kjp_generator

Crates.iokjp_generator
lib.rskjp_generator
version0.1.2
sourcesrc
created_at2023-01-03 12:28:16.2372
updated_at2023-02-06 12:33:08.247157
descriptionCustom Kafka JSON processor generator, part of kafka-json-processor project.
homepagehttps://github.com/multicatch/kafka-json-processor
repositoryhttps://github.com/multicatch/kafka-json-processor
max_upload_size
id750104
size81,847
multicatch (multicatch)

documentation

https://multicatch.github.io/kafka-json-processor/kjp_generator/

README

Kafka-json-processor project generator

This utility can be used to generate a Rust project that can be compiled into an executable with all preconfigured JSON processors. The executable will read from Kafka topic, process the messages and write to another Kafka topic.

The project is generated based on a template. The template is a configuration file instructing the generator how would you like to process the messages.

Preparing template.yml

See the following example of "Example processor" project:

name: "Example processor"
streams:
- input_topic: in
  output_topic: out

  processors:
    - generator: static_field
      field: $.hello
      value: world
    - generator: copy_field
      source_field: $.abc[1]
      target_field: $.def

In this file, we define one stream that will process messages from "in" topic and put processed messages into "out".

A stream is a single pipeline for processing messages originating from one topic and going into another topic. A single stream contains a list of processors. The processors are functions that will add or change fields to the output message.

In this example, we define two processors:

  • The first one will add a static_field to the output message. Desired field is defined by JSONPath and the static value is defined by value.
  • The second one will copy_field from an input message to an output message. It will copy from source_field (defined by JSONPath) to target_field.

Notice that in the template we do not use the term processor, processor kind or processor type to specify what function to use in a pipeline. The reason is that we actually generate the functions for your target project. So this file (template.yml) actually defines how to generate the project, and thus we use different generators for the desired behavior.

What are the generators?

The generators are scripts or executables that output function source based on given parameters. You can write your own script for custom functions. You can also write custom executable (or "plugin" - see kjp-generator-plugin).

Kafka-json-processor has a few ready-to-use generators - you can use kjp-generator-generators.

By default, kjp-generator uses "./generators" path for finding available generators. If you wish to specify a custom path, use this argument option:

  -g, --generators-path <GENERATORS_PATH>
          Custom path to processor generators.
          
          Put all processor generators in this directory. This directory will be scanned for available files and those files will be used as executable plugins to generate any code requested by `generator` option in your `template.yaml`.

          [default: ./generators]

Example: ./kjp-generator -g ./kjp-generator-generators -t ./template.yml -o output-directory

How to generate a project?

You will need:

Run kjp-generator with the following required options:

  -t, --template <TEMPLATE>
          Path to template file (YAML).
          
          A template file is a configuration file that will be used to generate the final project. 'The final project' - Rust project with generated code to process messages from selected Kafka topics.

  -o, --output <OUTPUT>
          Output directory of generated project.
          
          This will be the directory where the project with message processors will be generated. This project will contain generated code to process messages basing on the supplied template. The code will need to be compiled afterwards.

Those options are optional, but keep those in mind:

  -g, --generators-path <GENERATORS_PATH>
          Custom path to processor generators.
          
          Put all processor generators in this directory. This directory will be scanned for available files and those files will be used as executable plugins to generate any code requested by `generator` option in your `template.yaml`.
                    
          [default: ./generators]
          
  -c, --core-path <CORE_PATH>
          Custom path to kafka_json_processor_core.
          
          kafka_json_processor_code is a dependency that contains code that will prevent boilerplate in the generated project. By default, it will use hardcoded version from `crates.io`. If it doesn't work (or you want to use custom core), supply a path to the source code of kafka_json_processor_code.

Example: ./kjp-generator -g ./kjp-generator-generators -t ./template.yml -o output-directory

See also:

Developer's Guide To Plugins

During code generation phase, kjp-generator will try to execute generators with the following arguments:

  • generated function name,
  • generator options from template.yml as argument pairs ("$name" "$value").

For example, the following processor configuration will execute:

- input_topic: in
  output_topic: out

  processors:
    - generator: static_field
      field: $.hello
      value: world

Will execute the following script:

./static_field.sh in_out_static_0_field 'generator' 'static_field' 'field' '$.hello' 'value' 'world'

Kjp-generator expects the plugin to output a valid UTF-8 string in stdout with the following format:

  • first line: 1) OK or 2) ERR,
  • rest of stdout: 1) function source or 2) error message.

Line separators: \n. The plugin termination is treated as the end of function generation - the stdout is collected after this event. Invalid output is treated as an error.

The plugin does need to interpret JSONPath - it can just wrap it in ##JSONPATH(...)## to instruct the kjp-generator that it wants it converted to &[ObjectKey]. For example: ##JSONPATH($.hello[1].world)## will become &[Key(\"hello\".to_string()), Index(1), Key(\"world\".to_string())].

Output examples:

OK
fn in_out_static_0_field(_input: &Value, message: &mut OutputMessage) -> Result<(), ProcessingError> {
    message.insert_val(##JSONPATH($.hello)##, Value::String("world".to_string()))?;
    Ok(())
}

ERR
Generator required property that was missing in config: source_field
Commit count: 58

cargo fmt