Version 2.8.0 of Kafka for JUnit released
Version 2.8.0 of Kafka for JUnit has been released. It increases all Kafka dependencies to 2.8.0.
more ...Version 2.8.0 of Kafka for JUnit has been released. It increases all Kafka dependencies to 2.8.0.
more ...The last articles gave a couple of examples on how to write Kafka-enabled integration tests at various levels of abstraction using Kafka for JUnit. For component-tests, we kept the scenarios quite simple and built a minimal producer and consumer on top of the official kafka-clients
library for Java. This is perfectly fine and my personal recommendation is that you stick to this approach if you have any requirements that aren't particulary standard. Oftentimes, another abstraction layer on top of kafka-clients
that integrates well with your chosen application framework will suffice though. We will take a look at the Spring ecosystem for that matter. Hence, the question is: What do I need to do if I want write integration tests with Kafka for JUnit in the context of a Spring-based application that leverages Spring Kafka to integrate messaging capabilities?
In this article, we'll shift our attention away from component tests and will take a look at how you can leverage Kafka for JUnit in order to write system tests at a higher level of abstraction. A couple of years ago, I was exploring Spring for Kafka and implemented a couple of showcases along the way. One of these showcases is a small system of microservices that implement a solution for managing todo's according to David Allen's Getting Things Done method. This system of microservices follows a CQRS-style architecture with a dedicated microservice - call it command service - that is concerned with altering data and another dedicated microservice - call it query service - which serves the read model. We are going to use Kafka for JUnit to verify that the command service integrates properly with Apache Kafka.
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