Get started in Kubernetes
This section guides you through every step of installing and running Apache Pulsar with Helm on Kubernetes quickly, including the following sections:
- Install the Apache Pulsar on Kubernetes using Helm
- Start and stop Apache Pulsar
- Create topics using pulsar-admin
- Produce and consume messages using Pulsar clients
- Monitor Apache Pulsar status with Prometheus and Grafana
For deploying a Pulsar cluster for production usage, read the documentation on how to configure and install a Pulsar Helm chart.
Prerequisite
- Kubernetes server 1.14.0+
- kubectl 1.14.0+
- Helm 3.0+
For the following steps, step 2 and step 3 are for developers and step 4 and step 5 are for administrators.
Step 0: Prepare a Kubernetes cluster
Before installing a Pulsar Helm chart, you have to create a Kubernetes cluster. You can follow the instructions to prepare a Kubernetes cluster.
We use Minikube in this quick start guide. To prepare a Kubernetes cluster, follow these steps:
- 
Create a Kubernetes cluster on Minikube. 
 minikube start --memory=8192 --cpus=4 --kubernetes-version=<k8s-version>The <k8s-version>can be any Kubernetes version supported by your Minikube installation, such asv1.16.1.
- 
Set kubectlto use Minikube.
 kubectl config use-context minikube
- 
To use the Kubernetes Dashboard with the local Kubernetes cluster on Minikube, enter the command below: 
 minikube dashboardThe command automatically triggers opening a webpage in your browser. 
Step 1: Install Pulsar Helm chart
- 
Add Pulsar charts repo. 
 helm repo add apache https://pulsar.apache.org/charts
 helm repo update
- 
Clone the Pulsar Helm chart repository. 
 git clone https://github.com/apache/pulsar-helm-chart
 cd pulsar-helm-chart
- 
Run the script prepare_helm_release.shto create secrets required for installing the Apache Pulsar Helm chart. The usernamepulsarand passwordpulsarare used for logging into the Grafana dashboard and Pulsar Manager.NOTE When running the script, you can use -nto specify the Kubernetes namespace where the Pulsar Helm chart is installed,-kto define the Pulsar Helm release name, and-cto create the Kubernetes namespace. For more information about the script, run./scripts/pulsar/prepare_helm_release.sh --help.
 ./scripts/pulsar/prepare_helm_release.sh \
 -n pulsar \
 -k pulsar-mini \
 -c
- 
Use the Pulsar Helm chart to install a Pulsar cluster to Kubernetes. NOTE You need to specify --set initialize=truewhen installing Pulsar the first time. This command installs and starts Apache Pulsar.
 helm install \
 --values examples/values-minikube.yaml \
 --set initialize=true \
 --namespace pulsar \
 pulsar-mini apache/pulsar
- 
Check the status of all pods. 
 kubectl get pods -n pulsarIf all pods start up successfully, you can see that the STATUSis changed toRunningorCompleted.Output 
 NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
 pulsar-mini-bookie-0 1/1 Running 0 9m27s
 pulsar-mini-bookie-init-5gphs 0/1 Completed 0 9m27s
 pulsar-mini-broker-0 1/1 Running 0 9m27s
 pulsar-mini-grafana-6b7bcc64c7-4tkxd 1/1 Running 0 9m27s
 pulsar-mini-prometheus-5fcf5dd84c-w8mgz 1/1 Running 0 9m27s
 pulsar-mini-proxy-0 1/1 Running 0 9m27s
 pulsar-mini-pulsar-init-t7cqt 0/1 Completed 0 9m27s
 pulsar-mini-pulsar-manager-9bcbb4d9f-htpcs 1/1 Running 0 9m27s
 pulsar-mini-toolset-0 1/1 Running 0 9m27s
 pulsar-mini-zookeeper-0 1/1 Running 0 9m27s
- 
Check the status of all services in the namespace pulsar.
 kubectl get services -n pulsarOutput 
 NAME TYPE CLUSTER-IP EXTERNAL-IP PORT(S) AGE
 pulsar-mini-bookie ClusterIP None <none> 3181/TCP,8000/TCP 11m
 pulsar-mini-broker ClusterIP None <none> 8080/TCP,6650/TCP 11m
 pulsar-mini-grafana LoadBalancer 10.106.141.246 <pending> 3000:31905/TCP 11m
 pulsar-mini-prometheus ClusterIP None <none> 9090/TCP 11m
 pulsar-mini-proxy LoadBalancer 10.97.240.109 <pending> 80:32305/TCP,6650:31816/TCP 11m
 pulsar-mini-pulsar-manager LoadBalancer 10.103.192.175 <pending> 9527:30190/TCP 11m
 pulsar-mini-toolset ClusterIP None <none> <none> 11m
 pulsar-mini-zookeeper ClusterIP None <none> 2888/TCP,3888/TCP,2181/TCP 11m
Step 2: Use pulsar-admin to create Pulsar tenants/namespaces/topics
pulsar-admin is the CLI (command-Line Interface) tool for Pulsar. In this step, you can use pulsar-admin to create resources, including tenants, namespaces, and topics.
- 
Enter the toolsetcontainer.
 kubectl exec -it -n pulsar pulsar-mini-toolset-0 -- /bin/bash
- 
In the toolsetcontainer, create a tenant namedapache.
 bin/pulsar-admin tenants create apacheThen you can list the tenants to see if the tenant is created successfully. 
 bin/pulsar-admin tenants listYou should see a similar output as below. The tenant apachehas been successfully created.
 "apache"
 "public"
 "pulsar"
- 
In the toolsetcontainer, create a namespace namedpulsarin the tenantapache.
 bin/pulsar-admin namespaces create apache/pulsarThen you can list the namespaces of tenant apacheto see if the namespace is created successfully.
 bin/pulsar-admin namespaces list apacheYou should see a similar output as below. The namespace apache/pulsarhas been successfully created.
 "apache/pulsar"
- 
In the toolsetcontainer, create a topictest-topicwith4partitions in the namespaceapache/pulsar.
 bin/pulsar-admin topics create-partitioned-topic apache/pulsar/test-topic -p 4
- 
In the toolsetcontainer, list all the partitioned topics in the namespaceapache/pulsar.
 bin/pulsar-admin topics list-partitioned-topics apache/pulsarThen you can see all the partitioned topics in the namespace apache/pulsar.
 "persistent://apache/pulsar/test-topic"
Step 3: Use Pulsar client to produce and consume messages
You can use the Pulsar client to create producers and consumers to produce and consume messages.
By default, the Pulsar Helm chart exposes the Pulsar cluster through a Kubernetes LoadBalancer. In Minikube, you can use the following command to get the IP address of the proxy service.
kubectl get services -n pulsar | grep pulsar-mini-proxy
You will see a similar output as below.
pulsar-mini-proxy            LoadBalancer   10.97.240.109    <pending>     80:32305/TCP,6650:31816/TCP   28m
This output tells what are the node ports that Pulsar cluster's binary port and HTTP port are exposed to. The port after 80: is the HTTP port while the port after 6650: is the binary port.
Then you can find the IP address of your Minikube server by running the following command.
minikube ip
At this point, you can get the service URLs to connect to your Pulsar client.
webServiceUrl=http://$(minikube ip):<exposed-http-port>/
brokerServiceUrl=pulsar://$(minikube ip):<exposed-binary-port>/
Then you can proceed with the following steps:
- 
Download the Apache Pulsar tarball from the downloads page. 
- 
Decompress the tarball based on your download file. 
 tar -xf <file-name>.tar.gz
- 
Expose PULSAR_HOME.(1) Enter the directory of the decompressed download file. (2) Expose PULSAR_HOMEas the environment variable.
 export PULSAR_HOME=$(pwd)
- 
Configure the Pulsar client. In the ${PULSAR_HOME}/conf/client.conffile, replacewebServiceUrlandbrokerServiceUrlwith the service URLs you get from the above steps.
- 
Create a subscription to consume messages from apache/pulsar/test-topic.
 bin/pulsar-client consume -s sub apache/pulsar/test-topic -n 0
- 
Open a new terminal. In the new terminal, create a producer and send 10 messages to the test-topictopic.
 bin/pulsar-client produce apache/pulsar/test-topic -m "---------hello apache pulsar-------" -n 10
- 
Verify the results. - 
From the producer side Output The messages have been produced successfully. 
 18:15:15.489 [main] INFO org.apache.pulsar.client.cli.PulsarClientTool - 10 messages successfully produced
- 
From the consumer side Output At the same time, you can receive the messages as below. 
 ----- got message -----
 ---------hello apache pulsar-------
 ----- got message -----
 ---------hello apache pulsar-------
 ----- got message -----
 ---------hello apache pulsar-------
 ----- got message -----
 ---------hello apache pulsar-------
 ----- got message -----
 ---------hello apache pulsar-------
 ----- got message -----
 ---------hello apache pulsar-------
 ----- got message -----
 ---------hello apache pulsar-------
 ----- got message -----
 ---------hello apache pulsar-------
 ----- got message -----
 ---------hello apache pulsar-------
 ----- got message -----
 ---------hello apache pulsar-------
 
- 
Step 4: Use Pulsar Manager to manage the cluster
Pulsar Manager is a web-based GUI management tool for managing and monitoring Pulsar.
- 
By default, the Pulsar Manageris exposed as a separateLoadBalancer. You can open the Pulsar Manager UI using the following command:
 minikube service -n pulsar pulsar-mini-pulsar-manager
- 
The Pulsar Manager UI will be open in your browser. You can use the username pulsarand passwordpulsarto log into Pulsar Manager.
- 
In Pulsar Manager UI, you can create an environment. - Click New Environmentbutton in the top-left corner.
- Type pulsar-minifor the fieldEnvironment Namein the popup window.
- Type http://pulsar-mini-broker:8080for the fieldService URLin the popup window.
- Click Confirmbutton in the popup window.
 
- Click 
- 
After successfully creating an environment, you are redirected to the tenantspage of that environment. Then you can createtenants,namespacesandtopicsusing the Pulsar Manager.
Step 5: Use Prometheus and Grafana to monitor cluster
Grafana is an open-source visualization tool, which can be used for visualizing time series data into dashboards.
- 
By default, the Grafana is exposed as a separate LoadBalancer. You can open the Grafana UI using the following command:
 minikube service pulsar-mini-grafana -n pulsar
- 
The Grafana UI is open in your browser. You can use the username pulsarand passwordpulsarto log into the Grafana Dashboard.
- 
You can view dashboards for different components of a Pulsar cluster.