rtdl
pachyderm
rtdl | pachyderm | |
---|---|---|
2 | 8 | |
43 | 6,077 | |
- | 0.2% | |
0.0 | 9.8 | |
over 1 year ago | 7 days ago | |
Go | Go | |
MIT License | 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.
rtdl
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Why this subreddit dislikes the so-called Modern Data Stack?
I think my friend and I are building the solution you’re talking about. A real-time data lake that is easy to setup, uses the newest tech (not Spark and Hive), and has an extensible processing layer. https://github.com/realtimedatalake/rtdl. Fingers-crossed, but it looks like we may be a funded startup soon.
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What is the easiest way to build a real-time data lake?
For context, I work at Segment (including GTM for Segment Data Lakes) and am the co-creator of rtdl (https://github.com/realtimedatalake/rtdl). This is a problem I’m familiar with and trying to solve. I’m really curious about how others make data lakes easier and what solutions are floating around.
pachyderm
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Open Source Advent Fun Wraps Up!
20. Pachyderm | Github | tutorial
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Exploring Open-Source Alternatives to Landing AI for Robust MLOps
Pachyderm specializes in creating compliance-focused pipelines that integrate with enterprise-level storage solutions.
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Show HN: We scaled Git to support 1 TB repos
There are a couple of other contenders in this space. DVC (https://dvc.org/) seems most similar.
If you're interested in something you can self-host... I work on Pachyderm (https://github.com/pachyderm/pachyderm), which doesn't have a Git-like interface, but also implements data versioning. Our approach de-duplicates between files (even very small files), and our storage algorithm doesn't create objects proportional to O(n) directory nesting depth as Xet appears to. (Xet is very much like Git in that respect.)
The data versioning system enables us to run pipelines based on changes to your data; the pipelines declare what files they read, and that allows us to schedule processing jobs that only reprocess new or changed data, while still giving you a full view of what "would" have happened if all the data had been reprocessed. This, to me, is the key advantage of data versioning; you can save hundreds of thousands of dollars on compute. Being able to undo an oopsie is just icing on the cake.
Xet's system for mounting a remote repo as a filesystem is a good idea. We do that too :)
- pachyderm: Data-Centric Pipelines and Data Versioning
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Awesome list of VCs investing in commercial open-source startups
Pachyderm - License prevents competition.
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Airflow's Problem
I was at Airbnb when we open-sourced Airflow, it was a great solution to the problems we had at the time. It's amazing how many more use cases people have found for it since then. At the time it was pretty focused on solving our problem of orchestrating a largely static DAG of SQL jobs. It could do other stuff even then, but that was mostly what we were using it for. Airflow has become a victim of its success as it's expanded to meet every problem which could ever be considered a data workflow. The flaws and horror stories in the post and comments here definitely resonate with me. Around the time Airflow was opensource I starting working on data-centric approach to workflow management called Pachyderm[0]. By data-centric I mean that it's focused around the data itself, and its storage, versioning, orchestration and lineage. This leads to a system that feels radically different from a job focused system like Airflow. In a data-centric system your spaghetti nest of DAGs is greatly simplified as the data itself is used to describe most of the complexity. The benefit is that data is a lot simpler to reason about, it's not a living thing that needs to run in a certain way, it just exists, and because it's versioned you have strong guarantees about how it can change.
[0] https://github.com/pachyderm/pachyderm
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One secret tip for first-time OSS contributors. Shh! 🤫 don't tell anyone else
Here is a demo run of lgtm on pachyderm
- Dud: a tool for versioning data alongside source code, written in Go