Book Image

Building ETL Pipelines with Python

By : Brij Kishore Pandey, Emily Ro Schoof
5 (1)
Book Image

Building ETL Pipelines with Python

5 (1)
By: Brij Kishore Pandey, Emily Ro Schoof

Overview of this book

Modern extract, transform, and load (ETL) pipelines for data engineering have favored the Python language for its broad range of uses and a large assortment of tools, applications, and open source components. With its simplicity and extensive library support, Python has emerged as the undisputed choice for data processing. In this book, you’ll walk through the end-to-end process of ETL data pipeline development, starting with an introduction to the fundamentals of data pipelines and establishing a Python development environment to create pipelines. Once you've explored the ETL pipeline design principles and ET development process, you'll be equipped to design custom ETL pipelines. Next, you'll get to grips with the steps in the ETL process, which involves extracting valuable data; performing transformations, through cleaning, manipulation, and ensuring data integrity; and ultimately loading the processed data into storage systems. You’ll also review several ETL modules in Python, comparing their pros and cons when building data pipelines and leveraging cloud tools, such as AWS, to create scalable data pipelines. Lastly, you’ll learn about the concept of test-driven development for ETL pipelines to ensure safe deployments. By the end of this book, you’ll have worked on several hands-on examples to create high-performance ETL pipelines to develop robust, scalable, and resilient environments using Python.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
1
Part 1:Introduction to ETL, Data Pipelines, and Design Principles
Free Chapter
2
Chapter 1: A Primer on Python and the Development Environment
5
Part 2:Designing ETL Pipelines with Python
11
Part 3:Creating ETL Pipelines in AWS
15
Part 4:Automating and Scaling ETL Pipelines

Best Practices for ETL Pipelines

Up to this point in the book, we’ve gone through various tools and methods to create reliable, scalable, and maintainable ETL pipelines. We’ve also spent time discussing the concept of “garbage in, garbage out,” where the data quality and integrity of both the source and expected output data need to be prioritized throughout pipeline design and implementation, or the pipeline fails to perform its purpose. However, we haven’t spent a significant amount of time discussing some of the most common pitfalls to be cognizant of while building these pipelines.

In this chapter, we will discuss the importance of monitoring and logging each activity process within every pipeline you build, and how error handling and recovery mechanisms will save you hours of frustration while debugging and troubleshooting a deployed pipeline. To create effective logging, we need to first discuss which aspects of your pipelines need to be tracked...