Integrating data from multiple sources is essential in the age of big data, but it can be a challenging and time-consuming task. This handy cookbook provides dozens of ready-to-use recipes for using Apache Sqoop, the command-line interface application that optimizes data transfers between relational databases and Hadoop. Sqoop is both powerful and bewildering, but with this cookbook's problem-solution-discussion format, you'll quickly learn how to deploy and then apply Sqoop in your environment. The authors provide MySQL, Oracle, and PostgreSQL database examples on GitHub that you can easily adapt for SQL Server, Netezza, Teradata, or other relational systems. Transfer data from a single database table into your Hadoop ecosystem Keep table data and Hadoop in sync by importing data incrementally Import data from more than one database table Customize transferred data by calling various database functions Export generated, processed, or backed-up data from Hadoop to your database Run Sqoop within Oozie, Hadoop's specialized workflow scheduler Load data into Hadoop's data warehouse (Hive) or database (HBase) Handle installation, connection, and syntax issues common to specific database vendors
See more
Current price
€15.29
Original price
€17.99
Save 15%
Delivery/Collection within 10-20 working days
Product Details
Publication Date: 20 Aug 2013
Publisher: O'Reilly Media
Publication City/Country: United States
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781449364625
About Kathleen Ting
Kathleen Ting is currently a Customer Operations Engineering Manager at Cloudera where she helps customers deploy and use the Hadoop ecosystem in production. She has spoken on Hadoop ZooKeeper and Sqoop at many Big Data conferences including Hadoop World ApacheCon and OSCON. She's contributed to several projects in the open source community and is a Committer and PMC Member on Sqoop. Jarek Jarcec Cecho is currently a Software Engineer at Cloudera where he develops software to help customers better access and integrate with the Hadoop ecosystem. He has led the Sqoop community in the architecture of the next generation of Sqoop known as Sqoop 2. He's contributed to several projects in the open source community and is a Committer and PMC Member on Sqoop Flume and MRUnit.
Added to your cart:
(-)
Cart subtotal
We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue we'll assume that you are understand this. Learn more