Book Image

Building Big Data Pipelines with Apache Beam

By : Jan Lukavský
Book Image

Building Big Data Pipelines with Apache Beam

By: Jan Lukavský

Overview of this book

Apache Beam is an open source unified programming model for implementing and executing data processing pipelines, including Extract, Transform, and Load (ETL), batch, and stream processing. This book will help you to confidently build data processing pipelines with Apache Beam. You’ll start with an overview of Apache Beam and understand how to use it to implement basic pipelines. You’ll also learn how to test and run the pipelines efficiently. As you progress, you’ll explore how to structure your code for reusability and also use various Domain Specific Languages (DSLs). Later chapters will show you how to use schemas and query your data using (streaming) SQL. Finally, you’ll understand advanced Apache Beam concepts, such as implementing your own I/O connectors. By the end of this book, you’ll have gained a deep understanding of the Apache Beam model and be able to apply it to solve problems.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)
1
Section 1 Apache Beam: Essentials
5
Section 2 Apache Beam: Toward Improving Usability
9
Section 3 Apache Beam: Advanced Concepts

Summary

In this chapter, we went over some of the basic theoretical concepts you will need to understand in order to keep up with the following chapters. These include the difference between processing time and event time, which is the key knowledge for being able to define the correctness of streaming computation. Processing time is mostly useful for defining the rate of the (partial) result emission via triggers, because otherwise you would always have to wait for the end of the window to get a result. We have also seen how different accumulation modes affect the output of a computation.

We have walked through the life cycle of states, as needed for aggregations. We have seen that watermarks are a systematic approach for the definition of the position in the event time and, as such, define the relationship between the event time and the processing time. We also walked through how to write your first pipeline using Beam. We'll be using these lessons as a foundation for everything we cover throughout this book.

In Chapter 2, Implementing, Testing, and Deploying Basic Pipelines, we'll be developing our understanding of pipelines even further, covering the implementation, testing, and deployment of pipelines to real distributed runners.