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Last November, we released Confluent 3.1, with new connectors, clients, and Enterprise features. Today, we’re pleased to announce Confluent 3.1.2, a patch release which incorporates the latest stable version of Apache Kafka, 0.10.1.1.
The 0.10.1.1 release fixes a total of 30 issues, out of which 24 are bug fixes and 6 are general improvements. We recommend all users upgrade to this release by bumping up the version of your Kafka dependencies to 0.10.1.1 (Confluent users: 0.10.1.1-cp1) in your applications and updating the binary installations on server machines.
Here’s a quick overview of the most notable fixes in this release, grouped by the affected component. For a full list of Kafka-related improvements for this release, see the Apache Kafka release notes.
KAFKA-4497: log cleaner breaks on timeindex
KAFKA-4313: ISRs may thrash when replication quota is enabled
KAFKA-4529: tombstone may be removed earlier than it should
KAFKA-4472: offsetRetentionMs miscalculated in GroupCoordinator
KAFKA-4384: ReplicaFetcherThread stopped after ReplicaFetcherThread received a corrupted message
KAFKA-4205: NullPointerException in fetchOffsetsBefore
KAFKA-4361: Streams does not respect user configs for “default” params
KAFKA-4355: StreamThread intermittently dies with “Topic not found during partition assignment” when broker restarted
KAFKA-4331: The streams API resetter is slow because it joins the same group for each topic
KAFKA-4311: Multi-layer cache eviction causes forwarding to incorrect ProcessorNode
KAFKA-4302: Simplify KTableSource
KAFKA-3994: Deadlock between consumer heartbeat expiration and offset commit.
KAFKA-4469: Consumer throughput regression caused by inefficient list removal and copy
KAFKA-4362: Consumer can fail after reassignment of the offsets topic partition
KAFKA-4438: BACKPORT – Add scala 2.12 support
According to git shortlog, 21 people contributed to this release:
Alexey Ozeritsky, Anton Karamanov, Ben Stopford, Bernard Leach, Bill Bejeck, Damian Guy, Dan Norwood, Eno Thereska, Ewen Cheslack-Postava, Guozhang Wang, Jason Gustafson, Jiangjie Qin, Jun He, Jun Rao, Kim Christensen, Manikumar Reddy O, Matthias J. Sax, Mayuresh Gharat, Rajini Sivaram, Sumant Tambe, and Vahid Hashemian.
The easiest way to get started with or upgrade Kafka is by downloading Confluent. The 3.1.2 release of Confluent includes Apache Kafka 0.10.1.1 along with tools that you need to get started with Kafka. Learn more about it by reading the details in the Confluent 3.1.2 documentation or download it to give it a spin.
Confluent 3.1.2 is backed by our subscription support, and we also offer expert training and technical consulting to help get your organization started.
As always, we are happy to hear your feedback. Please post your questions and suggestions to the public Confluent mailing list.
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.