Book Image

Data Lake for Enterprises

By : Vivek Mishra, Tomcy John, Pankaj Misra
Book Image

Data Lake for Enterprises

By: Vivek Mishra, Tomcy John, Pankaj Misra

Overview of this book

The term "Data Lake" has recently emerged as a prominent term in the big data industry. Data scientists can make use of it in deriving meaningful insights that can be used by businesses to redefine or transform the way they operate. Lambda architecture is also emerging as one of the very eminent patterns in the big data landscape, as it not only helps to derive useful information from historical data but also correlates real-time data to enable business to take critical decisions. This book tries to bring these two important aspects — data lake and lambda architecture—together. This book is divided into three main sections. The first introduces you to the concept of data lakes, the importance of data lakes in enterprises, and getting you up-to-speed with the Lambda architecture. The second section delves into the principal components of building a data lake using the Lambda architecture. It introduces you to popular big data technologies such as Apache Hadoop, Spark, Sqoop, Flume, and ElasticSearch. The third section is a highly practical demonstration of putting it all together, and shows you how an enterprise data lake can be implemented, along with several real-world use-cases. It also shows you how other peripheral components can be added to the lake to make it more efficient. By the end of this book, you will be able to choose the right big data technologies using the lambda architectural patterns to build your enterprise data lake.
Table of Contents (23 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
Foreword
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface
Part 1 - Overview
Part 2 - Technical Building blocks of Data Lake
Part 3 - Bringing It All Together

Chapter 2. Comprehensive Concepts of a Data Lake

The concept of a Data Lake in an enterprise was driven by certain challenges that enterprises were facing with the way the data was handled, processed and stored. Initially, all the individual applications in the enterprise, via a natural evolution cycle, started maintaining huge amounts of data themselves with almost no reuse in other applications in the same enterprise. These created information silos across various applications. As the next step of evolution, these individual applications started exposing this data across the organization as a data mart access layer over the central data warehouse. While Data Mart solved one part of the problem, other problems still persisted. These problems were more about data governance, data ownership and data accessibility, which were required to be resolved so as to have better availability of enterprise relevant data. This is where a need was felt to have Data Lakes which could not only make such...