OK. I’ll put it back.

The real question is if the bug in parquet-avro can be fixed. The reporter 
indicated that they had tried to fix it several times.

Ralph

> On Jan 14, 2022, at 3:33 PM, Tristan Stevens <tris...@apache.org> wrote:
> 
> -1 from me.
> 
> First wee can’t do that in a patch release, but that’s semantics.
> 
> Both the Morphlines interceptor and the  Morphlines-Solr-Sink are components 
> that are widely used amongst the community. I did some analysis last year 
> that I’ll dig out and share, but they are two of the  most used components 
> after HDFS sink, Kafka and JMS.
> 
> Whilst I agree it’s sucky that Cloudera aren’t supporting Kite anymore, I 
> wonder whether we can find a way to bring Morphlines into here, or otherwise 
> get upstream and fix the bits that need fixing.
> 
> Tristan
> 
> 
> From: Ralph Goers <ralph.go...@dslextreme.com> 
> <mailto:ralph.go...@dslextreme.com>
> Reply: dev@flume.apache.org <mailto:dev@flume.apache.org> 
> <dev@flume.apache.org> <mailto:dev@flume.apache.org>
> Date: 13 January 2022 at 15:26:12
> To: dev@flume.apache.org <dev@flume.apache.org> <mailto:dev@flume.apache.org>
> Subject:  Morphlines-solr-sink 
> 
>> While I am not having any trouble building the morphline-solr-sink 
>> component, it is dependent on the abandoned kite-sdk, which makes its life 
>> very limited.  
>> 
>> In addition, the kite-sdk has a dependency on parquet-avro which, according 
>> to https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/FLUME-3403, has vulnerabilities in 
>> every available release. 
>> 
>> Due to these factors I am going to remove the morphline-solr-sink module 
>> from Flume for the 1.10.0 release. 
>> 
>> Ralph

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