The actual type name in the JSON descriptor files is "bool" not "boolean"
Reviewers: Mickael Maison <mickael.maison@gmail.com>, Andrew Schofield <andrew_schofield@live.com>
Update few classes that were still using the removed methods (including
tests that are no longer required).
Reviewers: Chia-Ping Tsai <chia7712@gmail.com>
Author: Colin P. Mccabe <cmccabe@confluent.io>
Reviewers: Vikas Singh <vikas@confluent.io>, Jason Gustafson <jason@confluent.io>
Closes#7477 from cmccabe/KAFKA-8984
See also KIP-183.
This implements the following algorithm:
AdminClient sends ElectPreferredLeadersRequest.
KafakApis receives ElectPreferredLeadersRequest and delegates to
ReplicaManager.electPreferredLeaders()
ReplicaManager delegates to KafkaController.electPreferredLeaders()
KafkaController adds a PreferredReplicaLeaderElection to the EventManager,
ReplicaManager.electPreferredLeaders()'s callback uses the
delayedElectPreferredReplicasPurgatory to wait for the results of the
election to appear in the metadata cache. If there are no results
because of errors, or because the preferred leaders are already leading
the partitions then a response is returned immediately.
In the EventManager work thread the preferred leader is elected as follows:
The EventManager runs PreferredReplicaLeaderElection.process()
process() calls KafkaController.onPreferredReplicaElectionWithResults()
KafkaController.onPreferredReplicaElectionWithResults()
calls the PartitionStateMachine.handleStateChangesWithResults() to
perform the election (asynchronously the PSM will send LeaderAndIsrRequest
to the new and old leaders and UpdateMetadataRequest to all brokers)
then invokes the callback.
Reviewers: Colin P. McCabe <cmccabe@apache.org>, Jun Rao <junrao@gmail.com>
This patch adds a framework to automatically generate the request/response classes for Kafka's protocol. The code will be updated to use the generated classes in follow-up patches. Below is a brief summary of the included components:
**buildSrc/src**
The message generator code is here. This code is automatically re-run by gradle when one of the schema files changes. The entire directory is processed at once to minimize the number of times we have to start a new JVM. We use Jackson to translate the JSON files into Java objects.
**clients/src/main/java/org/apache/kafka/common/protocol/Message.java**
This is the interface implemented by all automatically generated messages.
**clients/src/main/java/org/apache/kafka/common/protocol/MessageUtil.java**
Some utility functions used by the generated message code.
**clients/src/main/java/org/apache/kafka/common/protocol/Readable.java, Writable.java, ByteBufferAccessor.java**
The generated message code uses these classes for writing to a buffer.
**clients/src/main/message/README.md**
This README file explains how the JSON schemas work.
**clients/src/main/message/\*.json**
The JSON files in this directory implement every supported version of every Kafka API. The unit tests automatically validate that the generated schemas match the hand-written schemas in our code. Additionally, there are some things like request and response headers that have schemas here.
**clients/src/main/java/org/apache/kafka/common/utils/ImplicitLinkedHashSet.java**
I added an optimization here for empty sets. This is useful here because I want all messages to start with empty sets by default prior to being loaded with data. This is similar to the "empty list" optimizations in the `java.util.ArrayList` class.
Reviewers: Stanislav Kozlovski <stanislav_kozlovski@outlook.com>, Ismael Juma <ismael@juma.me.uk>, Bob Barrett <bob.barrett@outlook.com>, Jason Gustafson <jason@confluent.io>