Logo AppDev24 Login / Sign Up
Sign Up
Have Login?
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Login
New Account?
Recovery
Go to Login
By continuing you indicate that you agree to Terms of Service and Privacy Policy of the site.
Applications

Change Data Capture from MongoDB to Kafka

Updated on Jul 02, 2024

As data becomes increasingly critical to businesses, the need to capture and process changes in real-time has never been more important. In this article, we'll explore how to read changed data from a MongoDB Server and write it to a Kafka topic as event messages using Debezium's MongoDB CDC Source Connector.

Setting Up Environment

Before we dive into the code, make sure you have a Kafka ecosystem set up on your MacOS machine using Docker. You can refer to our previous article on setting up a Kafka container using Docker for more information.

Installing the Debezium Connector

To use the Debezium MongoDB CDC Source Connector, install it using Confluent Hub. Add the below entry inside the docker kafka-connect service under the command.

confluent-hub install --no-prompt debezium/debezium-connector-mongodb:2.4.2

Simulating MongoDB Source Database

Add a Docker container service to simulate a MongoDB source database in the docker-compose.yml file.

# MongoDB Source Database
  mongo_src:
    # Apple M1 Chip
    # platform: linux/amd64
    image: mongo:4.0
    container_name: mongo_src
    restart: always
    environment:
      MONGO_INITDB_ROOT_USERNAME: root
      MONGO_INITDB_ROOT_PASSWORD: Password1234
    ports:
      - 27019:27017
    volumes:     
      - mongo_datadir:/data/db
    networks:
      - kafka-network
    command: 
    - "--replSet"
    - "rs0"
    - "--bind_ip"
    - "localhost,mongo_src"

Please also remember to add mongo_datadir under the volumes block.

Initialize MongoDB Replica Set

docker-compose exec mongo_src /usr/bin/mongo --username root --authenticationDatabase admin --password Password1234 --eval "rs.initiate({_id: \"rs0\", members: [{_id: 0, host: \"mongo_src\"}]})"

docker-compose exec mongo_src /usr/bin/mongo --username root --authenticationDatabase admin --password Password1234 --eval "rs.status()"

Note: Using MongoDB Change Streams feature. the MongoDB server exposes the changes that occur in a collection as an event stream. The Debezium connector monitors the stream and then delivers the changes downstream.

Create Source Collection

Create a source collection with some documents in the MongoDB database for our demo:

use sales

db.consultants.insert({first_name: "John", last_name: "Doe", email: "john.doe@gmail.com", rate: 3000.00, status: "perm", created_at: new Date(), updated_at: new Date()})
db.consultants.insert({first_name: "Tom", last_name: "Hanks", email: "tom.hanks@gmail.com", rate: 3500.75, status: "contract", created_at: new Date(), updated_at: new Date()})
db.consultants.insert({first_name: "Jane", last_name: "Doe", email: "jane.doe@gmail.com", rate: 3500.75, status: "perm", created_at: new Date(), updated_at: new Date()})
db.consultants.insert({first_name: "Duke", last_name: "Johnson", email: "duke@hello.com", rate: 4500.25, status: "contract", created_at: new Date(), updated_at: new Date()})
db.consultants.insert({first_name: "Peter", last_name: "Parker", email: "peter@gmail.com", rate: 4500.25, status: "contract", created_at: new Date(), updated_at: new Date()})
db.consultants.insert({first_name: "Rick", last_name: "Nice", email: "rick@gmail.com", rate: 4900, status: "contract", created_at: new Date(), updated_at: new Date()})
db.consultants.insert({first_name: "Tommy", last_name: "Hill", email: "tommy@gmail.com", rate: 4100, status: "perm", created_at: new Date(), updated_at: new Date()})
db.consultants.insert({first_name: "Jill", last_name: "Stone", email: "jill@gmail.com", rate: 4250.50, status: "contract", created_at: new Date(), updated_at: new Date()})
db.consultants.insert({first_name: "Honey", last_name: "Bee", email: "honey@gmail.com", rate: 3200, status: "perm", created_at: new Date(), updated_at: new Date()})
db.consultants.insert({first_name: "Bell", last_name: "Doe", email: "bell@gmail.com", rate: 3400, status: "contract", created_at: new Date(), updated_at: new Date()})

Kafka Connect Configuration

Create a configuration file for the Debezium MongoDB CDC Source Connector:

{
    "name": "src-mongo-debezium-cdc-consultants",
    "connector.class": "io.debezium.connector.mongodb.MongoDbConnector",
    "mongodb.connection.string": "mongodb://host.docker.internal:27019/?replicaSet=rs0",
    "mongodb.connection.mode": "replica_set",
    "mongodb.user": "root",
    "mongodb.password": "Password1234",
    "database.include.list": "sales",
    "collection.include.list": "sales.consultants",
    "topic.prefix": "mongo_src",
    "capture.mode": "change_streams_update_full",
    "tasks.max": "1"
}

Once the Kafka Connector is up & running, let us now look into the Kafka Topic.

Capture Changed Data from Database

Modify some documents in the MongoDB database to observe the CDC from the database to a Kafka topic.

db.consultants.insert({first_name: "Saurav", last_name: "Mitra", email: "saurav.karate@gmail.com", rate: 5000.00, status: "perm", created_at: new Date(), updated_at: new Date()})
db.consultants.updateOne({email: "saurav.karate@gmail.com"}, {$set: {rate: 6500.00}, $currentDate: { updated_at: true }})
db.consultants.insert({first_name: "Tim", last_name: "Smith", email: "tim.smith@freelance.com", rate: 3500.70, status: "contract", created_at: new Date(), updated_at: new Date()})
db.consultants.deleteOne({ email: "tim.smith@freelance.com" })
db.consultants.insertMany([
    {first_name: "Shane", last_name: "Wilson", email: "shane.wilson@freelance.com", rate: 5000.00, status: "perm", created_at: new Date(), updated_at: new Date()},
    {first_name: "John", last_name: "Sinha", email: "john.sinha@freelance.com", rate: 9000.00, status: "contract", created_at: new Date(), updated_at: new Date()}
])

We can now see, that the database events have been streamed in near real-time to the Kafka Topic.

tombstones.on.delete: true is the default setting.
After a source record is deleted, a delete operation is represented by a delete event and a subsequent tombstone event in Kafka Topic. The tombstone event allows Kafka to completely delete all events that pertain to the key of the deleted row in case log compaction is enabled for the topic.

Alternative MongoDB Connector

To use the MongoDB CDC Source Connector, install it using Confluent Hub. Add the below entry inside the docker kafka-connect service under the command.

confluent-hub install --no-prompt mongodb/kafka-connect-mongodb:1.13.0

Create a configuration file for the MongoDB CDC Source Connector:

{
    "name": "src-mongo-mongodb-cdc-consultants",
    "connector.class": "com.mongodb.kafka.connect.MongoSourceConnector",
    "connection.uri": "mongodb://root:Password1234@host.docker.internal:27019/?replicaSet=rs0",
    "database": "sales",
    "collection": "consultants",
    "topic.prefix": "mongodb_src",
    "startup.mode": "copy_existing",
    "publish.full.document.only": "true",
    "publish.full.document.only.tombstone.on.delete": "true",
    "output.json.formatter": "com.mongodb.kafka.connect.source.json.formatter.SimplifiedJson",
    "output.format.key": "json",
    "output.format.value": "schema",
    "key.converter.schemas.enable": "false",
    "value.converter.schemas.enable": "true",
    "output.schema.infer.value": "true",
    "key.converter": "org.apache.kafka.connect.storage.StringConverter",
    "value.converter": "io.confluent.connect.avro.AvroConverter",
    "value.converter.schema.registry.url": "http://schema-registry:8081",
    "tasks.max": "1"
}

In this article, we've demonstrated how to capture change data from a MongoDB database and write it to a Kafka topic using Debezium's MongoDB CDC Source Connector. With this setup, you can now process changes in real-time and integrate them with your existing data pipelines.

PrimeChess

PrimeChess.org

PrimeChess.org makes elite chess training accessible and affordable for everyone. For the past 6 years, we have offered free chess camps for kids in Singapore and India, and during that time, we also observed many average-rated coaches charging far too much for their services.

To change that, we assembled a team of top-rated coaches including International Masters (IM) or coaches with multiple IM or GM norms, to provide online classes starting from $50 per month (8 classes each month + 4 tournaments)

This affordability is only possible if we get more students. This is why it will be very helpful if you could please pass-on this message to others.

Exclucively For Indian Residents: 
Basic - ₹1500
Intermediate- ₹2000
Advanced - ₹2500

Top 10 Articles