Your problem is the networking. In your Kafka config you’re setting
KAFKA_ADVERTISED_HOST_NAME: localhost
but this means that any client (including your python app) will connect to the broker, and then be told by the broker to use localhost
for any connections. Since localhost from your client machine (e.g. your python container) is not where the broker is, requests will fail.
You can read more about fixing problems with your Kafka listeners in detail here
- Kafka Listeners – Explained
- My Python/Java/Spring/Go/Whatever Client Won’t Connect to My Apache Kafka Cluster in Docker/AWS/My Brother’s Laptop. Please Help!
So to fix your issue, you can do one of two things:
-
Simply change your compose to use the internal hostname for Kafka (
KAFKA_ADVERTISED_HOST_NAME: kafka
). This means any clients within the docker network will be able to access it fine, but no external clients will be able to (e.g. from your host machine):version: '3' services: zookeeper: image: wurstmeister/zookeeper ports: - "2181:2181" kafka: image: wurstmeister/kafka ports: - "9092:9092" environment: KAFKA_ADVERTISED_HOST_NAME: kafka KAFKA_CREATE_TOPICS: "test:1:1" KAFKA_ZOOKEEPER_CONNECT: zookeeper:2181 volumes: - /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock parse-engine: build: . depends_on: - "kafka" command: python parse-engine.py ports: - "5000:5000"
Your clients would then access the broker at kafka:9092, so your python app would change to
consumer = KafkaConsumer('test', bootstrap_servers="kafka:9092")
-
Add a new listener to Kafka. This enables it to be accessed both internally and externally to the docker network. Port 29092 would be for access external to the docker network (e.g. from your host), and 9092 for internal access.
You would still need to change your python program to access Kafka at the correct address. In this case since it’s internal to the Docker network, you’d use:
consumer = KafkaConsumer('test', bootstrap_servers="kafka:9092")
Since I’m not familiar with the
wurstmeister
images, this docker-compose is based on the Confluent images which I do know:(editor has mangled my yaml, you can find it here)
--- version: '2' services: zookeeper: image: confluentinc/cp-zookeeper:latest environment: ZOOKEEPER_CLIENT_PORT: 2181 ZOOKEEPER_TICK_TIME: 2000 kafka: # "`-._,-'"`-._,-'"`-._,-'"`-._,-'"`-._,-'"`-._,-'"`-._,-'"`-._,-'"`-._,- # An important note about accessing Kafka from clients on other machines: # ----------------------------------------------------------------------- # # The config used here exposes port 29092 for _external_ connections to the broker # i.e. those from _outside_ the docker network. This could be from the host machine # running docker, or maybe further afield if you've got a more complicated setup. # If the latter is true, you will need to change the value 'localhost' in # KAFKA_ADVERTISED_LISTENERS to one that is resolvable to the docker host from those # remote clients # # For connections _internal_ to the docker network, such as from other services # and components, use kafka:9092. # # See https://rmoff.net/2018/08/02/kafka-listeners-explained/ for details # "`-._,-'"`-._,-'"`-._,-'"`-._,-'"`-._,-'"`-._,-'"`-._,-'"`-._,-'"`-._,- # image: confluentinc/cp-kafka:latest depends_on: - zookeeper ports: - 29092:29092 environment: KAFKA_BROKER_ID: 1 KAFKA_ZOOKEEPER_CONNECT: zookeeper:2181 KAFKA_ADVERTISED_LISTENERS: PLAINTEXT://kafka:9092,PLAINTEXT_HOST://localhost:29092 KAFKA_LISTENER_SECURITY_PROTOCOL_MAP: PLAINTEXT:PLAINTEXT,PLAINTEXT_HOST:PLAINTEXT KAFKA_INTER_BROKER_LISTENER_NAME: PLAINTEXT KAFKA_OFFSETS_TOPIC_REPLICATION_FACTOR: 1
Disclaimer: I work for Confluent