#    2. Latency: Very large flush intervals may lead to latency spikes when the flush does occur as there will be a lot of data to flush.#    3. Throughput: The flush is generally the most expensive operation, and a small flush interval may lead to exceessive seeks.# The settings below allow one to configure the flush policy to flush data after a period of time or# every N messages (or both). This can be done globally and overridden on a per-topic basis.# The number of messages to accept before forcing a flush of data to disk#log.flush.interval.messages=10000# The maximum amount of time a message can sit in a log before we force a flush#log.flush.interval.ms=1000############################# Log Retention Policy ############################## The following configurations control the disposal of log segments. The policy can# be set to delete segments after a period of time, or after a given size has accumulated.# A segment will be deleted whenever *either* of these criteria are met. Deletion always happens# from the end of the log.# The minimum age of a log file to be eligible for deletionlog.retention.hours=168# A size-based retention policy for logs. Segments are pruned from the log as long as the remaining# segments don't drop below log.retention.bytes.#log.retention.bytes=1073741824# The maximum size of a log segment file. When this size is reached a new log segment will be created.log.segment.bytes=1073741824# The interval at which log segments are checked to see if they can be deleted according# to the retention policieslog.retention.check.interval.ms=300000############################# Zookeeper ############################## Zookeeper connection string (see zookeeper docs for details).# This is a comma separated host:port pairs, each corresponding to a zk# server. e.g. "127.0.0.1:3000,127.0.0.1:3001,127.0.0.1:3002".# You can also append an optional chroot string to the urls to specify the# root directory for all kafka znodes.zookeeper.connect=data-zookeeper:2181,data-zookeeper1:2181,data-zookeeper2:2181/kafka# Timeout in ms for connecting to zookeeperzookeeper.connection.timeout.ms=6000delete.topic.enable=true  min.insync.replicas=1  zookeeper.session.timeout.ms=6000  
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