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Datacenter downtime and data loss can result in businesses losing a vast amount of revenue or entirely halting operations. To minimize the downtime and data loss resulting from a disaster, enterprises create business continuity plans and disaster recovery strategies.
A disaster recovery plan often requires multi-datacenter Apache Kafka® deployments where datacenters are geographically dispersed. If disaster strikes—catastrophic hardware failure, software failure, power outage, denial of service attack, or any other event that causes one datacenter to completely fail—Kafka continues running in another datacenter until service is restored. Here is a Confluent multi-datacenter reference architecture:
The details of your design will vary depending on your business requirements. You may be considering an active-passive design (one-way data replication between Kafka clusters), active-active design (two-way data replication between Kafka clusters), client applications that read from just their local cluster or both local and remote clusters, service discovery mechanisms to enable automated failovers, geo locality offerings, etc.
Confluent Replicator is the key to any of these multi-datacenter designs. It manages multiple Kafka deployments and provides a centralized configuration of cross-datacenter replication. It reads data from the origin cluster and writes that data to the destination cluster. As topic metadata or partition count changes in the origin cluster, it replicates the changes in the destination cluster. New topics are automatically detected and replicated to the destination cluster.
In our white paper “Disaster Recovery for Multi-Datacenter Apache Kafka Deployments“, we discuss multi-datacenter designs and building blocks:
This white paper is a practical guide for configuring multiple Kafka clusters so that if a disaster scenario strikes, you have a working plan for failover, failback, and ultimately successful recovery. Please download the white paper to follow these recommendations to strengthen your disaster recovery plan.
We covered so much at Current 2024, from the 138 breakout sessions, lightning talks, and meetups on the expo floor to what happened on the main stage. If you heard any snippets or saw quotes from the Day 2 keynote, then you already know what I told the room: We are all data streaming engineers now.
We’re excited to announce Early Access for Confluent for VS Code. This Visual Studio integration streamlines workflows, accelerates development, and enhances real-time data processing, all in a unified environment. This post shows how to get started, and also lists opportunities to get involved.