Book Image

Scalable Data Architecture with Java

By : Sinchan Banerjee
Book Image

Scalable Data Architecture with Java

By: Sinchan Banerjee

Overview of this book

Java architectural patterns and tools help architects to build reliable, scalable, and secure data engineering solutions that collect, manipulate, and publish data. This book will help you make the most of the architecting data solutions available with clear and actionable advice from an expert. You’ll start with an overview of data architecture, exploring responsibilities of a Java data architect, and learning about various data formats, data storage, databases, and data application platforms as well as how to choose them. Next, you’ll understand how to architect a batch and real-time data processing pipeline. You’ll also get to grips with the various Java data processing patterns, before progressing to data security and governance. The later chapters will show you how to publish Data as a Service and how you can architect it. Finally, you’ll focus on how to evaluate and recommend an architecture by developing performance benchmarks, estimations, and various decision metrics. By the end of this book, you’ll be able to successfully orchestrate data architecture solutions using Java and related technologies as well as to evaluate and present the most suitable solution to your clients.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
1
Section 1 – Foundation of Data Systems
5
Section 2 – Building Data Processing Pipelines
11
Section 3 – Enabling Data as a Service
14
Section 4 – Choosing Suitable Data Architecture

Developing the architecture and choosing the right tools  

In data engineering, after the data has been successfully ingested and stored in a data lake or a data warehouse, often, it needs to be mined and stored for specific needs in a more sorted and customized form for reporting and analysis. In this chapter, we will discuss such a problem where a huge volume of data needs to be analyzed and stored in a more customized format for a specific downstream audience.

Problem statement

Let’s assume that an e-commerce firm, ABC, wants to analyze various kinds of user interaction on its products and determine the top-selling products for each category each month. They want to provide incentives to the top-selling products in each category. They also want to provide special offers and marketing promotion tools to products with top view-to-sale ratios but are not the top-selling products. In addition, they want to market seller tools and training, as well as marketing...