There once was a Kinesis readable stream without a home, and a Kinesis writable stream without a home, so now they're roommates.
NOTE: Kinesis was a bad idea, and we're switching to Kafka. So I won't be using my own library for much longer.
npm install kinesis-streams
const AWS = require('aws-sdk')
const { KinesisWritable } = require('kinesis-streams')
const client = new AWS.Kinesis()
client.config.update({ maxRetries: 10 })
const writable = new KinesisWritable(client, 'streamName', options)
inputStream.pipe(writable)
options.logger
(optional) bunyan, winston, or logger withdebug
,error
andinfo
options.highWaterMark
(default: 16) Buffer this many records before writing to Kinesis. Equivalent toCollectionMaxCount
options.wait
(default: 500) How many milliseconds it should periodically flush. Equivalent toRecordMaxBufferedTime
Some of these options have equivalents in the official KPL.
These events are emitted:
-
kinesis.putRecords
Fires after records are put and the response is processed. You'll get the original response from AWS. Seedemo.js
for an example of how to interpret itreader.on('kinesis.putRecords', (response: {FailedRecordCount: number, Records: Record[]}) => {})
By default, the partition key is to a dummy value, '0'
. If you have
multiple shards, you need to set a partition key in a way that makes sense
for your data. Here are two ways to do this:
- Set the
getPartitionKey
method of the writable stream instance:
const AWS = require('aws-sdk')
const { KinesisWritable } = require('kinesis-streams')
const client = new AWS.Kinesis()
const writable = new KinesisWritable(client, 'streamName', options)
writable.getPartitionKey = (data) => data.foo.substr(5)
inputStream.pipe(writable)
- Subclass
KinesisWritable
and provide your owngetPartitionKey
. See the source for reference.
const AWS = require('aws-sdk')
const { KinesisReadable } = require('kinesis-streams')
const client = new AWS.Kinesis()
const reader = new KinesisReadable(client, streamName, options)
reader.pipe(yourDestinationHere)
-
options.logger
(optional) bunyan, winston, or logger withdebug
,error
andinfo
-
options.interval: number
(default:2000
) Milliseconds between each Kinesis read. The AWS limit is 5 reads / second / shard -
options.parser: Function
If this is set, this function is applied to the data. Example:const reader = new KinesisReadable(client, streamName, {parser: JSON.parse}) reader.on('data', console.log(data.id))
-
options.restartOnClose: boolean
(default:false
) Rediscover new shards once all current shards have been closed -
And any getShardIterator parameter
These events are emitted:
-
checkpoint
This fires when data is received so you can keep track of the last successful sequence read:reader.on('checkpoint', (sequenceNumber: string) => {})
KinesisWritable
and KinesisReadable
both take an optional logger
option.
If this is omitted, the debug logger will be used instead. To see output, set
DEBUG=kinesis-streams:*
in your environment.
The writable stream is based on the interface of kinesis-write-stream. The
checkpoint
event in readable stream is based on kinesis-readable. The
readable stream was originally written as a proof of concept in
kinesis-console-consumer.
kinesis-write-stream was forked because at the time, it didn't support periodic flushes. Since then the configuration of the readable and writable streams have been rewritten to be consistent, and both emit lots of events now that consumers can use for instrumentation.
This package is licensed under Apache License 2.0, but the
tests/writable.spec.js
and test/fixture/*
are originally from
kinesis-write-stream MIT licensed from Espen Volden.