Guozhang,
   In my processor, I'm buffering up contents of the final messages in order to 
make them larger. This is to optimize throughput and avoid tiny messages from 
being injected downstream. So nothing is being pushed to the producer until my 
configured thresholds are met in the buffering mechanism. So as it stands, 
these messages are left dangling after the producer closes and, even worse, if 
periodic commits are happening behind the scenes, the data is lost on restart.
   What we need is a way to notify the processors that everything is "about" to 
close so that I can properly flush what I have in memory out to the producer. 
Otherwise, I'm stuck with always sending tiny messages into kafka--which I know 
for certain causes problems on down stream consumers (where they set a high 
fetch memory size and it causes hundreds of thousands of messages to be 
retrieved at a time…and thus bogs down the consumer). I think the 
"max.poll.messages" setting we discussed before would help here but if it's not 
available until 0.10, I'm kind of stuck.
    Another option might be to disable periodic commits and only commit when 
the processor requests it. This would mitigate some data loss and is better 
than nothing. There is still a chance that data in RecordQueue not yet sent to 
my processor would be committed but never processed in this case.
    Another thought I had was to reduce the max fetch size; however, some 
messages can be very large (i.e. data spikes periodically). In this case, the 
messages size would exceed my lower max fetch size causing the consumer to 
simply stop consuming. So I'm stuck. So either we need to roll in the 
max.poll.messages sooner than 0.10 or maybe a callback mechanism letting me 
know that the producer is about to close so I can clear my buffers. 
    Ideas?
Mike

    On Friday, April 8, 2016 8:24 PM, Guozhang Wang <wangg...@gmail.com> wrote:
 

 Hi Michael,

When you call KafkaStreams.close(), it will first trigger a commitAll()
function, which will 1) flush local state store if necessary; 2) flush
messages buffered in producer; 3) commit offsets on consumer. Then it will
close the producer / consumer clients and shutdown the tasks. So when you
see processor's "close" function triggered, any buffered messages in the
producer should already been flushed.

Did you see a different behavior than the above described?

Guozhang


On Fri, Apr 8, 2016 at 12:23 PM, Michael D. Coon <mdco...@yahoo.com.invalid>
wrote:

> All,
>    I'm seeing my processor's "close" method being called AFTER my
> downstream producer has been closed. I had assumed that on close I would be
> able to flush whatever I had been buffering up to send to kafka topic. In
> other words, we've seen significant performance differences in building
> flows with small messages and large messages in/out of kafka. So my
> processor buffers up messages to a threshold and flushes those as a
> composite message bundle to improve downstream processing. But if this
> close method is called AFTER the producer has already been closed, I would
> have no way to actually flush the final composite bundles to my topic on
> shutdown. Is there some way to get a call BEFORE producer shutdown occurs?
> Mike
>
>


-- 
-- Guozhang


  

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