Container factory
As discussed in @KafkaListener
Annotation, a ConcurrentKafkaListenerContainerFactory
is used to create containers for annotated methods.
Starting with version 2.2, you can use the same factory to create any ConcurrentMessageListenerContainer
.
This might be useful if you want to create several containers with similar properties or you wish to use some externally configured factory, such as the one provided by Spring Boot auto-configuration.
Once the container is created, you can further modify its properties, many of which are set by using container.getContainerProperties()
.
The following example configures a ConcurrentMessageListenerContainer
:
@Bean
public ConcurrentMessageListenerContainer<String, String>(
ConcurrentKafkaListenerContainerFactory<String, String> factory) {
ConcurrentMessageListenerContainer<String, String> container =
factory.createContainer("topic1", "topic2");
container.setMessageListener(m -> { ... } );
return container;
}
Containers created this way are not added to the endpoint registry.
They should be created as @Bean definitions so that they are registered with the application context.
|
Starting with version 2.3.4, you can add a ContainerCustomizer
to the factory to further configure each container after it has been created and configured.
@Bean
public KafkaListenerContainerFactory<?> kafkaListenerContainerFactory() {
ConcurrentKafkaListenerContainerFactory<Integer, String> factory =
new ConcurrentKafkaListenerContainerFactory<>();
...
factory.setContainerCustomizer(container -> { /* customize the container */ });
return factory;
}
Starting with version 3.1, it’s also possible to apply the same kind of customization on a single listener by specifying the bean name of a 'ContainerPostProcessor' on the KafkaListener annotation.
@Bean
public ContainerPostProcessor<String, String, AbstractMessageListenerContainer<String, String>> customContainerPostProcessor() {
return container -> { /* customize the container */ };
}
...
@KafkaListener(..., containerPostProcessor="customContainerPostProcessor", ...)