With increasing volumes of data to manage, enterprises are looking for appropriate infrastructure models to help them apply analytics to their big data, or simply to store them for undetermined future use. In this post, we’re going to discuss Microsoft’s entry into the data lake market, Azure Data Lake, and in particular, Azure Data Lake store.
In simple terms, a data lake is a repository for large quantities and varieties of both structured and unstructured data in their native formats. The term data lake was coined by James Dixon, CTO of Pentaho, to contrast what he called “data marts”, which handled the data reporting and analysis by identifying “the most interesting attributes, and to aggregate” them. The problems with this approach are that “only a subset of the attributes is examined, so only pre-determined questions can be answered,” and that “data is aggregated, so visibility into the lowest levels is lost.”
A data lake, on the other hand, maintains data in their native formats and handles the three Vs of big data (Volume, Velocity and Variety) while providing tools for analysis, querying, and processing. Data lake eliminates all the restrictions of a typical data warehouse system by providing unlimited space, unrestricted file size, schema on read, and various ways to access data (including programming, SQL-like queries, and REST calls).
With the emergence of Hadoop (including HDFS and YARN), the benefits of data lake – previously available only to the most resource-rich companies like Google, Yahoo, and Facebook – became a practical reality for just about anyone. Now, organizations who had been generating and gathering data on a large scale but had struggled to store and process them in a meaningful way, have more options.
Azure Data Lake is the new kid on the data lake block from Microsoft Azure. Here is some of what it offers:
Azure Data Lake can, broadly, be divided into three parts:
We’ve already been introduced to HDInsight in this series. Now we will discuss Azure Data Lake Store…which is still in Preview Mode.
According to Microsoft, Azure Data Lake store is a hyper-scale repository for big data analytics workloads and a Hadoop Distributed File System (HDFS) for the cloud. It…
Some have compared Azure Data Lake store with Amazon S3 but, beyond the fact that both provide unlimited storage space, the two really don’t share all that much in common. If you want to compare S3 to an Azure service, you’ll get better mileage with the Azure Storage Service. Azure Data Lake store, on the other hand, provides an integrated analytics service and places no limits on file size. Here’s a nice illustration:
(Image Courtesy: Microsoft)
Azure Data Lake store can handle any data in their native format, as is, without requiring prior transformations. Data Lake store does not require a schema to be defined before the data is uploaded, leaving it up to the individual analytic framework to interpret the data and define a schema at the time of the analysis. Being able to store files of arbitrary size and formats makes it possible for Data Lake store to handle structured, semi-structured, and even unstructured data.
Azure Data Lake Store can be accessed from Hadoop (available with an HDInsight cluster) using the WebHDFS-compatible REST APIs. However, Azure Data Lake store introduced a new file system called AzureDataLakeFilesystem (adl://). adl:// is optimized for performance and available in HDInsight. Data is accessed in the Data Lake store using:
adl://<data_lake_store_name>.azuredatalakestore.net
Azure Data Lake store uses Azure Active Directory (AAD) for authentication and Access Control Lists (ACLs) to manage access to your data. Azure Data Lake benefits from all AAD features including Multi-Factor Authentication, conditional access, role-based access control, application usage monitoring, security monitoring and alerting. Azure Data Lake store supports the OAuth 2.0 protocol for authentication within the REST interface. Similarly, Data Lake store provides access control by supporting POSIX-style permissions exposed by the WebHDFS protocol.
Data Lake Store is currently available in US-2 region and offers preview pricing rates (excluding Outbound Data transfer):
Azure Data Lake is an important new part of Microsoft’s ambitious cloud offering. With Data Lake, Microsoft provides service to store and analyze data of any size at an affordable cost. In related posts, we will learn more about Data Lake Store, Data Lake Analytics, and HDInsight.
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