Towards Data & Cloud #7: Data Ingestion Frameworks (Part 3)

Framework, Tools & Technology Focus

LAKSHMI VENKATESH
8 min readMar 21, 2024

Data Ingestion Frameworks:

Hadoop Distributed Architecture

Much like a vast network of interconnected villages, each specializing in a unique craft yet working together towards common prosperity, Hadoop offers a robust framework for managing and processing enormous volumes of data across clusters of computers. Imagine setting sail across a vast ocean, with each island you visit offering a unique resource critical for your voyage. Hadoop’s architecture is this archipelago, where each component is an island of capability within the sea of data.

CDP Data Platform — Source

Pillars of Hadoop:

  • Hadoop Distributed File System (HDFS): The bedrock, akin to the fertile land that holds the seeds of data. HDFS stores massive data sets across multiple nodes, ensuring reliability and high-speed access.
  • MapReduce: The artisans, transforming raw materials into valuable goods. MapReduce processes large data sets by distributing tasks across the nodes, where they are processed in parallel and produce a combined output.
  • YARN (Yet Another Resource Negotiator): The town hall, coordinating the allocation of resources and managing the bustling activity of the islands. YARN schedules tasks and manages cluster resources, balancing the workload efficiently.
  • Hadoop Common: The pathways and bridges connecting the islands, Hadoop Common provides the essential utilities and libraries that link the system’s components together, facilitating communication and data flow.

Adopting Hadoop Distributed Architecture is akin to navigating the open seas with a fleet of interconnected ships, each designed for a specific purpose yet all moving in concert towards the horizon of insights. It embodies resilience, scalability, and efficiency in the quest to tame the data deluge.

Benefits:

  • Scalability: Expand your fleet as you discover new lands, scaling your data processing capabilities horizontally across more nodes.
  • Cost-Effectiveness: Sail the seas with vessels built from commodity hardware, making the journey not only adventurous but economically viable.
  • Flexibility: Chart your course through any type of data — structured or unstructured — and in any format, unlocking the treasures within.
  • Resilience: Should a storm take down a ship, the fleet sails on, with data automatically replicated across other vessels, ensuring no treasure is ever truly lost.

Hadoop Distributed Architecture charts a course through the uncharted waters of Big Data, offering a map to navigate the complexities of processing and managing voluminous data. It’s a journey of discovery, where the scalability of the seas meets the resilience of the fleet, guiding adventurers towards insights as vast as the ocean itself.

Data Integration Frameworks:

Data integration is a process of combining data from multiple sources, providing businesses with a comprehensive view that informs smarter decisions.

The Steps of Data Integration

  1. Ingestion: Collect data, whether structured, semi-structured, or unstructured, from various origins like databases, applications, APIs, or IoT devices, in formats including XML and JSON.
  2. Consolidation: Apply transformations — cleaning, merging, filtering, etc. — to harmonize the data.
  3. Importation: Load the transformed data into a central repository, such as a database or data lake, for analysis with tools like Tableau or Qlik.

Crucial Components for Effective Integration

  • Data ingestion strategies
  • ETL (Extract, Transform, Load) or ELT (Extract, Load, Transform) workflows
  • Metadata management for data understanding and control
  • Data quality management to ensure accuracy
  • Security and governance for data protection

Varieties of Data Integration

  • Batch Processing: Accumulates data in batches for periodic integration.
  • Real-Time Processing: Handles immediate data flows, enabling up-to-the-minute analysis.

A plethora of tools exist to support both data ingestion and the broader integration process, streamlining and automating these critical tasks. By mastering data integration, businesses can unlock the full value of their data, leading to enhanced analytics and more informed strategic decisions.

Data Tools & Technologies:

Amazon Web Services:

  1. Amazon Kinesis: This is a real-time data streaming service that can handle massive streams of data. It consists of several tools:
  • Kinesis Data Streams: For building custom applications that process or analyze streaming data for specialized needs.
  • Kinesis Data Firehose: For loading streaming data into AWS data stores.
  • Kinesis Data Analytics: For processing and analyzing streaming data with SQL or Apache Flink.

2. AWS Glue: This is a managed extract, transform, and load (ETL) service that makes it simple to prepare and load data for analytics. You can create and run an ETL job with a few clicks in the AWS Management Console.

3. Amazon Simple Storage Service (S3): While S3 is primarily a storage service, it is often used as a landing zone for data ingestion. You can easily move large volumes of data into S3 using various data transfer methods.

4. AWS Direct Connect: This service provides a dedicated network connection from your premises to AWS, which can be used for high-speed, secure data ingestion.

5. AWS Snowball: A physical device to transport terabytes to petabytes of data into and out of AWS, helpful for large-scale data migrations.

6. AWS Database Migration Service (DMS): This service helps you migrate databases to AWS quickly and securely. It’s also capable of continuously replicating data with high availability.

7. Amazon API Gateway: This service allows developers to create, publish, maintain, monitor, and secure APIs at any scale. It can be used as a front-door mechanism to ingest data from web applications.

8. AWS DataSync: This online data transfer service simplifies, automates, and accelerates moving and synchronizing data between on-premises storage systems and AWS storage services.

9. Amazon Managed Streaming for Apache Kafka (MSK): This is a managed service that makes it easy to build and run applications that use Apache Kafka to process streaming data.

10. AWS S3 Select to transfer the data.

Azure:

  1. Azure Data Factory: A cloud-based data integration service that allows you to create, schedule, and orchestrate your ETL/ELT workflows.
  2. Azure Stream Analytics: A real-time analytics and complex event-processing engine that is designed to analyze and process high volumes of fast-streaming data from multiple sources simultaneously.
  3. Azure Event Hubs: A highly scalable data streaming platform and event ingestion service capable of receiving and processing millions of events per second.
  4. Azure IoT Hub: A managed service that acts as a central message hub for bi-directional communication between IoT applications and the devices it manages.
  5. Azure Databricks: An Apache Spark-based analytics platform optimized for the Microsoft Azure cloud services platform. It provides a collaborative environment with a workspace for data science, data engineering, and business analytics.
  6. Azure Logic Apps: This service helps you schedule, automate, and orchestrate tasks, business processes, and workflows when you need to integrate apps, data, systems, and services across enterprises or organizations.
  7. Azure HDInsight: A cloud distribution of Hadoop components for processing big data, including capabilities for ETL, storage, and data processing.

GCP:

  1. Pub/Sub: A real-time messaging service that allows for the ingestion of event streams and can serve as a messaging backbone for other services.
  2. Dataflow: An auto-scaling stream and batch data processing service that can be used to ingest, process, and analyze data. It’s built on Apache Beam.
  3. Dataprep: An intelligent data service for visually exploring, cleaning, and preparing data for analysis.
  4. Transfer Service: Offers services for batch transfers like:
  • Storage Transfer Service: For moving large volumes of data to Google Cloud Storage from other cloud storage providers or online data sources.
  • BigQuery Data Transfer Service: For automating data movement into BigQuery on a scheduled, managed basis.

5. Dataproc: A fast, easy-to-use, fully managed cloud service for running Apache Spark and Apache Hadoop clusters to process data.

6. Cloud IoT Core: A fully managed service to easily and securely connect, manage, and ingest data from globally dispersed devices.

7. Cloud SDK: A set of tools including gsutil and bq command-line tools for interacting with Google Cloud products and services, including data ingestion into services like Cloud Storage and BigQuery.

8. Cloud Composer: A fully managed workflow orchestration service built on Apache Airflow, which can be used to create, schedule, and monitor data ingestion pipelines.

9. Cloud Data Fusion: A fully managed, cloud-native data integration service that helps build and manage ETL/ELT data pipelines.

Other Cloud / Hybrid Platform:

  1. Apache NiFi: An open-source data ingestion platform which provides real-time control that makes it easy to manage the movement of data between any source and any destination.
  2. Apache Kafka: A distributed event streaming platform capable of handling trillions of events a day. It can be deployed in the cloud, on-premises, or in a hybrid setup.
  3. Confluent Platform: Built on Apache Kafka, Confluent provides a streaming platform that can be deployed on-premises or in the cloud and is designed to handle massive amounts of data.
  4. Informatica Cloud Data Integration: A cloud-based data integration platform that offers services for connecting, synchronizing, and relating data, applications, and processes in a hybrid environment.
  5. Talend Data Fabric: A suite of cloud apps designed to integrate data and applications in real-time across modern big data and cloud environments, as well as traditional systems.
  6. Dell Boomi: An iPaaS (Integration Platform as a Service) that supports cloud-to-cloud, SaaS-to-SaaS, cloud-to-on-premises, on-premises-to-on-premises and B2B integration.
  7. Striim: An end-to-end real-time data integration and streaming analytics platform that operates in the cloud, on-premises, or in hybrid environments.
  8. Fivetran: A cloud-based service that helps analysts replicate data from various sources into a cloud data warehouse.
  9. Snowflake: While primarily known as a cloud data warehouse, Snowflake also offers data ingestion capabilities through Snowpipe, which allows for continuous, automated loading of data.
  10. Qlik Replicate (formerly Attunity Replicate): A data replication and ingestion software that allows for moving and synchronizing data across a wide range of databases, data warehouses, and Hadoop, both on-premises and in the cloud.
  11. MuleSoft Anypoint Platform: An integration platform for connecting SaaS and enterprise applications in the cloud and on-premises.
  12. IBM DataStage: A data integration tool that allows for designing, developing, and running jobs that move and transform data on-premises and in the cloud.
  13. DBT: DBT (Data Build Tool) focuses on transforming data in the warehouse, but there are several technologies and tools that complement DBT by focusing on the ingestion part of the data pipeline.
  14. Airbyte: An open-source data integration platform that syncs data from databases, APIs, and SaaS applications to data warehouses, lakes, and databases.
  15. Singer: An open-source standard for writing scripts that move data. It provides a collection of connectors (taps and targets) for extracting and loading data.
  16. StreamSets: A data integration platform for designing, deploying, and managing data flows in complex architectures, supporting both batch and streaming data.
  17. Stitch Data: A simple, powerful ETL service for businesses of all sizes to rapidly move data from a multitude of sources into data warehouses.
  18. IBM MQ: A messaging middleware that enables applications to communicate and exchange data in a reliable, scalable, and secure way across diverse environments. It facilitates the asynchronous integration of distributed systems through message queues, ensuring that messages are delivered once and only once.

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LAKSHMI VENKATESH

I learn by Writing; Data, AI, Cloud and Technology. All the views expressed here are my own views and does not represent views of my firm that I work for.