Book Image

Fast Data Processing Systems with SMACK Stack

By : Raúl Estrada
Book Image

Fast Data Processing Systems with SMACK Stack

By: Raúl Estrada

Overview of this book

SMACK is an open source full stack for big data architecture. It is a combination of Spark, Mesos, Akka, Cassandra, and Kafka. This stack is the newest technique developers have begun to use to tackle critical real-time analytics for big data. This highly practical guide will teach you how to integrate these technologies to create a highly efficient data analysis system for fast data processing. We’ll start off with an introduction to SMACK and show you when to use it. First you’ll get to grips with functional thinking and problem solving using Scala. Next you’ll come to understand the Akka architecture. Then you’ll get to know how to improve the data structure architecture and optimize resources using Apache Spark. Moving forward, you’ll learn how to perform linear scalability in databases with Apache Cassandra. You’ll grasp the high throughput distributed messaging systems using Apache Kafka. We’ll show you how to build a cheap but effective cluster infrastructure with Apache Mesos. Finally, you will deep dive into the different aspect of SMACK using a few case studies. By the end of the book, you will be able to integrate all the components of the SMACK stack and use them together to achieve highly effective and fast data processing.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
Fast Data Processing Systems with SMACK Stack
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface

Summary


NoSQL is not just hype, or a young technology; it is an alternative, with known limitations and capabilities. It is not an RDBMS killer. It's more like a younger brother who is slowly growing up and taking some of the burden. Acceptance is increasing and it will be even better as NoSQL solutions mature. Skepticism may be justified, but only for concrete reasons.

Since Cassandra is an easy and free working environment, suitable for application development, we recommended it, especially with additional utilities that ease and accelerate database administration.

Cassandra has some faults (for example, user authentication and authorization are still insufficiently supported in Windows environments) and should preferably be used when there is a need to store large amounts of data.

For start-up companies that need to manipulate large amounts of data with the aim of costs reduction, implementing Cassandra in a Linux environment is a must-have.

In the next chapter, we will explore Kafka, an...