Hi Svante,

Thank you, that's cleared things up. We'll look for something where locality is 
more built in

Ben

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Svante Karlsson [mailto:svante.karls...@csi.se]
> Sent: 12 November 2015 09:17
> To: users@kafka.apache.org
> Subject: Re: Locality question
> 
> If you have a kafka partition that is replicated to 3 nodes the partition 
> varies
> (in time) thus making the colocation pointless. You can only produce and
> consume to/from the leader.
> 
> /svante
> 
> 
> 
> 2015-11-12 9:00 GMT+01:00 Young, Ben <ben.yo...@sungard.com>:
> 
> > Hi,
> >
> > Any thoughts on this? Perhaps Kafka is not the best way to go for
> > this, but the docs do mention transaction/replication logs as a use
> > case, and I'd have thought locality would have been important for that?
> >
> > Thanks,
> > Ben
> >
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: Young, Ben [mailto:ben.yo...@sungard.com]
> > Sent: 06 November 2015 08:20
> > To: users@kafka.apache.org
> > Subject: Locality question
> >
> > Hi,
> >
> > I've had a look over the website and searched the archives, but I
> > can't find any obvious answers to this, so apologies if it's been asked
> before.
> >
> > I'm investigating potentially using Kafka for the transaction log for
> > our in-memory database technology. The idea is the Kafka partitioning
> > and replication will "automatically" give us sharding and hot-standby
> > capabilities in the db (obviously with a fair amount of work).
> >
> > The database can ingest hundreds of gigabytes of data extremely
> > quickly, easily enough to saturate any reasonable network connection,
> > so I've thought about co-locating the db on the same nodes of the
> > kafka cluster that actually store the data, to cut out the network
> > entirely from the loading process. We'd also probably want the db
> > topology to be defined first, and the kafka partitioning to follow. I
> > can see how to use the partitioner class to assign a specific
> > partition to a key, but I can't currently see how to assume partitions
> > to known machines upfront. Is this possible?
> >
> > Does the plan sound reasonable in general? I've also considered a log
> > shipping approach like Flume, but Kafka seems simplest all round, and
> > a really like the idea of just being able to set the log offset to
> > zero to reload on startup.
> >
> > Thanks,
> > Ben Young
> >
> >
> > Ben Young . Principal Software Engineer . Adaptiv .
> >
> >
> >

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