Important
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Schema Registry API Usage Examples¶
This section provides examples of calls to the Schema Registry API using curl commands.
You can also see a few more examples of using curl to interact with these APIs in the Schema Registry Tutorial.
For your API testing, you may want to use jq along with --silent
flag for curl
to get nicely formatted output for the given commands. For example, the command: curl -X GET http://localhost:8081/subjects
results in:
["my-cool-topic-value","my-other-cool-topic-value"]
Whereas, the same command using curl in silent mode and piped through jq: curl --silent -X GET http://localhost:8081/subjects | jq
results in:
"my-cool-topic-value",
"my-other-cool-topic-value"
Starting Schema Registry¶
Start Schema Registry and its dependent services ZooKeeper and Kafka. Each service reads its configuration from its property files under
etc
.
Development or Test Environment¶
- Prerequisites
- Confluent Platform
- Confluent CLI (requires separate installation)
You can use the Confluent CLI confluent local commands to start Schema Registry and its dependent services with this command:
confluent local start schema-registry
Important
The confluent local commands are intended for a single-node development environment and are not suitable for a production environment. The data that are produced are transient and are intended to be temporary. For production-ready workflows, see Install and Upgrade Confluent Platform.
Production Environment¶
Start each Confluent Platform service in its own terminal using this order of operations:
Start ZooKeeper. Run this command in its own terminal.
bin/zookeeper-server-start ./etc/kafka/zookeeper.properties
Start Kafka. Run this command in its own terminal.
bin/kafka-server-start ./etc/kafka/server.properties
Start Schema Registry. Run this command in its own terminal.
bin/schema-registry-start ./etc/schema-registry/schema-registry.properties
See the On-Premises Deployments for a more detailed explanation of how to get these services up and running.
Common Schema Registry API Usage Examples¶
See also
- Schema Registry Tutorials
- Schema Formats, Serializers, and Deserializers
- Schema Registry API Reference
- For a detailed example that uses Schema Registry configured with security, see the Confluent Platform demo.
These examples use curl commands to interact with the Schema Registry Schema Registry API.
Commands and results are shown separately to make it easy to copy-paste the commands into a shell.
Register a new version of a schema under the subject “Kafka-key”¶
curl -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/vnd.schemaregistry.v1+json" \
--data '{"schema": "{\"type\": \"string\"}"}' \
http://localhost:8081/subjects/Kafka-key/versions
Example result:
{"id":1}
Register a new version of a schema under the subject “Kafka-value”¶
curl -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/vnd.schemaregistry.v1+json" \
--data '{"schema": "{\"type\": \"string\"}"}' \
http://localhost:8081/subjects/Kafka-value/versions
Example result:
{"id":1}
Register an existing schema to a new subject name¶
Use case: there is an existing schema registered to a subject called Kafka1
, and this same schema needs to be available to another subject called Kafka2
.
The following one-line command reads the existing schema from Kafka1-value
and registers it to Kafka2-value
.
It assumes the tool jq
is installed on your machine.
curl -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/vnd.schemaregistry.v1+json" \
--data "{\"schema\": $(curl -s http://localhost:8081/subjects/Kafka1-value/versions/latest | jq '.schema')}" \
http://localhost:8081/subjects/Kafka2-value/versions
Example result:
{"id":1}
Tip
You do not need to use the AvroConverter for topic replication or
schema management, even if the topic is Avro format. The ByteArrayConverter
retains
the “magic byte”, which is the schema ID. When a replicator is created, messages are
replicated with the schema ID. You do not need to create a schema subject. A best practice
is to avoid the use of Avro due to the overhead, as there is no real value to it in this context.
To learn more, see Tutorial: Replicating Data Between Clusters, including the use of topic.rename.format=${topic}.replica
in the subsection on Configure and run Replicator, and Replicator and Cross-Cluster Failover.
List all subjects¶
curl -X GET http://localhost:8081/subjects
Example result:
["Kafka-value","Kafka-key"]
List all subjects associated with a given ID¶
Use this two-step process to find subjects associated with a given ID:
List all the subjects.
curl -X GET http://localhost:8081/subjects
Iterate through the output from the subject list as follows, and check for the ID in the results:
curl -X GET http://localhost:8081/subjects/<INSERT SUBJECT NAME>-value/versions/latest
Fetch a schema by globally unique ID 1¶
curl -X GET http://localhost:8081/schemas/ids/1
Example result:
{"schema":"\"string\""}
List all schema versions registered under the subject “Kafka-value”¶
curl -X GET http://localhost:8081/subjects/Kafka-value/versions
Example result:
[1]
Fetch Version 1 of the schema registered under subject “Kafka-value”¶
curl -X GET http://localhost:8081/subjects/Kafka-value/versions/1
Example result:
{"subject":"Kafka-value","version":1,"id":1,"schema":"\"string\""}
Delete Version 1 of the schema registered under subject “Kafka-value”¶
curl -X DELETE http://localhost:8081/subjects/Kafka-value/versions/1
Example result:
1
See also
Delete the most recently registered schema under subject “Kafka-value”¶
curl -X DELETE http://localhost:8081/subjects/Kafka-value/versions/latest
Example result:
2
See also
Register the same schema under the subject “Kafka-value”¶
curl -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/vnd.schemaregistry.v1+json" \
--data '{"schema": "{\"type\": \"string\"}"}' \
http://localhost:8081/subjects/Kafka-value/versions
Example result:
{"id":1}
Fetch the schema again by globally unique ID 1¶
curl -X GET http://localhost:8081/schemas/ids/1
Example result:
{"schema":"\"string\""}
Check if a schema Is registered under subject “Kafka-key”¶
curl -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/vnd.schemaregistry.v1+json" \
--data '{"schema": "{\"type\": \"string\"}"}' \
http://localhost:8081/subjects/Kafka-key
Example result:
{"subject":"Kafka-key","version":3,"id":1,"schema":"\"string\""}
Test compatibility of a schema with the latest schema under subject “Kafka-value”¶
curl -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/vnd.schemaregistry.v1+json" \
--data '{"schema": "{\"type\": \"string\"}"}' \
http://localhost:8081/compatibility/subjects/Kafka-value/versions/latest
Example result:
{"is_compatible":true}
Get the top level config¶
curl -X GET http://localhost:8081/config
Example result:
{"compatibility":"BACKWARD"}
Update compatibility requirements globally¶
curl -X PUT -H "Content-Type: application/vnd.schemaregistry.v1+json" \
--data '{"compatibility": "NONE"}' \
http://localhost:8081/config
Example result:
{"compatibility":"NONE"}
Register a schema for a new topic¶
Tip
This example and the next few examples refer to a new topic called my-kafka
which will be used to demonstrate subject-level compatibility configuration.
Assume for these examples that you have created this topic either in the Confluent Control Center or at Kafka command line using. If you would
like to stick with the command line and create the topic now to follow along, use Kafka commands similar to the following to create the topic, then check for its existence:
kafka-topics --create --bootstrap-server localhost:9092 --partitions 1 --replication-factor 1 --topic my-kafka
kafka-topics --list --bootstrap-server localhost:9092
Use the Schema Registry API to add a schema for the topic my-kafka
.
curl -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/vnd.schemaregistry.v1+json" --data '{"schema": "{\"type\":\"record\",\"name\":\"Payment\",\"namespace\":\"my.examples\",\"fields\":[{\"name\":\"id\",\"type\":\"string\"},{\"name\":\"amount\",\"type\":\"double\"}]}"}' http://localhost:8081/subjects/my-kafka-value/versions
Example result:
{"id":1}
Update compatibility requirements on a subject¶
curl -X PUT -H "Content-Type: application/vnd.schemaregistry.v1+json" --data '{"compatibility": "FULL"}' http://localhost:8081/config/my-kafka-value
Example result:
{"compatibility":"FULL"}
Get compatibility requirements on a subject¶
curl -X GET http://localhost:8081/config/my-kafka-value
Example result:
{"compatibilityLevel":"FULL"}
Tip
If the subject you ask about does not have a subject-specific compatibility level set, this command returns an error code.
For example, if you run the same command for the subject Kafka-value
, for which you have not set subject-specific compatibility, you get:
{"error_code":40401,"message":"Subject 'Kafka-value' not found."}
Show compatibility requirements in effect for a subject¶
You can use the flag defaultToGlobal
to determine what compatibility
requirements, if any, are set at the subject level and what requirements will be
used for compatibility checks. These are often, but not always, the same if
a subject has subject-level compatibility set.
For the subject
my-kafka-value
, which has a subject-specific compatibility set to “FULL”,defaultToGlobal=true
anddefaultToGlobal=false
both return{"compatibilityLevel":"FULL"}
.curl -X GET http://localhost:8081/config/my-kafka-value/?defaultToGlobal=true
Example result:
{"compatibilityLevel":"FULL"}
curl -X GET http://localhost:8081/config/my-kafka-value/?defaultToGlobal=false
Example result:
{"compatibilityLevel":"FULL"}
For the subject
Kafka-value
, for which you have not set subject-specific compatibility,defaultToGlobal=true
returns the current global default, for example:{"compatibilityLevel":"NONE"}
.curl -X GET http://localhost:8081/config/Kafka-value/?defaultToGlobal=true
Example result:
{"compatibilityLevel":"NONE"}
Whereas,
defaultToGlobal=false
on the subjectKafka-value
returns an error code:curl -X GET http://localhost:8081/config/Kafka-value/?defaultToGlobal=false
Example result:
{"error_code":40401,"message":"Subject 'Kafka-value' not found."}
Delete all schema versions registered under the subject “Kafka-value”¶
curl -X DELETE http://localhost:8081/subjects/Kafka-value
Example result:
[3]
See also
Schema Deletion Guidelines and Schema Registry in Confluent Cloud.
List schema types currently registered in Schema Registry¶
curl -X GET http://localhost:8081/schemas/types
Example result:
["JSON", "PROTOBUF", "AVRO"]
List all subject-version pairs where a given ID is used¶
curl -X GET http://localhost:8081/schemas/ids/2/versions
Example result:
[{"subject":"testproto-value","version":1}]
List IDs of schemas that reference a given schema¶
curl -X GET http://localhost:8081/subjects/other.proto/versions/1/referencedby
Example result:
[2]
Using Schema Registry over HTTPS¶
The curl command examples provided above show how to communicate with Schema Registry over HTTP.
These examples show how to communicate with Schema Registry over HTTPS. You can extrapolate from these few examples to know how to run additional commands. When communicating with Schema Registry with HTTPS enabled, apply the patterns shown for the curl commands (specifying a certificate, key, and so forth) to accomplish the other usage examples shown above. For more about configuring and using Schema Registry with security enabled, see Schema Registry Security Overview.
Verify HTTPS on Schema Registry¶
openssl s_client -connect schemaregistry:8082/subjects -cert client.certificate.pem -key client.key -tls1
Register a new version of a schema under the subject “Kafka-key”¶
curl -v -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/vnd.schemaregistry.v1+json" --data '{"schema": "{\"type\": \"string\"}"}' --cert /etc/kafka/secrets/client.certificate.pem --key /etc/kafka/secrets/client.key --tlsv1.2 --cacert /etc/kafka/secrets/snakeoil-ca-1.crt https://schemaregistry:8082/subjects/Kafka-key/versions
List all subjects¶
curl -v -X GET --cert /etc/kafka/secrets/client.certificate.pem --key /etc/kafka/secrets/client.key --tlsv1.2 --cacert /etc/kafka/secrets/snakeoil-ca-1.crt https://schemaregistry:8082/subjects/
Use curl to access Schema Registry in Confluent Cloud¶
You can also use curl commands to view and manage schemas on Confluent Cloud.
Schema Registry on Confluent Cloud requires that you pass the API Key and Secret with the --user
(or -u
) flag.
For example, to view all subjects in the registry:
curl --user <schema-registry-api-key>:<schema-registry-api-secret> \
<schema-registry-url>/subjects
For more about using Schema Registry on Confluent Cloud, see Schema Registry and Confluent Cloud.