Kora Engine, Data Quality Rules y mucho más en nuestra nueva versión del 2T'23 | Regístrese para la demostración
There has been much renewed interest in using log-centric architectures to scale distributed systems that provide efficient durability and high availability. In this approach, a collection of distributed servers can operate on a replicated log that record state changes in sequential ordering. The log itself can then be treated as the “source-of-truth”: when some of the servers fail and come back, their states can be deterministically reconstructed by replaying this log upon recovery.
Over the past years of developing and operating Kafka, we have envisioned and exercised the idea of extending its commit-log structured architecture into a replicated logging system in order to serve as the underlying data flow backbone for a wide scope of applications, such as data integration, commit log replication, and stream processing, etc. In this year’s Very Large Data Bases conference I will talk about our experience in building such a replicated logging system using Kafka and will present several of its use cases.
If you happen to be attending the VLDB conference and you’re interested in learning more about how to build a replicated log using Kafka, how to deploy it as your commit log replication layer underlying your distributed stores, etc., I invite you to attend my session or find me at the conference.
Building a Replicated Logging System with Apache Kafka
Guozhang Wang, Confluent
10:30am – 12:00pm, Thursday, September 3, 2015
41st International Conference on Very Large Data Bases
Hilton Waikoloa Hotel | Kohala Coast, Hawai’i | August 31 – September 4, 2015
You may also be interested in these blog posts by Jay Kreps (Kafka co-creator):
Putting Apache Kafka To Use: A Practical Guide to Building a Stream Data Platform (Part 1)
Putting Apache Kafka To Use: A Practical Guide to Building a Stream Data Platform (Part 2)
Feel free to share your feedback, questions, and suggestions — about my conference talk or about Kafka in general — with us at any time via https://www.confluent.io/contact or @ConfluentInc on Twitter.
"It really is an awesome time for this community,” said Jay Kreps, CEO of Confluent, in his opening keynote to over 1,500 live attendees (and 2k+ virtual viewers) from 50+ countries at Kafka Summit London.
Hi there, it’s me, Danica Fine, your friendly neighborhood Kafka Summit London Program Committee Chair. Kafka Summit London 2023 is in just over two weeks, and I’ll be joining our incredible community members at the ExCeL in London to talk all things Apache Kafka® over two jam-packed days.