monosi
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monosi | projects | |
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20 | 19 | |
320 | 77 | |
1.3% | - | |
0.0 | 4.7 | |
over 1 year ago | 3 months ago | |
Python | Jupyter Notebook | |
Apache License 2.0 | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
monosi
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Open source data observability tools with UI?
I also found https://github.com/monosidev/monosi but it seems there are no activities in the repository from last year.
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Databricks monitoring/observability
I'm building an open source data observability platform - https://github.com/monosidev/monosi that visualizes metadata collected from data warehouses. Databricks is currently not supported (contributions welcome!), but it may help to take a look at how we approach the anomaly detection & visualization aspects.
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Monitor PostgreSQL for anomalies in ingested data
Building an open source tool that lets you monitor PostgreSQL instances form anomalies in data coming in - https://github.com/monosidev/monosi
- Open Source Data Observability for BigQuery
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Metadata extraction and management
It’s open source, check out the repository here - https://github.com/monosidev/monosi
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How to Monitor Supabase with Monosi
🎉 Congratulations, you've just set up and scheduled a data monitor on your Supabase instance. You can now add more monitors to other tables in your database. Find more information on how to use Monosi here.
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Setting up data monitoring for PostgreSQL
Now that you’ve worked through an example using a public PostgreSQL instance, you can further extend this to your own data store. For more information, get started here.
- Monosi v0.0.3 Released! Open source Data Observability now with a Web UI, Postgres Support, & more.
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Sunday Daily Thread: What's everyone working on this week?
Continuing to build out & stabilize Monosi (open source data observability) - https://github.com/monosidev/monosi
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Data pipeline suggestions
Observability: Monosi
projects
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Analyze and plot 5.5M records in 20s with BigQuery and Ploomber
You can look at the files in detail here. For this tutorial, I'll quickly mention a few crucial details.
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Three Tools for Executing Jupyter Notebooks
Ploomber is the complete solution for notebook execution. It builds on top of papermill and extends it to allow writing multi-stage workflows where each task is a notebook. Meanwhile, it automatically manages orchestration. Hence you can run notebooks in parallel without having to write extra code.
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OOP in python ETL?
The answer is YES, you can take advantage of OOP best practices to write good ETLs. For instance in this Ploomber sample ETL You can see there's a mix of .sql and .py files, it's within modular components so it's easier to test, deploy and execute. It's way easier than airflow since there's no infra work involved, you only have to setup your pipeline.yaml file. This also allows you to make the code WAY more maintainable and scalable, avoid redundant code and deploy faster :)
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What are some good DS/ML repos where I can learn about structuring a DS/ML project?
We have tons of examples that follow a standard layout, here’s one: https://github.com/ploomber/projects/tree/master/templates/ml-intermediate
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Anyone's org using Airflow as a generalized job orchestator, not just for data engineering/ETL?
I can talk about the open-source I'm working on Ploomber (https://github.com/ploomber/ploomber), it's focusing on seamless integration with Jupyter and IDEs. It allows an easy mechanism to orchestrate work for instance, here's an example SQL ETL and then you can deploy it anywhere, so if you're working with Airflow, it'll deploy it there too but without the complexity. You wouldn't have to maintain docker images etc.
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ETL with python
I recommend using Ploomber which can help you build once and automate a lot of the work, and it works with python natively. It's open source so you can start with one of the examples, like the ML-basic example or the ETL one. It'll allow you to define the pipeline and then easily explain the flow with the DAG plot. Feel free to ask questions, I'm happy to help (I've built 100s of data pipelines over the years).
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What tools do you use for data quality?
I'm not sure what pipeline frameworks support this kind of testing, but after successfully implementing this workflow, I added this feature to Ploomber, the project I'm working on. Here's how a pipeline looks like, and here's a tutorial.
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Data pipeline suggestions
Check out Ploomber, (disclaimer: I'm the author) it has a simple API, and you can export to Airflow, AWS, Kubernetes. Supports all databases that work with Python and you can seamlessly transfer from a SQL step to a Python step. Here's an example.
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ETL Tools
Without more specifics about your use case, it's hard to give more specific advice. But check out Ploomber (disclaimer: I'm the creator) - here's an example ETL pipeline. I've used it in past projects to develop Oracle ETL pipelines. Modularizing the analysis in many parts helps a lot with maintenance.
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Whats something hot rn or whats going to be next thing we should focus on in data engineering?
Yes! (tell your friend). You can write shell scripts so you can execute that 2002 code :) You can test it locally and then run it in AWS Batch/Argo. Here's an example
What are some alternatives?
datahub - The Metadata Platform for your Data Stack
cookiecutter-data-science - A logical, reasonably standardized, but flexible project structure for doing and sharing data science work.
jitsu - Jitsu is an open-source Segment alternative. Fully-scriptable data ingestion engine for modern data teams. Set-up a real-time data pipeline in minutes, not days
ploomber - The fastest ⚡️ way to build data pipelines. Develop iteratively, deploy anywhere. ☁️
castled - Castled is an open source reverse ETL solution that helps you to periodically sync the data in your db/warehouse into sales, marketing, support or custom apps without any help from engineering teams
Kedro - Kedro is a toolbox for production-ready data science. It uses software engineering best practices to help you create data engineering and data science pipelines that are reproducible, maintainable, and modular.
soda-spark - Soda Spark is a PySpark library that helps you with testing your data in Spark Dataframes
dbt-core - dbt enables data analysts and engineers to transform their data using the same practices that software engineers use to build applications.
soda-sql - Data profiling, testing, and monitoring for SQL accessible data.
great_expectations - Always know what to expect from your data.
Python Packages Project Generator - 🚀 Your next Python package needs a bleeding-edge project structure.