Changefeed Examples

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This page provides step-by-step examples for using Core and Enterprise changefeeds. Creating Enterprise changefeeds is available on CockroachDB Standard, Advanced, Basic, and with an Enterprise license on CockroachDB Self-Hosted clusters. Core changefeeds are available in all products.

For a summary of Core and Enterprise changefeed features, refer to the Change Data Capture Overview page.

Enterprise changefeeds can connect to the following sinks:

Refer to the Changefeed Sinks page for more detail on forming sink URIs, available sink query parameters, and specifics on configuration.

Cockroach Labs recommends monitoring your changefeeds to track retryable errors and protected timestamp usage. Refer to the Monitor and Debug Changefeeds page for more information.

Use the following filters to show usage examples for either Enterprise or Core changefeeds:

Before you run the examples, verify that you have the CHANGEFEED privilege in order to create and manage changefeed jobs. Refer to Required privileges for more details.

Tip:

You can create an external connection to represent a changefeed sink URI. This allows you to specify the external connection's name in statements rather than the provider-specific URI. For detail on using external connections, see the CREATE EXTERNAL CONNECTION page.

Create a changefeed connected to Kafka

Note:

CREATE CHANGEFEED is an Enterprise-only feature. For the Core version, see the CHANGEFEED FOR example.

In this example, you'll set up a changefeed for a single-node cluster that is connected to a Kafka sink. The changefeed will watch two tables.

  1. If you do not already have one, request a trial Enterprise license.

  2. Use the cockroach start-single-node command to start a single-node cluster:

    icon/buttons/copy
    cockroach start-single-node --insecure --listen-addr=localhost
    
  3. Download and extract the Confluent Open Source platform (which includes Kafka).

  4. In a new terminal window, go to the extracted confluent-<version> directory and start Confluent:

    icon/buttons/copy
    ./bin/confluent local services start
    

    Only zookeeper and kafka are needed. To troubleshoot Confluent, see their docs and the Quick Start Guide.

  5. Create two Kafka topics:

    icon/buttons/copy
    ./bin/kafka-topics \
    --create \
    --zookeeper localhost:2181 \
    --replication-factor 1 \
    --partitions 1 \
    --topic office_dogs
    
    icon/buttons/copy
    ./bin/kafka-topics \
    --create \
    --zookeeper localhost:2181 \
    --replication-factor 1 \
    --partitions 1 \
    --topic employees
    
    Note:

    You are expected to create any Kafka topics with the necessary number of replications and partitions. Topics can be created manually or Kafka brokers can be configured to automatically create topics with a default partition count and replication factor.

  6. As the root user, open the built-in SQL client:

    icon/buttons/copy
    $ cockroach sql --insecure
    
  7. Set your organization name and Enterprise license key that you received via email:

    icon/buttons/copy
    > SET CLUSTER SETTING cluster.organization = '<organization name>';
    
    icon/buttons/copy
    > SET CLUSTER SETTING enterprise.license = '<secret>';
    
  8. Enable the kv.rangefeed.enabled cluster setting:

    icon/buttons/copy
    > SET CLUSTER SETTING kv.rangefeed.enabled = true;
    
    Note:

    If you are working on a CockroachDB Standard or Basic cluster, the kv.rangefeed.enabled cluster setting is enabled by default.

  9. Create a database called cdc_demo:

    icon/buttons/copy
    > CREATE DATABASE cdc_demo;
    
  10. Set the database as the default:

    icon/buttons/copy
    > SET DATABASE = cdc_demo;
    
  11. Create a table and add data:

    icon/buttons/copy
    > CREATE TABLE office_dogs (
         id INT PRIMARY KEY,
         name STRING);
    
    icon/buttons/copy
    > INSERT INTO office_dogs VALUES
       (1, 'Petee'),
       (2, 'Carl');
    
    icon/buttons/copy
    > UPDATE office_dogs SET name = 'Petee H' WHERE id = 1;
    
  12. Create another table and add data:

    icon/buttons/copy
    > CREATE TABLE employees (
         dog_id INT REFERENCES office_dogs (id),
         employee_name STRING);
    
    icon/buttons/copy
    > INSERT INTO employees VALUES
       (1, 'Lauren'),
       (2, 'Spencer');
    
  13. Start the changefeed:

    icon/buttons/copy
    CREATE CHANGEFEED FOR TABLE office_dogs, employees INTO 'kafka://localhost:9092';
    
    
            job_id
    +--------------------+
      360645287206223873
    (1 row)
    
    NOTICE: changefeed will emit to topic office_dogs
    NOTICE: changefeed will emit to topic employees
    

    This will start up the changefeed in the background and return the job_id. The changefeed writes to Kafka.

  14. In a new terminal, move into the extracted confluent-<version> directory and start watching the Kafka topics:

    icon/buttons/copy
    ./bin/kafka-console-consumer \
    --bootstrap-server=localhost:9092 \
    --from-beginning \
    --include 'office_dogs|employees'
    
    {"after": {"id": 1, "name": "Petee H"}}
    {"after": {"id": 2, "name": "Carl"}}
    {"after": {"id": 1, "name": "Lauren", "rowid": 528514320239329281}}
    {"after": {"id": 2, "name": "Spencer", "rowid": 528514320239362049}}
    

    The initial scan displays the state of the tables as of when the changefeed started (therefore, the initial value of "Petee" is omitted).

    Note:

    This example only prints the value. To print both the key and value of each message in the changefeed (e.g., to observe what happens with DELETEs), use the --property print.key=true flag.

  15. Back in the SQL client, insert more data:

    icon/buttons/copy
    INSERT INTO office_dogs VALUES (3, 'Ernie');
    
  16. Back in the terminal where you're watching the Kafka topics, the following output has appeared:

    {"after": {"id": 3, "name": "Ernie"}}
    
  17. When you are done, exit the SQL shell (\q).

  18. To stop cockroach:

    Get the process ID of the node:

    icon/buttons/copy
    ps -ef | grep cockroach | grep -v grep
    
      501 21766     1   0  6:21PM ttys001    0:00.89 cockroach start-single-node --insecure --listen-addr=localhost
    

    Gracefully shut down the node, specifying its process ID:

    icon/buttons/copy
    kill -TERM 21766
    
    initiating graceful shutdown of server
    server drained and shutdown completed
    
  19. To stop Kafka, move into the extracted confluent-<version> directory and stop Confluent:

    icon/buttons/copy
    ./bin/confluent local services stop
    

Create a changefeed connected to Kafka using Avro

Note:

CREATE CHANGEFEED is an Enterprise-only feature. For the Core version, see the CHANGEFEED FOR example.

In this example, you'll set up a changefeed for a single-node cluster that is connected to a Kafka sink and emits Avro records. The changefeed will watch two tables.

  1. If you do not already have one, request a trial Enterprise license.

  2. Use the cockroach start-single-node command to start a single-node cluster:

    icon/buttons/copy
    cockroach start-single-node --insecure --listen-addr=localhost
    
  3. Download and extract the Confluent Open Source platform (which includes Kafka).

  4. Move into the extracted confluent-<version> directory and start Confluent:

    icon/buttons/copy
    ./bin/confluent local services start
    

    Only zookeeper, kafka, and schema-registry are needed. To troubleshoot Confluent, see their docs and the Quick Start Guide.

  5. Create two Kafka topics:

    icon/buttons/copy
    ./bin/kafka-topics \
    --create \
    --zookeeper localhost:2181 \
    --replication-factor 1 \
    --partitions 1 \
    --topic office_dogs
    
    icon/buttons/copy
    ./bin/kafka-topics \
    --create \
    --zookeeper localhost:2181 \
    --replication-factor 1 \
    --partitions 1 \
    --topic employees
    
    Note:

    You are expected to create any Kafka topics with the necessary number of replications and partitions. Topics can be created manually or Kafka brokers can be configured to automatically create topics with a default partition count and replication factor.

  6. As the root user, open the built-in SQL client:

    icon/buttons/copy
    $ cockroach sql --insecure
    
  7. Set your organization name and Enterprise license key that you received via email:

    icon/buttons/copy
    > SET CLUSTER SETTING cluster.organization = '<organization name>';
    
    icon/buttons/copy
    > SET CLUSTER SETTING enterprise.license = '<secret>';
    
  8. Enable the kv.rangefeed.enabled cluster setting:

    icon/buttons/copy
    > SET CLUSTER SETTING kv.rangefeed.enabled = true;
    
    Note:

    If you are working on a CockroachDB Standard or Basic cluster, the kv.rangefeed.enabled cluster setting is enabled by default.

  9. Create a database called cdc_demo:

    icon/buttons/copy
    > CREATE DATABASE cdc_demo;
    
  10. Set the database as the default:

    icon/buttons/copy
    > SET DATABASE = cdc_demo;
    
  11. Create a table and add data:

    icon/buttons/copy
    > CREATE TABLE office_dogs (
         id INT PRIMARY KEY,
         name STRING);
    
    icon/buttons/copy
    > INSERT INTO office_dogs VALUES
       (1, 'Petee'),
       (2, 'Carl');
    
    icon/buttons/copy
    > UPDATE office_dogs SET name = 'Petee H' WHERE id = 1;
    
  12. Create another table and add data:

    icon/buttons/copy
    > CREATE TABLE employees (
         dog_id INT REFERENCES office_dogs (id),
         employee_name STRING);
    
    icon/buttons/copy
    > INSERT INTO employees VALUES
       (1, 'Lauren'),
       (2, 'Spencer');
    
  13. Start the changefeed:

    icon/buttons/copy
    CREATE CHANGEFEED FOR TABLE office_dogs, employees INTO 'kafka://localhost:9092' WITH format = avro, confluent_schema_registry = 'http://localhost:8081';
    

    To connect to Confluent Cloud, use the following URL structure: 'https://{API_KEY_ID}:{API_SECRET_URL_ENCODED}@{CONFLUENT_REGISTRY_URL}:443'. See the Stream a Changefeed to a Confluent Cloud Kafka Cluster tutorial for further detail.

            job_id
    +--------------------+
      360645287206223873
    (1 row)
    
    NOTICE: changefeed will emit to topic office_dogs
    NOTICE: changefeed will emit to topic employees
    

    This will start up the changefeed in the background and return the job_id. The changefeed writes to Kafka.

  14. In a new terminal, move into the extracted confluent-<version> directory and start watching the Kafka topics:

    icon/buttons/copy
    ./bin/kafka-avro-console-consumer \
    --bootstrap-server=localhost:9092 \
    --from-beginning \
    --include 'office_dogs|employees'
    
    {"after":{"office_dogs":{"id":{"long":1},"name":{"string":"Petee H"}}}}
    {"after":{"office_dogs":{"id":{"long":2},"name":{"string":"Carl"}}}}
    {"after":{"employees":{"dog_id":{"long":1},"employee_name":{"string":"Lauren"},"rowid":{"long":528537452042682369}}}}
    {"after":{"employees":{"dog_id":{"long":2},"employee_name":{"string":"Spencer"},"rowid":{"long":528537452042747905}}}}
    

    The initial scan displays the state of the table as of when the changefeed started (therefore, the initial value of "Petee" is omitted).

    Note:

    This example only prints the value. To print both the key and value of each message in the changefeed (e.g., to observe what happens with DELETEs), use the --property print.key=true flag.

  15. Back in the SQL client, insert more data:

    icon/buttons/copy
    INSERT INTO office_dogs VALUES (3, 'Ernie');
    
  16. Back in the terminal where you're watching the Kafka topics, the following output has appeared:

    {"after":{"office_dogs":{"id":{"long":3},"name":{"string":"Ernie"}}}}
    
  17. When you are done, exit the SQL shell (\q).

  18. To stop cockroach:

    Get the process ID of the node:

    icon/buttons/copy
    ps -ef | grep cockroach | grep -v grep
    
      501 21766     1   0  6:21PM ttys001    0:00.89 cockroach start-single-node --insecure --listen-addr=localhost
    

    Gracefully shut down the node, specifying its process ID:

    icon/buttons/copy
    kill -TERM 21766
    
    initiating graceful shutdown of server
    server drained and shutdown completed
    
  19. To stop Kafka, move into the extracted confluent-<version> directory and stop Confluent:

    icon/buttons/copy
    ./bin/confluent local services stop
    

Create a changefeed connected to a Confluent Cloud sink

New in v23.2: In this example, you'll set up a changefeed for a single-node cluster that is connected to a Confluent Cloud managed Kafka cluster. The changefeed will watch a table and send messages to the sink.

  1. If you do not already have one, request a trial Enterprise license.

  2. Use the cockroach start-single-node command to start a single-node cluster:

    icon/buttons/copy
    cockroach start-single-node --insecure --listen-addr=localhost
    
  3. In this example, you'll run CockroachDB's Movr application workload to set up some data for your changefeed.

    In a new terminal, first create the schema for the workload:

    icon/buttons/copy

     cockroach workload init movr "postgresql://root@127.0.0.1:26257?sslmode=disable"
    

    Then run the workload:

    icon/buttons/copy

     cockroach workload run movr --duration=1m "postgresql://root@127.0.0.1:26257?sslmode=disable"
    
  4. As the root user, open the built-in SQL client:

    icon/buttons/copy
    $ cockroach sql --insecure
    
  5. Set your organization name and Enterprise license key that you received via email:

    icon/buttons/copy
    > SET CLUSTER SETTING cluster.organization = '<organization name>';
    
    icon/buttons/copy
    > SET CLUSTER SETTING enterprise.license = '<secret>';
    
  6. Enable the kv.rangefeed.enabled cluster setting:

    icon/buttons/copy
    > SET CLUSTER SETTING kv.rangefeed.enabled = true;
    
    Note:

    If you are working on a CockroachDB Standard or Basic cluster, the kv.rangefeed.enabled cluster setting is enabled by default.

  7. To prepare the Confluent Cloud Kafka sink, sign up on the Confluent Cloud trial page.

  8. On the Create cluster page, select the necessary cluster type. The Basic cluster type is sufficient to run this example. Select the configuration and regions. After you have confirmed payment and set a cluster name, Launch the cluster.

  9. From the Overview page, click on API Keys in the navigation menu. Click Create key and select the scope for this API key. Global access is sufficient for this example. Granular access is more suitable for production. Copy or download the key and secret.

  10. Create a topic in Confluent Cloud. Under Topics select Add topic. Add a topic name and define the number of partitions and then Create. CockroachDB defaults to using the table name as the topic name. If you would like to send messages to an alternate topic, you can specify the topic_name parameter.

    Note:

    You can enable auto topic creation for Confluent Cloud Dedicated clusters under Cluster Settings in the console.

  11. Construct the URI to connect your changefeed to the Confluent Cloud cluster. You will need:

    • The prefix scheme confluent-cloud://.
    • The address and port of the bootstrap server. Click on Cluster settings in your Confluent Cloud console. Under Endpoints, you will find the Bootstrap server. It will be something like: pkc-lzvrd.us-west4.gcp.confluent.cloud:9092.
    • Ensure that you follow the cluster address with ? before the remaining parameters, and also connect the following parameters with &.
    • Your API key and secret from the previous step passed with the api_key and api_secret parameters. You must URL encode the secret before adding to the connection string.
    • (Optional) Any further parameters. Refer to Query parameters.

      'confluent-cloud://pkc-lzvrd.us-west4.gcp.confluent.cloud:9092?api_key={API key}&api_secret={url-encoded API secret}'
      
  12. Back in the SQL shell, create a changefeed:

    icon/buttons/copy
    CREATE CHANGEFEED FOR TABLE movr.users, movr.vehicles INTO 'confluent-cloud://pkc-lzvrd.us-west4.gcp.confluent.cloud:9092?api_key={API key}&api_secret={url-encoded API secret}&topic_name=users_and_vehicles' WITH resolved;
    
            job_id
    ----------------------
    913248812656525313
    (1 row)
    
    NOTICE: changefeed will emit to topic users_and_vehicles
    

Create a changefeed connected to a Google Cloud Pub/Sub sink

Note:

This feature is in preview. This feature is subject to change. To share feedback and/or issues, contact Support.

In this example, you'll set up a changefeed for a single-node cluster that is connected to a Google Cloud Pub/Sub sink. The changefeed will watch a table and send messages to the sink.

You'll need access to a Google Cloud Project to set up a Pub/Sub sink. In this example, the Google Cloud CLI (gcloud) is used, but you can also complete each of these steps within your Google Cloud Console.

  1. If you do not already have one, request a trial Enterprise license.

  2. Use the cockroach start-single-node command to start a single-node cluster:

    icon/buttons/copy
    cockroach start-single-node --insecure --listen-addr=localhost
    
  3. In this example, you'll run CockroachDB's Movr application workload to set up some data for your changefeed.

    In a new terminal, first create the schema for the workload:

    icon/buttons/copy

     cockroach workload init movr "postgresql://root@127.0.0.1:26257?sslmode=disable"
    

    Then run the workload:

    icon/buttons/copy

     cockroach workload run movr --duration=1m "postgresql://root@127.0.0.1:26257?sslmode=disable"
    
  4. As the root user, open the built-in SQL client:

    icon/buttons/copy
    $ cockroach sql --insecure
    
  5. Set your organization name and Enterprise license key that you received via email:

    icon/buttons/copy
    > SET CLUSTER SETTING cluster.organization = '<organization name>';
    
    icon/buttons/copy
    > SET CLUSTER SETTING enterprise.license = '<secret>';
    
  6. Enable the kv.rangefeed.enabled cluster setting:

    icon/buttons/copy
    > SET CLUSTER SETTING kv.rangefeed.enabled = true;
    
    Note:

    If you are working on a CockroachDB Standard or Basic cluster, the kv.rangefeed.enabled cluster setting is enabled by default.

  7. Next, you'll prepare your Pub/Sub sink.

    In a new terminal window, create a Service Account attached to your Google Project:

    icon/buttons/copy
    gcloud iam service-accounts create cdc-demo --project cockroach-project
    

    In this example, cdc-demo will represent the name of the service account, and cockroach-project is the name of the Google Project.

    To ensure that your Service Account has the correct permissions to publish to the sink, use the following command to give the Service Account the predefined Pub/Sub Editor role:

    icon/buttons/copy
    gcloud projects add-iam-policy-binding cockroach-project --member='serviceAccount:cdc-demo@cockroach-project.iam.gserviceaccount.com' --role='roles/pubsub.editor'
    
  8. Create the Pub/Sub topic to which your changefeed will emit messages:

    icon/buttons/copy
    gcloud pubsub topics create movr-users --project cockroach-project
    

    Run the following command to create a subscription within the movr-users topic:

    icon/buttons/copy
    gcloud pubsub subscriptions create movr-users-sub --topic=movr-users --topic-project=cockroach-project
    
  9. With the topic and subscription set up, you can now download your Service Account credentials. Use the gcloud iam service-accounts keys create command to specify where to download the JSON credential file (credentials.json):

    icon/buttons/copy
    gcloud iam service-accounts keys create credentials.json --iam-account=cdc-demo@cockroach-project.iam.gserviceaccount.com
    

    Next, base64 encode the file that contains the entire JSON credential object using the command specific to your platform.

    If you're working on macOS:

    icon/buttons/copy
    cat credentials.json | base64
    

    If you're working on Linux, run the following to ensure that lines are not wrapped in the output:

    icon/buttons/copy
    cat credentials.json | base64 -w 0
    

    Copy the output so that you can add it to your CREATE CHANGEFEED statement in the next step. When you create your changefeed, it is necessary that the credentials are base64 encoded before passing it in the URI.

  10. Back in the SQL shell, create a changefeed that will emit messages to your Pub/Sub topic. Ensure that you have base64 encoded the entire credentials JSON object for your Service Account and then run:

    icon/buttons/copy
    CREATE CHANGEFEED FOR TABLE users INTO 'gcpubsub://cockroach-project?region=us-east1&topic_name=movr-users&AUTH=specified&CREDENTIALS={base64-encoded credentials}';
    

    You can include the region parameter for your topic, or use the WITH unordered option for multi-region Pub/Sub. See the Changefeed Sinks page for more detail.

    The output will confirm the topic where the changefeed will emit messages to.

           job_id
    ----------------------
    756641304964792321
    (1 row)
    
    NOTICE: changefeed will emit to topic movr-users
    

    To view all the messages delivered to your topic, you can use:

    • The Google Cloud Console. From the Pub/Sub menu, select Subscriptions in the left-hand navigation and then select the subscription ID from your list of subscriptions. On the subscription's overview, click Messages, and then Pull to view messages.
    • The gcloud CLI. From your terminal, run the following command:

      icon/buttons/copy
      gcloud pubsub subscriptions pull movr-users-sub --auto-ack --limit=10
      

      This command will only pull these messages once per subscription. For example, if you ran this command again you would receive 10 different messages in your output. To receive more than one message at a time, pass the --limit flag. For more details, refer to the gcloud pubsub subscriptions pull documentation.

      ┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┬───────────────────┬──────────────┬────────────┬──────────────────┬────────────┐
      │                                                                                                                                     DATA                                                                                                                                    │     MESSAGE_ID    │ ORDERING_KEY │ ATTRIBUTES │ DELIVERY_ATTEMPT │ ACK_STATUS │
      ├─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┼───────────────────┼──────────────┼────────────┼──────────────────┼────────────┤
      │ {"Key":["amsterdam", "09ee2856-5856-40c4-85d3-7d65bed978f0"],"Value":{"after": {"address": "84579 Peter Divide Apt. 47", "city": "amsterdam", "credit_card": "0100007510", "id": "09ee2856-5856-40c4-85d3-7d65bed978f0", "name": "Timothy Jackson"}},"Topic":"movr-users"}       │ 11249015757941393 │              │            │                  │ SUCCESS    │
      │ {"Key":["new york", "8803ab9e-5001-4994-a2e6-68d587f95f1d"],"Value":{"after": {"address": "37546 Andrew Roads Apt. 68", "city": "new york", "credit_card": "4731676650", "id": "8803ab9e-5001-4994-a2e6-68d587f95f1d", "name": "Susan Harrington"}},"Topic":"movr-users"}        │ 11249015757941394 │              │            │                  │ SUCCESS    │
      │ {"Key":["seattle", "32e27201-ca0d-4a0c-ada2-fbf47f6a4711"],"Value":{"after": {"address": "86725 Stephen Gardens", "city": "seattle", "credit_card": "3639690115", "id": "32e27201-ca0d-4a0c-ada2-fbf47f6a4711", "name": "Brad Hill"}},"Topic":"movr-users"}                      │ 11249015757941395 │              │            │                  │ SUCCESS    │
      │ {"Key":["san francisco", "27b03637-ef9f-49a0-9b58-b16d7a9e34f4"],"Value":{"after": {"address": "85467 Tiffany Field", "city": "san francisco", "credit_card": "0016125921", "id": "27b03637-ef9f-49a0-9b58-b16d7a9e34f4", "name": "Mark Garcia"}},"Topic":"movr-users"}          │ 11249015757941396 │              │            │                  │ SUCCESS    │
      │ {"Key":["rome", "982e1863-88d4-49cb-adee-0a35baae7e0b"],"Value":{"after": {"address": "54918 Sutton Isle Suite 74", "city": "rome", "credit_card": "6015706174", "id": "982e1863-88d4-49cb-adee-0a35baae7e0b", "name": "Kimberly Nichols"}},"Topic":"movr-users"}                │ 11249015757941397 │              │            │                  │ SUCCESS    │
      │ {"Key":["washington dc", "7b298994-7b12-414c-90ef-353c7105f012"],"Value":{"after": {"address": "45205 Romero Ford Apt. 86", "city": "washington dc", "credit_card": "3519400314", "id": "7b298994-7b12-414c-90ef-353c7105f012", "name": "Taylor Bullock"}},"Topic":"movr-users"} │ 11249015757941398 │              │            │                  │ SUCCESS    │
      │ {"Key":["boston", "4f012f57-577b-4853-b5ab-0d79d0df1369"],"Value":{"after": {"address": "15765 Vang Ramp", "city": "boston", "credit_card": "6747715133", "id": "4f012f57-577b-4853-b5ab-0d79d0df1369", "name": "Ryan Garcia"}},"Topic":"movr-users"}                            │ 11249015757941399 │              │            │                  │ SUCCESS    │
      │ {"Key":["seattle", "9ba85917-5545-4674-8ab2-497fa47ac00f"],"Value":{"after": {"address": "24354 Whitney Lodge", "city": "seattle", "credit_card": "8642661685", "id": "9ba85917-5545-4674-8ab2-497fa47ac00f", "name": "Donald Walsh"}},"Topic":"movr-users"}                     │ 11249015757941400 │              │            │                  │ SUCCESS    │
      │ {"Key":["seattle", "98312fb3-230e-412d-9b22-074ec97329ff"],"Value":{"after": {"address": "72777 Carol Shoal", "city": "seattle", "credit_card": "7789799678", "id": "98312fb3-230e-412d-9b22-074ec97329ff", "name": "Christopher Davis"}},"Topic":"movr-users"}                  │ 11249015757941401 │              │            │                  │ SUCCESS    │
      └─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┴───────────────────┴──────────────┴────────────┴──────────────────┴────────────┘
      

Create a changefeed connected to a cloud storage sink

Note:

CREATE CHANGEFEED is an Enterprise-only feature. For the Core version, see the CHANGEFEED FOR example.

In this example, you'll set up a changefeed for a single-node cluster that is connected to an AWS S3 sink. The changefeed watches two tables. Note that you can set up changefeeds for any of these cloud storage providers.

  1. If you do not already have one, request a trial Enterprise license.

  2. Use the cockroach start-single-node command to start a single-node cluster:

    icon/buttons/copy
    $ cockroach start-single-node --insecure --listen-addr=localhost
    
  3. As the root user, open the built-in SQL client:

    icon/buttons/copy
    $ cockroach sql --insecure
    
  4. Set your organization name and Enterprise license key that you received via email:

    icon/buttons/copy
    > SET CLUSTER SETTING cluster.organization = '<organization name>';
    
    icon/buttons/copy
    > SET CLUSTER SETTING enterprise.license = '<secret>';
    
  5. Enable the kv.rangefeed.enabled cluster setting:

    icon/buttons/copy
    > SET CLUSTER SETTING kv.rangefeed.enabled = true;
    
    Note:

    If you are working on a CockroachDB Standard or Basic cluster, the kv.rangefeed.enabled cluster setting is enabled by default.

  6. Create a database called cdc_demo:

    icon/buttons/copy
    > CREATE DATABASE cdc_demo;
    
  7. Set the database as the default:

    icon/buttons/copy
    > SET DATABASE = cdc_demo;
    
  8. Create a table and add data:

    icon/buttons/copy
    > CREATE TABLE office_dogs (
         id INT PRIMARY KEY,
         name STRING);
    
    icon/buttons/copy
    > INSERT INTO office_dogs VALUES
       (1, 'Petee'),
       (2, 'Carl');
    
    icon/buttons/copy
    > UPDATE office_dogs SET name = 'Petee H' WHERE id = 1;
    
  9. Create another table and add data:

    icon/buttons/copy
    > CREATE TABLE employees (
         dog_id INT REFERENCES office_dogs (id),
         employee_name STRING);
    
    icon/buttons/copy
    > INSERT INTO employees VALUES
       (1, 'Lauren'),
       (2, 'Spencer');
    
  10. Start the changefeed:

    icon/buttons/copy
    > CREATE CHANGEFEED FOR TABLE office_dogs, employees INTO 's3://example-bucket-name/test?AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=enter_key-here&AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=enter_key_here' with updated, resolved='10s';
    
            job_id
    +--------------------+
      360645287206223873
    (1 row)
    

    This will start up the changefeed in the background and return the job_id. The changefeed writes to AWS.

  11. Monitor your changefeed on the DB Console. For more information, see Changefeeds Dashboard.

  12. When you are done, exit the SQL shell (\q).

  13. To stop cockroach:

    Get the process ID of the node:

    icon/buttons/copy
    ps -ef | grep cockroach | grep -v grep
    
      501 21766     1   0  6:21PM ttys001    0:00.89 cockroach start-single-node --insecure --listen-addr=localhost
    

    Gracefully shut down the node, specifying its process ID:

    icon/buttons/copy
    kill -TERM 21766
    
    initiating graceful shutdown of server
    server drained and shutdown completed
    

Create a changefeed connected to a webhook sink

Note:

CREATE CHANGEFEED is an Enterprise-only feature. For the Core version, see the CHANGEFEED FOR example.

In this example, you'll set up a changefeed for a single-node cluster that is connected to a local HTTP server via a webhook. For this example, you'll use an example HTTP server to test out the webhook sink.

  1. If you do not already have one, request a trial Enterprise license.

  2. Use the cockroach start-single-node command to start a single-node cluster:

    icon/buttons/copy
    $ cockroach start-single-node --insecure --listen-addr=localhost
    
  3. In this example, you'll run CockroachDB's Movr application workload to set up some data for your changefeed.

    First create the schema for the workload:

    icon/buttons/copy

     cockroach workload init movr "postgresql://root@127.0.0.1:26257?sslmode=disable"
    

    Then run the workload:

    icon/buttons/copy

     cockroach workload run movr --duration=1m "postgresql://root@127.0.0.1:26257?sslmode=disable"
    
  4. As the root user, open the built-in SQL client:

    icon/buttons/copy
    $ cockroach sql --insecure
    
  5. Set your organization name and Enterprise license key that you received via email:

    icon/buttons/copy
    > SET CLUSTER SETTING cluster.organization = '<organization name>';
    
    icon/buttons/copy
    > SET CLUSTER SETTING enterprise.license = '<secret>';
    
  6. Enable the kv.rangefeed.enabled cluster setting:

    icon/buttons/copy
    > SET CLUSTER SETTING kv.rangefeed.enabled = true;
    
    Note:

    If you are working on a CockroachDB Standard or Basic cluster, the kv.rangefeed.enabled cluster setting is enabled by default.

  7. In a separate terminal window, set up your HTTP server. Clone the test repository:

    icon/buttons/copy
    git clone https://github.com/cockroachlabs/cdc-webhook-sink-test-server.git
    
    icon/buttons/copy
    cd cdc-webhook-sink-test-server/go-https-server
    
  8. Next make the script executable and then run the server (passing a specific port if preferred, otherwise it will default to :3000):

    icon/buttons/copy
    chmod +x ./server.sh
    
    icon/buttons/copy
    ./server.sh <port>
    
  9. Back in your SQL shell, run the following statement to create a changefeed that emits to your webhook sink:

    icon/buttons/copy
    CREATE CHANGEFEED FOR TABLE movr.vehicles INTO 'webhook-https://localhost:3000?insecure_tls_skip_verify=true' WITH updated;
    

    You set up a changefeed on the vehicles table, which emits changefeed messages to the local HTTP server.

    See the options table for more information on the options available for creating your changefeed to a webhook sink.

          job_id
    ----------------------
    687842491801632769
    (1 row)
    

    In the terminal where your HTTP server is running, you'll receive output similar to:

    2021/08/24 14:00:21 {"payload":[{"after":{"city":"rome","creation_time":"2019-01-02T03:04:05","current_location":"39141 Travis Curve Suite 87","ext":{"brand":"Schwinn","color":"red"},"id":"d7b18299-c0c4-4304-9ef7-05ae46fd5ee1","dog_owner_id":"5d0c85b5-8866-47cf-a6bc-d032f198e48f","status":"in_use","type":"bike"},"key":["rome","d7b18299-c0c4-4304-9ef7-05ae46fd5ee1"],"topic":"vehicles","updated":"1629813621680097993.0000000000"}],"length":1}
    2021/08/24 14:00:22 {"payload":[{"after":{"city":"san francisco","creation_time":"2019-01-02T03:04:05","current_location":"84888 Wallace Wall","ext":{"color":"black"},"id":"020cf7f4-6324-48a0-9f74-6c9010fb1ab4","dog_owner_id":"b74ea421-fcaf-4d80-9dcc-d222d49bdc17","status":"available","type":"scooter"},"key":["san francisco","020cf7f4-6324-48a0-9f74-6c9010fb1ab4"],"topic":"vehicles","updated":"1629813621680097993.0000000000"}],"length":1}
    2021/08/24 14:00:22 {"payload":[{"after":{"city":"san francisco","creation_time":"2019-01-02T03:04:05","current_location":"3893 Dunn Fall Apt. 11","ext":{"color":"black"},"id":"21b2ec54-81ad-4af7-a76d-6087b9c7f0f8","dog_owner_id":"8924c3af-ea6e-4e7e-b2c8-2e318f973393","status":"lost","type":"scooter"},"key":["san francisco","21b2ec54-81ad-4af7-a76d-6087b9c7f0f8"],"topic":"vehicles","updated":"1629813621680097993.0000000000"}],"length":1}
    

    For more detail on emitted changefeed messages, see responses.

Core changefeeds stream row-level changes to a client until the underlying SQL connection is closed.

Create a Core changefeed

In this example, you'll set up a core changefeed for a single-node cluster.

  1. In a terminal window, start cockroach:

    icon/buttons/copy
    $ cockroach start-single-node \
    --insecure \
    --listen-addr=localhost \
    --background
    
  2. As the root user, open the built-in SQL client:

    icon/buttons/copy
    $ cockroach sql \
    --url="postgresql://root@127.0.0.1:26257?sslmode=disable" \
    --format=csv
    
    Note:

    Because core changefeeds return results differently than other SQL statements, they require a dedicated database connection with specific settings around result buffering. In normal operation, CockroachDB improves performance by buffering results server-side before returning them to a client; however, result buffering is automatically turned off for core changefeeds. Core changefeeds also have different cancellation behavior than other queries: they can only be canceled by closing the underlying connection or issuing a CANCEL QUERY statement on a separate connection. Combined, these attributes of changefeeds mean that applications should explicitly create dedicated connections to consume changefeed data, instead of using a connection pool as most client drivers do by default.

    Note:

    To determine how wide the columns need to be, the default table display format in cockroach sql buffers the results it receives from the server before printing them to the console. When consuming core changefeed data using cockroach sql, it's important to use a display format like csv that does not buffer its results. To set the display format, use the --format=csv flag when starting the built-in SQL client, or set the \set display_format=csv option once the SQL client is open.

  3. Enable the kv.rangefeed.enabled cluster setting:

    icon/buttons/copy
    > SET CLUSTER SETTING kv.rangefeed.enabled = true;
    
  4. Create table foo:

    icon/buttons/copy
    > CREATE TABLE foo (a INT PRIMARY KEY);
    
  5. Insert a row into the table:

    icon/buttons/copy
    > INSERT INTO foo VALUES (0);
    
  6. Start the core changefeed:

    icon/buttons/copy
    > EXPERIMENTAL CHANGEFEED FOR foo;
    
    table,key,value
    foo,[0],"{""after"": {""a"": 0}}"
    
  7. In a new terminal, add another row:

    icon/buttons/copy
    $ cockroach sql --insecure -e "INSERT INTO foo VALUES (1)"
    
  8. Back in the terminal where the core changefeed is streaming, the following output has appeared:

    foo,[1],"{""after"": {""a"": 1}}"
    

    Note that records may take a couple of seconds to display in the core changefeed.

  9. To stop streaming the changefeed, enter CTRL+C into the terminal where the changefeed is running.

  10. To stop cockroach:

    Get the process ID of the node:

    icon/buttons/copy
    ps -ef | grep cockroach | grep -v grep
    
      501 21766     1   0  6:21PM ttys001    0:00.89 cockroach start-single-node --insecure --listen-addr=localhost
    

    Gracefully shut down the node, specifying its process ID:

    icon/buttons/copy
    kill -TERM 21766
    
    initiating graceful shutdown of server
    server drained and shutdown completed
    

Create a Core changefeed using Avro

In this example, you'll set up a core changefeed for a single-node cluster that emits Avro records. CockroachDB's Avro binary encoding convention uses the Confluent Schema Registry to store Avro schemas.

  1. Use the cockroach start-single-node command to start a single-node cluster:

    icon/buttons/copy
    $ cockroach start-single-node \
    --insecure \
    --listen-addr=localhost \
    --background
    
  2. Download and extract the Confluent Open Source platform.

  3. Move into the extracted confluent-<version> directory and start Confluent:

    icon/buttons/copy
    $ ./bin/confluent local services start
    

    Only zookeeper, kafka, and schema-registry are needed. To troubleshoot Confluent, see their docs and the Quick Start Guide.

  4. As the root user, open the built-in SQL client:

    icon/buttons/copy
    $ cockroach sql --url="postgresql://root@127.0.0.1:26257?sslmode=disable" --format=csv
    
    Note:

    Because core changefeeds return results differently than other SQL statements, they require a dedicated database connection with specific settings around result buffering. In normal operation, CockroachDB improves performance by buffering results server-side before returning them to a client; however, result buffering is automatically turned off for core changefeeds. Core changefeeds also have different cancellation behavior than other queries: they can only be canceled by closing the underlying connection or issuing a CANCEL QUERY statement on a separate connection. Combined, these attributes of changefeeds mean that applications should explicitly create dedicated connections to consume changefeed data, instead of using a connection pool as most client drivers do by default.

    Note:

    To determine how wide the columns need to be, the default table display format in cockroach sql buffers the results it receives from the server before printing them to the console. When consuming core changefeed data using cockroach sql, it's important to use a display format like csv that does not buffer its results. To set the display format, use the --format=csv flag when starting the built-in SQL client, or set the \set display_format=csv option once the SQL client is open.

  5. Enable the kv.rangefeed.enabled cluster setting:

    icon/buttons/copy
    > SET CLUSTER SETTING kv.rangefeed.enabled = true;
    
  6. Create table bar:

    icon/buttons/copy
    > CREATE TABLE bar (a INT PRIMARY KEY);
    
  7. Insert a row into the table:

    icon/buttons/copy
    > INSERT INTO bar VALUES (0);
    
  8. Start the core changefeed:

    icon/buttons/copy
    > EXPERIMENTAL CHANGEFEED FOR bar WITH format = avro, confluent_schema_registry = 'http://localhost:8081';
    
    table,key,value
    bar,\000\000\000\000\001\002\000,\000\000\000\000\002\002\002\000
    
  9. In a new terminal, add another row:

    icon/buttons/copy
    $ cockroach sql --insecure -e "INSERT INTO bar VALUES (1)"
    
  10. Back in the terminal where the core changefeed is streaming, the output will appear:

    bar,\000\000\000\000\001\002\002,\000\000\000\000\002\002\002\002
    

    Note that records may take a couple of seconds to display in the core changefeed.

  11. To stop streaming the changefeed, enter CTRL+C into the terminal where the changefeed is running.

  12. To stop cockroach:

    Get the process ID of the node:

    icon/buttons/copy
    ps -ef | grep cockroach | grep -v grep
    
      501 21766     1   0  6:21PM ttys001    0:00.89 cockroach start-single-node --insecure --listen-addr=localhost
    

    Gracefully shut down the node, specifying its process ID:

    icon/buttons/copy
    kill -TERM 21766
    
    initiating graceful shutdown of server
    server drained and shutdown completed
    
  13. To stop Confluent, move into the extracted confluent-<version> directory and stop Confluent:

    icon/buttons/copy
    $ ./bin/confluent local services stop
    

    To terminate all Confluent processes, use:

    icon/buttons/copy
    $ ./bin/confluent local destroy
    

For further information on Core changefeeds, see EXPERIMENTAL CHANGEFEED FOR.

See also


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