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Pulsar Terminology

Here is a glossary of terms related to Apache Pulsar:

Concepts​

Pulsar​

Pulsar is a distributed messaging system originally created by Yahoo but now under the stewardship of the Apache Software Foundation.

Message​

Messages are the basic unit of Pulsar. They're what producers publish to topics and what consumers then consume from topics.

Topic​

A named channel used to pass messages published by producers to consumers who process those messages.

Partitioned Topic​

A topic that is served by multiple Pulsar brokers, which enables higher throughput.

Namespace​

A grouping mechanism for related topics.

Namespace Bundle​

A virtual group of topics that belong to the same namespace. A namespace bundle is defined as a range between two 32-bit hashes, such as 0x00000000 and 0xffffffff.

Tenant​

An administrative unit for allocating capacity and enforcing an authentication/authorization scheme.

Subscription​

A lease on a topic established by a group of consumers. Pulsar has three subscription modes (exclusive, shared, and failover).

Pub-Sub​

A messaging pattern in which producer processes publish messages on topics that are then consumed (processed) by consumer processes.

Producer​

A process that publishes messages to a Pulsar topic.

Consumer​

A process that establishes a subscription to a Pulsar topic and processes messages published to that topic by producers.

Reader​

Pulsar readers are message processors much like Pulsar consumers but with two crucial differences:

  • you can specify where on a topic readers begin processing messages (consumers always begin with the latest available unacked message);
  • readers don't retain data or acknowledge messages.

Cursor​

The subscription position for a consumer.

Acknowledgment (ack)​

A message sent to a Pulsar broker by a consumer that a message has been successfully processed. An acknowledgement (ack) is Pulsar's way of knowing that the message can be deleted from the system; if no acknowledgement, then the message will be retained until it's processed.

Unacknowledged​

A message that has been delivered to a consumer for processing but not yet confirmed as processed by the consumer.

Retention Policy​

Size and/or time limits that you can set on a namespace to configure retention of messages that have already been acknowledged.

Multi-Tenancy​

The ability to isolate namespaces, specify quotas, and configure authentication and authorization on a per-tenant basis.

Architecture​

Standalone​

A lightweight Pulsar broker in which all components run in a single Java Virtual Machine (JVM) process. Standalone clusters can be run on a single machine and are useful for development purposes.

Cluster​

A set of Pulsar brokers and BookKeeper servers (aka bookies). Clusters can reside in different geographical regions and replicate messages to one another in a process called geo-replication.

Instance​

A group of Pulsar clusters that act together as a single unit.

Geo-Replication​

Replication of messages across Pulsar clusters, potentially in different datacenters or geographical regions.

Configuration Store​

Pulsar's configuration store (previously known as configuration store) is a ZooKeeper quorum that is used for configuration-specific tasks. A multi-cluster Pulsar installation requires just one configuration store across all clusters.

Topic Lookup​

A service provided by Pulsar brokers that enables connecting clients to automatically determine which Pulsar cluster is responsible for a topic (and thus where message traffic for the topic needs to be routed).

Service Discovery​

A mechanism provided by Pulsar that enables connecting clients to use just a single URL to interact with all the brokers in a cluster.

Broker​

A stateless component of Pulsar clusters that runs two other components: an HTTP server exposing a REST interface for administration and topic lookup and a dispatcher that handles all message transfers. Pulsar clusters typically consist of multiple brokers.

Dispatcher​

An asynchronous TCP server used for all data transfers in-and-out a Pulsar broker. The Pulsar dispatcher uses a custom binary protocol for all communications.

Storage​

BookKeeper​

Apache BookKeeper is a scalable, low-latency persistent log storage service that Pulsar uses to store data.

Bookie​

Bookie is the name of an individual BookKeeper server. It is effectively the storage server of Pulsar.

Ledger​

An append-only data structure in BookKeeper that is used to persistently store messages in Pulsar topics.

Functions​

Pulsar Functions are lightweight functions that can consume messages from Pulsar topics, apply custom processing logic, and, if desired, publish results to topics.