Streaming Systems: The What, Where, When, and How of Large-Scale Data Processing
Spiral-Bound |
Tyler Akidau, Slava Chernyak, Reuven Lax
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Streaming Systems: The What, Where, When, and How of Large-Scale Data Processing
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Streaming data is a big deal in big data these days. As more and more businesses seek to tame the massive unbounded data sets that pervade our world, streaming systems have finally reached a level of maturity sufficient for mainstream adoption. With this practical guide, data engineers, data scientists, and developers will learn how to work with streaming data in a conceptual and platform-agnostic way.
Expanded from Tyler Akidau’s popular blog posts "Streaming 101" and "Streaming 102", this book takes you from an introductory level to a nuanced understanding of the what, where, when, and how of processing real-time data streams. You’ll also dive deep into watermarks and exactly-once processing with co-authors Slava Chernyak and Reuven Lax.
You’ll explore:
How streaming and batch data processing patterns compare
The core principles and concepts behind robust out-of-order data processing
How watermarks track progress and completeness in infinite datasets
How exactly-once data processing techniques ensure correctness
How the concepts of streams and tables form the foundations of both batch and streaming data processing
The practical motivations behind a powerful persistent state mechanism, driven by a real-world example
How time-varying relations provide a link between stream processing and the world of SQL and relational algebra
Publisher: Ingram Publisher Services
Original Binding: Trade Paperback
Pages: 349 pages
ISBN-10: 1491983876
Item Weight: 1.74 lbs
Dimensions: 7.0 x 1.35 x 9.2 inches
Tyler Akidau is a senior staff software engineer at Google, where he is the technical lead for the Data Processing Languages & Systems group, responsible for Google's Apache Beam efforts, Google Cloud Dataflow, and internal data processing tools like Google Flume, MapReduce, and MillWheel. His also a founding member of the Apache Beam PMC. Though deeply passionate and vocal about the capabilities and importance of stream processing, he is also a firm believer in batch and streaming as two sides of the same coin, with the real endgame for data processing systems the seamless merging between the two. He is the author of the 2015 Dataflow Model paper and the Streaming 101 and Streaming 102 articles on the O'Reilly website. His preferred mode of transportation is by cargo bike, with his two young daughters in tow.
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