Known Issues in Streams Replication Manager
Learn about the known issues in Streams Replication Manager, the impact or changes to the functionality, and the workaround.
- CDPD-22089: SRM does not sync re-created source topics until the offsets have caught up with target topic
- Messages written to topics that were deleted and re-created are not replicated until the source topic reaches the same offset as the target topic. For example, if at the time of deletion and re-creation there are a 100 messages on the source and target clusters, new messages will only get replicated once the re-created source topic has 100 messages. This leads to messages being lost.
- CDPD-14019: SRM may automatically re-create deleted topics
- If
auto.create.topics.enable
is enabled, deleted topics are automatically recreated on source clusters. - CDPD-13864 and CDPD-15327: Replication stops after the network configuration of a source or target cluster is changed
- If the network configuration of a cluster which is taking part in a replication flow is changed, for example, port numbers are changed as a result of enabling or disabling TLS, SRM will not update its internal configuration even if SRM is reconfigured and restarted. From SRM’s perspective, it is the cluster identity that has changed. SRM cannot determine whether the new identity corresponds to the same cluster or not, only the owner or administrator of that cluster can know. In this case, SRM tries to use the last known configuration of that cluster which might not be valid, resulting in the halt of replication.
- CDPD-11709: Blacklisted topics appear in the list of replicated topics
- If a topic was originally replicated but was later disallowed
(blacklisted), it will still appear as a replicated topic under the
/remote-topics
REST API endpoint. As a result, if a call is made to this endpoint, the disallowed topic will be included in the response. Additionally, the disallowed topic will also be visible in the SMM UI. However, it's Partitions and Consumer Groups will be 0, its Throughput, Replication Latency and Checkpoint Latency will show N/A.
- CDPD-22094: The SRM service role displays as healthy, but no metrics are processed
-
The SRM service role might encounter errors that make metrics processing impossible. An example of this is when the target Kafka cluster is not reachable. The SRM service role does not automatically stop or recover if such an error is encountered. It continues to run and displays as healthy in Cloudera Manager. Metrics, however, are not processed. In addition, no new data is displayed in SMM for the replications.
- CDPD-22389: The SRM driver role displays as healthy, but replication fails
-
During startup, the SRM driver role might encounter errors that make data replication impossible. An example of this is when one of the clusters added for replication is not reachable. The SRM driver role does not automatically stop or recover if such an error is encountered. It will start up, continue to run, and display as healthy in Cloudera Manager. Replication, however, will not happen.
- CDPD-23683: The replication status reported by the SRM service role for healthy replications is flaky
- The replication status reported by the SRM service role is flaky. The replication status might change between active and inactive frequently even if the replication is healthy. This status is also reflected in SMM on the replications tab.
- OPSAPS-63992: Rolling restart unavailable for SRM
- Initiating a rolling restart for the SRM service is not possible. Consequently, performing a rolling upgrade of the SRM service is also not possible.
- CDPD-31745: SRM Control fails to configure internal topic when target is earlier than Kafka 2.3
- When the target Kafka cluster of a replication is earlier than
version 2.3, the
srm-control
internal topic is created with an incorrect configuration (cleanup.policy=compact
). This causes thesrm-control
topic to lose the replication filter records, causing issues in the replication. - CDPD-31235: Negative consumer group lag when replicating groups through SRM
-
SRM checkpointing reads the offset-syncs topic to create offset mappings for committed consumer group offsets. In some corner cases, it is possible that a mapping is not available in offset-syncs. In a case like this SRM simply copies the source offset, which might not be a valid offset in the replica topic.
One possible situation is if there is an empty topic in the source cluster with a non-zero end offset (for example, retention already removed the records), and a consumer group which has a committed offset set to the end offset. If replication is configured to start replicating this topic, it will not have an offset mapping available in offset-syncs (as the topic is empty), causing SRM to copy the source offset.
This can cause issues when automatic offset synchronization is enabled, as the consumer group offset can be potentially set to a high number. SRM never rewinds these offsets, so even when there is a correct offset mapping available, the offset will not be updated correctly.
Limitations
- SRM cannot replicate Ranger authorization policies to or from Kafka clusters
- Due to a limitation in the Kafka-Ranger plugin, SRM cannot
replicate Ranger policies to or from clusters that are configured to use Ranger for
authorization. If you are using SRM to replicate data to or from a cluster that uses
Ranger, disable authorization policy synchronization in SRM. This can be achieved by
clearing the Sync Topic Acls Enabled
(
sync.topic.acls.enabled
) checkbox. - SRM cannot ensure the exactly-once semantics of transactional source topics
- SRM data replication uses at-least-once guarantees, and as a result cannot ensure the exactly-once semantics (EOS) of transactional topics in the backup/target cluster.
- SRM checkpointing is not supported for transactional source topics
- SRM does not correctly translate checkpoints (committed consumer group offsets) for transactional topics. Checkpointing assumes that the offset mapping function is always increasing, but with transactional source topics this is violated. Transactional topics have control messages in them, which take up an offset in the log, but they are never returned on the consumer API. This causes the mappings to decrease, causing issues in the checkpointing feature. As a result of this limitation, consumer failover operations for transactional topics is not possible.