Book Image

Building Data Streaming Applications with Apache Kafka

By : Chanchal Singh, Manish Kumar
Book Image

Building Data Streaming Applications with Apache Kafka

By: Chanchal Singh, Manish Kumar

Overview of this book

Apache Kafka is a popular distributed streaming platform that acts as a messaging queue or an enterprise messaging system. It lets you publish and subscribe to a stream of records, and process them in a fault-tolerant way as they occur. This book is a comprehensive guide to designing and architecting enterprise-grade streaming applications using Apache Kafka and other big data tools. It includes best practices for building such applications, and tackles some common challenges such as how to use Kafka efficiently and handle high data volumes with ease. This book first takes you through understanding the type messaging system and then provides a thorough introduction to Apache Kafka and its internal details. The second part of the book takes you through designing streaming application using various frameworks and tools such as Apache Spark, Apache Storm, and more. Once you grasp the basics, we will take you through more advanced concepts in Apache Kafka such as capacity planning and security. By the end of this book, you will have all the information you need to be comfortable with using Apache Kafka, and to design efficient streaming data applications with it.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)

Using Kafka in Big Data Applications

In the earlier chapters, we covered how Kafka works, what kind of different components Kafka has, and what some of the Kafka tools that we can utilize for some specific use cases are. In this chapter, our focus is on understanding the importance of Kafka in big data applications. Our intention is for you to understand how Kafka can be used in any big data use cases and what are different types of design aspects you should keep in mind while using Kafka in this manner.

Kafka is becoming the standard tool for messaging in big data applications. There are some specific reasons for it. One of the reasons for it is that we can not use databases as the one-stop destination for all. Earlier, due to lack of elegant storage systems, databases tend to be the only solution for any type of data store. If you use a database, over a period of time, the system...