This Kafka sink connector for Amazon EventBridge allows you to send events (records) from one or multiple Kafka topic(s) to the specified event bus, including useful features such as:
- offloading large events to S3 (✨ new in
v1.3.0
) - configurable topic to event
detail-type
name mapping with option to provide a custom class to customize eventdetail-type
naming (✨ new inv1.3.0
) - custom IAM profiles per connector
- IAM role-based authentication
- provide custom credentials provider class (✨ new in
v1.3.3
) - support for dead-letter queues
- and schema registry support for Avro and Protocol Buffers (Protobuf).
See configuration below for details.
Amazon EventBridge Event Bus is a serverless event router that enables you to create scalable event-driven applications by routing events between your own applications, third-party SaaS applications, and other AWS services. You can set up routing rules to determine where to send your events, allowing for application architectures to react to changes in your systems as they occur. To get started with Amazon EventBridge, visit our documentation.
The connector is released as a community-supported open-source project with best effort support from the repository maintainers.
Download the connector from Confluent Connector Hub.
Two kafka-eventbridge-sink
JAR files, are created on each
release. The JAR file *-with-dependencies.jar
contains all required dependencies of the connector, excluding Kafka Connect dependencies and (de)serializers, such
as connect-api
and connect-json
. To support additional (de)serializers, such as Avro and Protobuf using the AWS
Glue Schema
Registry,
install these dependencies in your Kafka Connect environment before deploying this connector.
The following steps describe how to clone the repo and perform a clean packaging of the connector. Requires Maven and Java Development Kit (JDK 11 or later).
Clone the repo:
git clone https://github.com/awslabs/eventbridge-kafka-connector.git
cd eventbridge-kafka-connector
Create JAR artifacts:
mvn clean package -Drevision=$(git describe --tags --always)
The following steps describe how to clone the repo and perform a clean packaging of the connector using Docker.
Clone the repo:
# clone repo
git clone https://github.com/awslabs/eventbridge-kafka-connector.git
cd eventbridge-kafka-connector
Create JAR artifacts:
docker run --rm -v $(pwd):/src -w /src -it maven:3-eclipse-temurin-11 \
mvn clean package -Drevision=$(git describe --tags --always)
Tip
If you want to reuse your local Maven cache and/or persist the Maven dependencies pulled, add
-v <local_maven_folder>:/root/.m2
to the above command.
In addition to the common Kafka Connect sink-related configuration options, this connector defines the following configuration properties.
Property | Required | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
aws.eventbridge.connector.id |
Yes | The unique ID of this connector (used in the EventBridge event source field as a suffix on kafka-connect. to uniquely identify a connector). |
|
aws.eventbridge.region |
Yes | The AWS region of the target event bus. | |
aws.eventbridge.eventbus.arn |
Yes | The ARN of the target event bus. | |
aws.eventbridge.endpoint.uri |
No | An optional service endpoint URI used to connect to EventBridge. | |
aws.eventbridge.eventbus.global.endpoint.id |
No | An optional global endpoint ID of the target event bus specified using abcde.xyz syntax (see API documentation). |
|
aws.eventbridge.eventbus.resources |
No | Optional Resources (comma-seperated) to add to each EventBridge event. |
|
aws.eventbridge.detail.types |
No | "kafka-connect-${topic}" |
The detail-type that will be used for the EventBridge events. Can be defined per topic e.g., "topic1:MyDetailType, topic2:MyDetailType" , as a single expression with a dynamic ${topic} placeholder for all topics e.g., "my-detail-type-${topic}" or as a static value without additional topic information for all topics e.g, "my-detail-type" . |
aws.eventbridge.detail.types.mapper.class |
No | An optional class name implementing software.amazon.event.kafkaconnector.mapping.DetailTypeMapper to customize the EventBridge detail-type field mapping. If specified, the configuration property aws.eventbridge.detail.types is ignored. |
|
aws.eventbridge.time.mapper.class |
No | An optional class name implementing software.amazon.event.kafkaconnector.mapping.TimeMapper to customize the EventBridge Time field mapping. If not specified, the event Time is set by EventBridge. |
|
aws.eventbridge.retries.max |
No | 2 |
The maximum number of retry attempts when sending events to EventBridge. |
aws.eventbridge.retries.delay |
No | 200 |
The retry delay in milliseconds between each retry attempt. |
aws.eventbridge.auth.credentials_provider.class |
No | software.amazon.awssdk.auth.credentials.DefaultCredentialsProvider or software.amazon.awssdk.services.sts.auth.StsAssumeRoleCredentialsProvider if aws.eventbridge.iam.role.arn is provided |
An optional class name of the credentials provider to use. It must implement software.amazon.awssdk.auth.credentials.AwsCredentialsProvider with a no-arg constructor and optionally org.apache.kafka.common.Configurable to configure the provider after instantiation. |
aws.eventbridge.iam.profile.name |
No | Use the specified IAM profile to resolve credentials See Using different Configuration Profiles per Connector for details | |
aws.eventbridge.iam.role.arn |
No | Uses STS to assume the specified IAM role with periodic refresh. The connector ID is used as the session name. | |
aws.eventbridge.iam.external.id |
No | The IAM external id (optional) when role-based authentication is used. | |
aws.eventbridge.offloading.default.s3.bucket |
No | The S3 bucket to use to offload events to S3 (see Offloading large events (payloads) to S3) | |
aws.eventbridge.offloading.default.fieldref |
No | $.detail.value |
The part of the event (payload) to offload to S3 (only active when aws.eventbridge.offloading.default.s3.bucket is set) |
Note
When using the default retry configuration (or retries > 0), the connector provides at-least-once delivery semantics for valid Kafka records, i.e., records which can be correctly (de)serialized before making a delivery attempt to EventBridge.
The following minimal configuration configures the connector with default values, consuming Kafka records from the topic
"json-values-topic"
with record keys as String
and JSON
values (without schema), and sending events to the custom
EventBridge event bus "kafkabus"
in region "us-east-1"
.
{
"name": "EventBridgeSink-Json",
"config": {
// consume from earliest record or last checkpointed offset if available
"auto.offset.reset": "earliest",
"connector.class": "software.amazon.event.kafkaconnector.EventBridgeSinkConnector",
"topics": "json-values-topic",
"aws.eventbridge.connector.id": "my-json-values-connector",
"aws.eventbridge.eventbus.arn": "arn:aws:events:us-east-1:1234567890:event-bus/kafkabus",
"aws.eventbridge.region": "us-east-1",
"key.converter": "org.apache.kafka.connect.storage.StringConverter",
// see note below on JSON schemas
"value.converter": "org.apache.kafka.connect.json.JsonConverter",
"value.converter.schemas.enable": false
}
}
Note
Currently, when using JsonConverter
for keys or values, the connector uses a fixed configuration
schemas.enable=false
, i.e., JSON schemas are not included in the outgoing EventBridge event.
Continuing the example above, the following configuration defines a dead-letter queue (DLQ), i.e., topic, "json-dlq"
which will be created with an replication factor of 1
if it does not exist. Records which cannot be converted or
delivered to EventBridge will be sent to this DLQ.
{
"name": "EventBridgeSink-Json",
"config": {
"auto.offset.reset": "earliest",
"connector.class": "software.amazon.event.kafkaconnector.EventBridgeSinkConnector",
"topics": "json-values-topic",
"aws.eventbridge.connector.id": "my-json-values-connector",
"aws.eventbridge.eventbus.arn": "arn:aws:events:us-east-1:1234567890:event-bus/kafkabus",
"aws.eventbridge.region": "us-east-1",
"key.converter": "org.apache.kafka.connect.storage.StringConverter",
"value.converter": "org.apache.kafka.connect.json.JsonConverter",
"value.converter.schemas.enable": false,
"errors.tolerance":"all",
"errors.deadletterqueue.topic.name":"json-dlq",
"errors.deadletterqueue.topic.replication.factor":1
}
}
The following configuration shows some advanced options, such as multiple topics with customized detail-type
mapping,
customized retry behavior, and IAM-based authentication, and how to deserialize Avro-encoded record values (with
JSON-encoded keys) using AWS Glue Schema Registry
(GSR).
{
"name": "EventBridgeSink-Avro",
"config": {
"auto.offset.reset": "earliest",
"connector.class": "software.amazon.event.kafkaconnector.EventBridgeSinkConnector",
"topics": "avro-topic-1,avro-topic-2",
"aws.eventbridge.connector.id": "avro-test-connector",
"aws.eventbridge.eventbus.arn": "arn:aws:events:us-east-1:1234567890:event-bus/kafkabus",
"aws.eventbridge.region": "us-east-1",
// customized retries
"aws.eventbridge.retries.max": 1,
"aws.eventbridge.retries.delay": 1000,
// custom detail-type mapping with topic suffix
"aws.eventbridge.detail.types": "avro-test-${topic}",
// IAM-based authentication
"aws.eventbridge.iam.role.arn":"arn:aws:iam::1234567890:role/EventBridgePutEventsRole",
"tasks.max": 1,
"schema.history.internal.kafka.bootstrap.servers": "kafka:9092",
"schema.history.internal.kafka.topic": "schema-changes.inventory",
"key.converter": "org.apache.kafka.connect.json.JsonConverter",
// dependencies (Classes) must be in the connector $CLASSPATH
"value.converter": "com.amazonaws.services.schemaregistry.kafkaconnect.AWSKafkaAvroConverter",
// GSR region
"value.converter.region": "us-east-1",
// GSR registry to use (expects schemas to exist and IAM role to have permission to read)
"value.converter.registry.name": "avro-kafka-eventbridge",
"value.converter.avroRecordType": "GENERIC_RECORD"
}
}
Important
This connector does not include custom (de)serializers, such as AWSKafkaAvroConverter
as shown above. Refer to the
Kafka Connect, schema registry (e.g.
GSR),
or (de)serializer (e.g. GSR SerDes) documentation how to
provide them to Kafka connectors.
The main task of this connector is to convert Kafka records to EventBridge events. Since this connector can be used to
consume from multiple Kafka topics, which an EventBridge user might want to filter later on, the mapping of topic names
to the EventBridge detail-type
, i.e. event type, is customizable.
The default, i.e., when the configuration option aws.eventbridge.detail.types
is not set, uses kafka-connect-
as a
prefix, followed by the topic name of each individual record. Alternatively, a custom detail-type
can be defined per
topic, provided as a comma-separated list with the syntax "<topic_name>:<detail_type>,<topic_name>:<detail_type>,..."
e.g., "orders:com.example.org.orders.event.v0,customers:com.example.org.customers.event.v0"
. Records from the orders
topic would result in EventBridge events with a detail-type: com.example.org.orders.event.v0
.
If only the topic name should be used, a single expression with a dynamic ${topic}
placeholder for all topics can be
used e.g., "my-detail-type-${topic}"
(using a hardcoded prefix), "${topic}"
(only topic name), or as a static value
without additional topic information "my-detail-type"
.
Tip
You can implement custom detail-type
mapping by specifying a custom class in the
aws.eventbridge.detail.types.mapper.class
configuration property.
The current PutEvents
size limit in
EventBridge is 256KB. This can be problematic in cases where Kafka topics contain records exceeding this limit. By
default, the connector logs a warning when trying to send those events to EventBridge which can be ignored (dropped) or
sent to a Kafka dead-letter topic (see Payloads exceeding PutEvents Limit).
Alternatively, the connector can be configured to offload (parts of) the event to S3 before calling the PutEvents
API.
This is also known as the claim-check pattern. When enabled (see Configuration), every record
received from the associated Kafka topics in the connector which matches the
JSONPath expression defined in
aws.eventbridge.offloading.default.fieldref
(default: $.detail.value
) will be offloaded.
To enable offloading, specify an S3 bucket via aws.eventbridge.offloading.default.s3.bucket
.
Note
The IAM credentials/role used in the connector needs
PutObject
permissions.
Unless overwritten by aws.eventbridge.offloading.default.fieldref
, the connector will offload the value in
$.detail.value
to S3, delete that key from the event and add claim-check information to the event metadata (see
examples below). The JSONPath expression applies to the converted EventBridge event before calling PutEvents
to EventBridge.
The benefits of this approach over other offloading implementations is flexibility in which parts of the events should be offloaded and retaining as much of the original event as possible to harness the powerful event filtering capabilities in EventBridge. For example, some events in a topic might contain large blobs of binary/base64-encoded data which most consumers are not interested. In those cases, offloading helps to trim down event (payload) size and giving the consumer(s) interested in the full payload the option to fully reconstruct the event based on the offloaded S3 object and metadata added to the event structure.
Note
Array and wildcard references are not allowed in the JSONPath expression defined in
aws.eventbridge.offloading.default.fieldref
and the JSONPath must always begin with $.detail.value
.
Assuming offloading is enabled via the setting aws.eventbridge.offloading.default.s3.bucket="my-offloading-bucket"
and
the following event structure which the S3 offloading logic in the connector operates on before making the final
PutEvents
API call to EventBridge:
{
"version": "0",
"id": "dbc1c73a-c51d-0c0e-ca61-ab9278974c57",
"account": "1234567890",
"time": "2023-05-23T11:38:46Z",
"region": "us-east-1",
"detail-type": "kafka-connect-json-values-topic",
"source": "kafka-connect.my-json-values-connector",
"resources": [],
"detail": {
"topic": "json-values-topic",
"partition": 0,
"offset": 0,
"timestamp": 1684841916831,
"timestampType": "CreateTime",
"headers": [],
"key": "order-1",
"value": {
"orderItems": [
"item-1",
"item-2"
],
"orderCreatedTime": "Tue May 23 13:38:46 CEST 2023",
"orderPreferences": null
}
}
}
If aws.eventbridge.offloading.default.fieldref
is $.detail.value
(the default), the resulting event sent to EventBridge would be:
{
"version": "0",
"id": "dbc1c73a-c51d-0c0e-ca61-ab9278974c57",
"account": "1234567890",
"time": "2023-05-23T11:38:46Z",
"region": "us-east-1",
"detail-type": "kafka-connect-json-values-topic",
"source": "kafka-connect.my-json-values-connector",
"resources": [],
"detail": {
"topic": "json-values-topic",
"partition": 0,
"offset": 0,
"timestamp": 1684841916831,
"timestampType": "CreateTime",
"headers": [],
"key": "order-1",
"dataref": "arn:aws:s3:::my-offloading-bucket/2d10c6f6-31e9-43b4-8706-51b4cf5534d8",
"datarefJsonPath": "$.detail.value"
}
}
In the S3 bucket my-offloading-bucket
there would be an object 2d10c6f6-31e9-43b4-8706-51b4cf5534d8
containing:
{
"orderItems": [
"item-1",
"item-2"
],
"orderCreatedTime": "Tue May 23 13:38:46 CEST 2023",
"orderPreferences": null
}
Continuing the example, if aws.eventbridge.offloading.default.fieldref
is $.detail.value.non-existing-key
,
offloading would pass this event through without modification. The resulting event would be the same as the input event
without offloading information:
{
"version": "0",
"id": "dbc1c73a-c51d-0c0e-ca61-ab9278974c57",
"account": "1234567890",
"time": "2023-05-23T11:38:46Z",
"region": "us-east-1",
"detail-type": "kafka-connect-json-values-topic",
"source": "kafka-connect.my-json-values-connector",
"resources": [],
"detail": {
"topic": "json-values-topic",
"partition": 0,
"offset": 0,
"timestamp": 1684841916831,
"timestampType": "CreateTime",
"headers": [],
"key": "order-1",
"value": {
"orderItems": [
"item-1",
"item-2"
],
"orderCreatedTime": "Tue May 23 13:38:46 CEST 2023",
"orderPreferences": null
}
}
}
If aws.eventbridge.offloading.default.fieldref
is $.detail.value.orderPreferences
and matches a key with a null
value, offloading is also skipped as there is nothing to offload. The resulting event would be the same as the input
event without offloading information:
{
"version": "0",
"id": "dbc1c73a-c51d-0c0e-ca61-ab9278974c57",
"account": "1234567890",
"time": "2023-05-23T11:38:46Z",
"region": "us-east-1",
"detail-type": "kafka-connect-json-values-topic",
"source": "kafka-connect.my-json-values-connector",
"resources": [],
"detail": {
"topic": "json-values-topic",
"partition": 0,
"offset": 0,
"timestamp": 1684841916831,
"timestampType": "CreateTime",
"headers": [],
"key": "order-1",
"value": {
"orderItems": [
"item-1",
"item-2"
],
"orderCreatedTime": "Tue May 23 13:38:46 CEST 2023",
"orderPreferences": null
}
}
}
Note
If offloading matches a key with an empty object {}
or array []
, these values are considered a match and will be
offloaded just as any other matched value.
By default, the connector is configured to retry failed PutEvents
API calls, i.e. an Exception was
thrown, 2
times, i.e., 3
total attempts, with a constant delay between each retry of 200
milliseconds. These
values can be configured (see configuration). The following exceptions (incl. their subclasses) are
considered retryable: AwsServiceException
, SdkClientException
, ExecutionException
, InterruptedException
,
TimeoutException
.
Note
EventBridgeException
s with a 413
status code (PutEventsRequestEntry
limit exceeded) are not retried.
Note
The setting aws.eventbridge.retries.max
is also used on the underlying AWS SDK client, which automatically handles
certain retryable errors, such as throttling, without immediately throwing an exception. Currently, this can lead to
more than the desired retry attempts since those exceptions are also considered retryable by the connector code.
Each connector task creates an EventBridge client using the AWS DefaultCredentialsProvider to look up credentials. AWS credential providers use a predefined configuration and configuration order to retrieve credentials from the various credential sources.
For example, you can provide (temporary) credentials to the connector using AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID
,
AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY
, and AWS_SESSION_TOKEN
environment variables. For information how to use AWS config
and
credentials
profiles to resolve credentials, see Using different Configuration Profiles per Connector.
When the configuration property “aws.eventbridge.iam.role.arn”
is set, the
StsAssumeRoleCredentialsProvider
is directly used to assume the specified IAM role and periodically refresh credentials with STS. The STS client uses the
configured region
of the connector for the STS client and retrieves credentials using the DefaultCredentialsProvider
retrieval chain described above.
The connector only requires events:PutEvents
permission as shown in the IAM policy example below. For details refer to
the "Managing access permissions to your Amazon EventBridge resources"
documentation.
{
"Version": "2012-10-17",
"Statement": [
{
"Sid": "AllowPutEventsKafkaConnector",
"Effect": "Allow",
"Action": "events:PutEvents",
"Resource": "<ARN of your event bus>"
}
]
}
Important
If you use the Glue Schema Registry, the IAM role needs additional permissions to retrieve schemas e.g.,
using the managed policy AWSGlueSchemaRegistryReadonlyAccess
. Please refer to the Glue Schema Registry
documentation.
If you run multiple EventBridge connectors in your Kafka Connect environment, using environment variables or Java system
properties to configure your connectors means that each connector will be configured with the same IAM permissions.
If you want to configure multiple connectors with specific (different) IAM profiles from your config
and credentials
files, the connector configuration option aws.eventbridge.iam.profile.name
can be used.
With the connector configuration option aws.eventbridge.iam.profile.name
you specify which profile the specific
connector will use.
Important
Environment variables, such as AWS_PROFILE
or AWS access keys always take precedence over the configuration
files and must not be set for this configuration option to take effect.
Steps to configure a connector with a configuration profile:
First, set "aws.eventbridge.iam.profile.name": "my-custom-profile"
in the connector JSON configuration file (replace
example values with your desired profile name). Then, create (or mount) the AWS config
and credentials
files in your
Kafka Connect host(s). If the configuration files are not located/mounted in the default
location, set the environment variables
AWS_CONFIG_FILE
and AWS_SHARED_CREDENTIALS_FILE
accordingly. For example, with Docker you can mount them from your
local machine using Docker volume mounts and environment variables (see example below).
config
file:
[profile my-custom-profile]
output=text # not used by the SDK, for illustration purposes
credentials
file:
[my-custom-profile]
aws_access_key_id=AKIAIOSFODNN7EXAMPLE
aws_secret_access_key=wJalrXUtnFEMI/K7MDENG/bPxRfiCYEXAMPLEKEY
aws_session_token = IQoJb3JpZ2luX2IQoJb3JpZ2luX2IQoJb3JpZ2luX2IQoJb3JpZ2luX2IQoJb3JpZVERYLONGSTRINGEXAMPLE
Docker Compose file (snippet):
connect:
# (snip)
environment:
AWS_CONFIG_FILE: '/aws/config'
AWS_SHARED_CREDENTIALS_FILE: '/aws/credentials'
volumes:
- /Users/example/.aws:/aws # mount credentials from local host to /aws folder
You can also use role-based authentication with this approach by referencing a source_profile
in the config
file:
config
file (role-based authentication):
[profile my-custom-profile]
role_arn = arn:aws:iam::0123456789:role/KafkaConnectorPutEvents
source_profile = default # assume role using credentials using from the default profile specified in the credentials file
To use your own credentials provider, the class must implement the interface of AwsCredentialsProvider with a no-arg constructor and optionally the Kafka Configurable interface to configure the provider after instantiation.
Example configuration to use custom credentials provider com.example.MyCustomCredentialsProvider
:
{
"name": "EventBridgeSink-CustomCredentialsProvider",
"config": {
// other configuration attributes are omitted for clarity
"aws.eventbridge.auth.credentials_provider.class": "com.example.MyCustomCredentialsProvider"
}
}
Important
Since the class must be loadable from Kafka Connect, place the (uber) JAR with your custom credentials provider (and third-party dependencies) to a directory already listed in the plugin path (plugin.path
).
The connector can be deployed like any Kafka connector e.g., using the Kafka Connect REST API:
curl -i -X POST -H "Accept:application/json" -H "Content-Type:application/json" http://<kafka-connect-api>:<kafka-connect-port>/connectors/ -d @connector_config.json
Important
On Amazon Managed Streaming for Apache Kafka (MSK), follow the official documentation how to create a custom plugin (connector).
Below is an example of an event received by an EventBridge target using the minimal JSON configuration described above.
{
// fields set by EventBridge
"version": "0",
"id": "dbc1c73a-c51d-0c0e-ca61-ab9278974c57",
"account": "1234567890",
"time": "2023-05-23T11:38:46Z",
"region": "us-east-1",
// customizable fields (see configuration)
// detail-type is highly configurable (see section below)
"detail-type": "kafka-connect-json-values-topic",
// source is kafka-connect.<connector-id>
"source": "kafka-connect.my-json-values-connector",
"resources": [],
// contains Kafka record key/value and metadata
"detail": {
"topic": "json-values-topic",
"partition": 0,
"offset": 0,
"timestamp": 1684841916831,
"timestampType": "CreateTime",
"headers": [],
"key": "order-1",
"value": {
"orderItems": [
"item-1",
"item-2"
],
"orderCreatedTime": "Tue May 23 13:38:46 CEST 2023"
}
}
}
The following Rule pattern would match the above event, i.e., any event where:
source
is exactlykafka-connect.my-json-values-connector
anddetail.key
starts withorder
and- the field
orderItems
exists in thedetails.value
object
{
"source": ["kafka-connect.my-json-values-connector"],
"detail": {
"key": [{"prefix": "order"}],
"value": {
"orderItems": [{"exists": true}]
}
}
}
Tip
Consult the EventBridge event patterns documentation for a complete explanation of available patterns.
Common issues are around schema handling, authentication and authorization (IAM), and debugging the event flow.
If you see the following errors, check your connector configuration if it uses the correct key and value schema settings.
Error:
The following error is caused when the JsonConverter
is used and configured to use a schema within the Kafka record.
If the Kafka record was not produced with a JSON schema, i.e., only the JSON value, deserialization will fail with:
org.apache.kafka.connect.errors.DataException: JsonConverter with schemas.enable requires "schema" and "payload"
fields and may not contain additional fields. If you are trying to deserialize plain JSON data,
set schemas.enable=false in your converter configuration.
Resolution:
"value.converter": "org.apache.kafka.connect.json.JsonConverter",
"value.converter.schemas.enable": "false",
Error:
The following error is caused when an AvroConverter
is used but the respective key/value is not Avro-encoded:
org.apache.kafka.common.errors.SerializationException: Error deserializing Avro message for id -1
org.apache.kafka.common.errors.SerializationException: Unknown magic byte!
Resolution:
Change the key and/or value converters from Avro to the actual schema/payload type stored in the topic.
When invalid IAM credentials are used, such as due to expired tokens or insufficient permissions, the connector will
throw an exception after an PutEvents
API call attempt to EventBridge or during key/value deserialization when an
external schema registry with authentication is used. An example error message due to insufficient PutEvents
permissions looks like:
org.apache.kafka.connect.errors.ConnectException: software.amazon.event.kafkaconnector.exceptions.EventBridgeWriterException:
java.util.concurrent.ExecutionException: software.amazon.awssdk.services.eventbridge.model.EventBridgeException:
User: arn:aws:sts::1234567890:assumed-role/some/role is not authorized to perform: events:PutEvents on resource: arn:aws:events:us-east-1:1234567890:event-bus/kafkabus because no identity-based policy allows the events:PutEvents action
(Service: EventBridge, Status Code: 400, Request ID: e5ed0fb7-535d-4417-b38b-110f8495d0cb)
By default, the underlying AWS SDK client used will automatically handle throttle errors (exceptions) when the
PutEvents
ingestion quota for the account/region is exceeded.
However, depending on your quota and ingestion rate, if the client keeps hitting the rate limit it might throw an
exception to the connector. When setting aws.eventbridge.retries.max
greater than 0
, the connector will attempt to
retry such a failed PutEvents
attempt up to aws.eventbridge.retries.max
. If aws.eventbridge.retries.max
is 0 or
the retry budget is exhausted, a terminal ConnectException
is thrown and the task will be stopped.
We recommend to verify your PutEvents
account quota for the specific AWS
region and adjusting the Kafka Connect sink setting
consumer.override.max.poll.records
accordingly. For example, if your PutEvents
quota is 500
, setting
consumer.override.max.poll.records=400
leaves enough headroom.
Note
The EventBridge PutEvents
quota is an account-level soft quota, i.e., it applies to the sum of all PutEvents
requests in the same account, such as running multiple tasks of this connector. If you need to increase the quota
beyond the hard limit, reach out to the EventBridge service team to better understand your use case and needs.
Note
consumer.override.max.poll.interval.ms
is a related setting after which a consumer is considered failed and will
leave the consumer group. Continuing the example above, if consumer.override.max.poll.records=400
and
consumer.override.max.poll.interval.ms=300000
(the default as of Kafka 3.5), it means that processing 400
records
is allowed to take up to 5 minutes, i.e., 750 milliseconds per record/event, before considering the consumer (task)
failed.
EventBridge has a limit of 256KB on
the request size used in PutEvents
. When a Kafka record exceeds this threshold, the connector will log a warning and
ignore (skip) over the record. Optionally, a dead-letter topic can be
configured where such records are sent to or offloading to
S3 can be enabled.
[2023-05-26 09:01:21,149] WARN [EventBridgeSink-Json|task-0] [@69c7029] Marking record as failed: code=413 message=EventBridge batch size limit exceeded topic=json-test partition=0 offset=0 (software.amazon.event.kafkaconnector.EventBridgeWriter:244)
[2023-05-26 09:01:21,149] WARN [EventBridgeSink-Json|task-0] [@69c7029] Dead-letter queue not configured: skipping failed record (software.amazon.event.kafkaconnector.EventBridgeSinkTask:147)
software.amazon.event.kafkaconnector.exceptions.EventBridgePartialFailureResponse: statusCode=413 errorMessage=EventBridge batch size limit exceeded topic=json-test partition=0 offset=0
The connector will periodically (asynchronously) on a per-task basis report the count of successful PutEvents
API
calls e.g.:
[2023-05-25 11:53:04,598] INFO [EventBridgeSink-Json|task-0] Total records sent=15 (software.amazon.event.kafkaconnector.util.StatusReporter:36)
Tip
Depending on your Kafka Connect environment, you can enable [EventBridgeSink-Json|task-0]
logging style using this environment variable in Kafka Connect CONNECT_LOG4J_APPENDER_STDOUT_LAYOUT_CONVERSIONPATTERN: "[%d] %p %X{connector.context}%m (%c:%L)%n"
By enabling TRACE
-level logging, the connector will emit additional log messages, such as the underlying AWS SDK
client configuration, records received from Kafka Connect, PutEvents
stats, such as start, end time and duration, etc.
[2023-05-25 12:01:56,882] TRACE [EventBridgeSink-Json|task-0] [@69c7029] EventBridgeSinkTask put called with 1 records: [SinkRecord{kafkaOffset=0, timestampType=CreateTime} ConnectRecord{topic='json-test', kafkaPartition=0, key=my-key, keySchema=Schema{STRING}, value={sentTime=Thu May 25 14:01:56 CEST 2023}, valueSchema=null, timestamp=1685016116860, headers=ConnectHeaders(headers=)}] (software.amazon.event.kafkaconnector.EventBridgeSinkTask:57)
[2023-05-25 12:01:56,889] TRACE [EventBridgeSink-Json|task-0] [@69c7029] EventBridgeSinkTask putItems call started: start=2023-05-25T12:01:56.889640Z attempts=1 maxRetries=0 (software.amazon.event.kafkaconnector.EventBridgeSinkTask:77)
[2023-05-25 12:01:56,909] TRACE [EventBridgeSink-Json|task-0] [@69c7029] EventBridgeWriter sending request to eventbridge: PutEventsRequest(Entries=[PutEventsRequestEntry(Source=kafka-connect.json-test-connector, Resources=[], DetailType=kafka-connect-json-test, Detail={"topic":"json-test","partition":0,"offset":0,"timestamp":1685016116860,"timestampType":"CreateTime","headers":[],"key":"my-key","value":{"sentTime":"Thu May 25 14:01:56 CEST 2023"}}, EventBusName=arn:aws:events:us-east-1:1234567890:event-bus/kafkabus)]) (software.amazon.event.kafkaconnector.EventBridgeWriter:140)
[2023-05-25 12:01:57,242] TRACE [EventBridgeSink-Json|task-0] [@69c7029] EventBridgeWriter putEvents response: [PutEventsResultEntry(EventId=875b7f21-f098-8b55-ea7a-a4d235079bfb)] (software.amazon.event.kafkaconnector.EventBridgeWriter:142)
[2023-05-25 12:01:57,242] TRACE [EventBridgeSink-Json|task-0] [@69c7029] EventBridgeSinkTask putItems call completed: start=2023-05-25T12:01:56.889640Z completion=2023-05-25T12:01:57.242428Z durationMillis=352 attempts=1 maxRetries=0 (software.amazon.event.kafkaconnector.EventBridgeSinkTask:99)
Depending on your Kafka Connect environment, you can enable TRACE
-level logging via environment variables on Kafka
Connect using CONNECT_LOG4J_LOGGERS: "software.amazon.event.kafkaconnector=TRACE"
. Please consult your Kafka Connect
documentation how to configure and change log levels for a particular connector.
Warning
EnablingTRACE
-level logging can expose sensitive information due to logging record keys and values. It is strongly recommended to audit changes to the log level to guard against leaking sensitive data, such as personally identifiable information (PII).
See CONTRIBUTING for more information.
This project is licensed under the Apache-2.0 License.
A HUGE THANK YOU to @flo-mair and @maschnetwork for their initial contributions to this project.