Book Image

Practical Real-time Data Processing and Analytics

Book Image

Practical Real-time Data Processing and Analytics

Overview of this book

With the rise of Big Data, there is an increasing need to process large amounts of data continuously, with a shorter turnaround time. Real-time data processing involves continuous input, processing and output of data, with the condition that the time required for processing is as short as possible. This book covers the majority of the existing and evolving open source technology stack for real-time processing and analytics. You will get to know about all the real-time solution aspects, from the source to the presentation to persistence. Through this practical book, you’ll be equipped with a clear understanding of how to solve challenges on your own. We’ll cover topics such as how to set up components, basic executions, integrations, advanced use cases, alerts, and monitoring. You’ll be exposed to the popular tools used in real-time processing today such as Apache Spark, Apache Flink, and Storm. Finally, you will put your knowledge to practical use by implementing all of the techniques in the form of a practical, real-world use case. By the end of this book, you will have a solid understanding of all the aspects of real-time data processing and analytics, and will know how to deploy the solutions in production environments in the best possible manner.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

Storm and Cassandra topology


As discussed in Chapter 4Setting up the Infrastructure for Storm, Storm has spouts and bolts. The Casandra bolt is required to persist records. There are two common ways to integrate Storm with Cassandra. The first is by using the storm-cassandra built-in library where you just need to call CassndraBolt and the required parameters. The second way is by using the DataStax Cassandra library, which needs to be imported using the build manager and using the wrapper classes to make a connection with Cassandra. The following are the steps to integrate Storm with Cassandra using the DataStax library:

  1. Add the following dependencies:
<dependency> 
    <groupId>com.datastax.cassandra</groupId> 
    <artifactId>cassandra-driver-core</artifactId> 
    <version>3.1.0</version> 
</dependency> 
<dependency> 
    <groupId>com.datastax.cassandra</groupId> 
    <artifactId>cassandra-driver-mapping</artifactId...