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Serverless ETL and Analytics with AWS Glue

You're reading from  Serverless ETL and Analytics with AWS Glue

Product type Book
Published in Aug 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800564985
Pages 434 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Authors (6):
Vishal Pathak Vishal Pathak
Profile icon Vishal Pathak
Subramanya Vajiraya Subramanya Vajiraya
Profile icon Subramanya Vajiraya
Noritaka Sekiyama Noritaka Sekiyama
Profile icon Noritaka Sekiyama
Tomohiro Tanaka Tomohiro Tanaka
Profile icon Tomohiro Tanaka
Albert Quiroga Albert Quiroga
Profile icon Albert Quiroga
Ishan Gaur Ishan Gaur
Profile icon Ishan Gaur
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Table of Contents (20) Chapters

Preface 1. Section 1 – Introduction, Concepts, and the Basics of AWS Glue
2. Chapter 1: Data Management – Introduction and Concepts 3. Chapter 2: Introduction to Important AWS Glue Features 4. Chapter 3: Data Ingestion 5. Section 2 – Data Preparation, Management, and Security
6. Chapter 4: Data Preparation 7. Chapter 5: Data Layouts 8. Chapter 6: Data Management 9. Chapter 7: Metadata Management 10. Chapter 8: Data Security 11. Chapter 9: Data Sharing 12. Chapter 10: Data Pipeline Management 13. Section 3 – Tuning, Monitoring, Data Lake Common Scenarios, and Interesting Edge Cases
14. Chapter 11: Monitoring 15. Chapter 12: Tuning, Debugging, and Troubleshooting 16. Chapter 13: Data Analysis 17. Chapter 14: Machine Learning Integration 18. Chapter 15: Architecting Data Lakes for Real-World Scenarios and Edge Cases 19. Other Books You May Enjoy

Dealing with Join performance issues with big fact and small dimension tables in ETL workloads

In a scenario where you are joining a big fact table with a small dimension table, Spark can apply the join operation using two different join techniques – it can use a Sort Merge/Shuffle Hash join if both tables are bigger or a Broadcast join if one of the datasets for the underlying table is small enough to be stored in the Spark memory of all executors.

A broadcast join can significantly increase performance and helps with optimizing join operations. A join operation can result in a large data shuffle across the network between the different executors running on multiple workers. This leads to out-of-memory (OOM) errors or data spilling to physical disks on the respective workers. While using a broadcast join, you must ensure the smaller table is broadcasted to the executors running on the worker nodes. By doing so, each of the executors running on the workers will be capable...

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