KSQL is now GA and officially supported by Confluent Inc. Get started with KSQL today.
KSQL is the streaming SQL engine for Apache Kafka.
KSQL is an open source streaming SQL engine for Apache Kafka. It provides a simple and completely interactive SQL interface for stream processing on Kafka; no need to write code in a programming language such as Java or Python. KSQL is open-source (Apache 2.0 licensed), distributed, scalable, reliable, and real-time. It supports a wide range of powerful stream processing operations including aggregations, joins, windowing, sessionization, and much more.
Click here to watch a screencast of the KSQL demo on YouTube.
- Download KSQL, which is included in the Enterprise and Open Source editions of Confluent Platform.
- Follow the Quick Start.
For more information, see the KSQL Tutorials and Examples, which includes Docker-based variants.
See KSQL documentation.
Apache Kafka is a popular choice for powering data pipelines. KSQL makes it simple to transform data within the pipeline, readying messages to cleanly land in another system.
CREATE STREAM vip_actions AS
SELECT userid, page, action
FROM clickstream c
LEFT JOIN users u ON c.userid = u.user_id
WHERE u.level = 'Platinum';KSQL is a good fit for identifying patterns or anomalies on real-time data. By processing the stream as data arrives you can identify and properly surface out of the ordinary events with millisecond latency.
CREATE TABLE possible_fraud AS
SELECT card_number, count(*)
FROM authorization_attempts
WINDOW TUMBLING (SIZE 5 SECONDS)
GROUP BY card_number
HAVING count(*) > 3;Kafka's ability to provide scalable ordered messages with stream processing make it a common solution for log data monitoring and alerting. KSQL lends a familiar syntax for tracking, understanding, and managing alerts.
CREATE TABLE error_counts AS
SELECT error_code, count(*)
FROM monitoring_stream
WINDOW TUMBLING (SIZE 1 MINUTE)
WHERE type = 'ERROR'
GROUP BY error_code;- Confluent Platform 4.1 with Production-Ready KSQL Now Available
- Press Release: KSQL GA announced for early April 2018 -- until then you can download the latest KSQL Developer Preview release at https://github.com/confluentinc/ksql/releases.
- KSQL Feb 2018 release available -- bug fixes, performance and stability improvements
- Secure Stream Processing with Apache Kafka, Confluent Platform and KSQL -- stream processing examples using KSQL that show how companies are using Apache Kafka to grow their business and to analyze data in real time; how to secure KSQL and the entire Confluent Platform with encryption, authentication, and authorization
- KSQL in Action: Real-Time Streaming ETL from Oracle Transactional Data -- replacing batch extracts with event streams, and batch transformation with in-flight transformation; we take a stream of data from a transactional system built on Oracle, transform it, and stream the results into Elasticsearch
- KSQL Jan 2018 release available
-- improved data exploration with
PRINT TOPIC,SHOW TOPICS; improved analytics withTOPK,TOPKDISTINCTaggregations; operational improvements (command line tooling for metrics); distributed failure testing in place - KSQL Dec 2017 release available
-- support for Avro and Confluent Schema Registry; easy data
conversion between Avro, JSON, Delimited data; joining streams and tables across different data formats; operational
improvements (
DESCRIBE EXTENDED,EXPLAIN, and new metrics); optimizations (faster server startup and recovery times, better resource utilization) - KSQL Nov 2017 release available -- focus on community-raised issues and requests (369 pull requests, 50 closed issues)
You can get help, learn how to contribute to KSQL, and find the latest news by connecting with the Confluent community.
- Ask a question in the #ksql channel in our public Confluent Community Slack. Account registration is free and self-service.
- Join the Confluent Google group.
Contributions to the code, examples, documentation, etc. are very much appreciated.
- Report issues and bugs directly in this GitHub project.
- Learn how to work with the KSQL source code, including building and testing KSQL as well as contributing code changes to KSQL by reading our Development and Contribution guidelines.
The project is licensed under the Apache License, version 2.0.
Apache, Apache Kafka, Kafka, and associated open source project names are trademarks of the Apache Software Foundation.