Debezium Blog
As the summer concludes for us in the north and we await the autumn colors, the team has been busy preparing for the next major release of Debezium 2.4. It’s my pleasure to announce today that we are nearly there with the release of Debezium 2.4.0.CR1. The focus for this release is primarily on stability; however, we do have a few new last minute addititons that we should highlight, so let’s dive right in, shall...
It has been nearly two weeks since our last preview release of the Debezium 2.4 series, and I am thrilled to announcement the next installation of that series, Debezium 2.4.0.Beta2.
While typically beta releases focus on stability and bugs, this release includes quite a number of noteworthy improves and new features including a new ingestion method for Oracle using OpenLogReplicator, a new single message transform to handle timezone conversions, custom authentication support for MongoDB, configurable order for the MongoDB aggregation pipeline, and lastly support for MongoDB 7.
Let’s take a few moments and dive into all these new features, improvements, and changes in more detail.
The Debezium UI team continues to add support for more features, allowing users to configure connectors more easily. In this article, we’ll describe and demonstrate how to provide the additional properties for configuration that the UI does not expose by default. Read further for more information!
It is my pleasure to announce the immediate release of Debezium 2.3.3.Final.
This release includes several bug fixes to address regressions, stability, documentation updates. If you are currently looking to upgrade to the Debezium 2.3.x release stream, we highly recommend you consider using this release. Let’s take a quick look into the regressions and bug fixes.
While development remains steadfast as we continue forward on Debezium 2.4, I am thrilled to announce the immediate availability of Debezium 2.4.0.Beta1.
While this release focuses on stability and bug fixes, there are several new noteworthy features including TimescaleDB support, JMX notifications using JSON payloads, multiple improvements to the Oracle connector’s metrics and embedded Infinispan buffer implementation, SQL Server heartbeats, Vitess shardless strategy, JDBC sink with SQL Server identity-based inserts, and much more. Let’s dive into each of thees new features and others in more detail.