3 Integrations with Azkaban

View a list of Azkaban integrations and software that integrates with Azkaban below. Compare the best Azkaban integrations as well as features, ratings, user reviews, and pricing of software that integrates with Azkaban. Here are the current Azkaban integrations in 2024:

  • 1
    MySQL

    MySQL

    Oracle

    MySQL is the world's most popular open source database. With its proven performance, reliability, and ease-of-use, MySQL has become the leading database choice for web-based applications, used by high profile web properties including Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and all five of the top five websites*. Additionally, it is an extremely popular choice as embedded database, distributed by thousands of ISVs and OEMs.
  • 2
    Hadoop

    Hadoop

    Apache Software Foundation

    The Apache Hadoop software library is a framework that allows for the distributed processing of large data sets across clusters of computers using simple programming models. It is designed to scale up from single servers to thousands of machines, each offering local computation and storage. Rather than rely on hardware to deliver high-availability, the library itself is designed to detect and handle failures at the application layer, so delivering a highly-available service on top of a cluster of computers, each of which may be prone to failures. A wide variety of companies and organizations use Hadoop for both research and production. Users are encouraged to add themselves to the Hadoop PoweredBy wiki page. Apache Hadoop 3.3.4 incorporates a number of significant enhancements over the previous major release line (hadoop-3.2).
  • 3
    IBM Databand
    Monitor your data health and pipeline performance. Gain unified visibility for pipelines running on cloud-native tools like Apache Airflow, Apache Spark, Snowflake, BigQuery, and Kubernetes. An observability platform purpose built for Data Engineers. Data engineering is only getting more challenging as demands from business stakeholders grow. Databand can help you catch up. More pipelines, more complexity. Data engineers are working with more complex infrastructure than ever and pushing higher speeds of release. It’s harder to understand why a process has failed, why it’s running late, and how changes affect the quality of data outputs. Data consumers are frustrated with inconsistent results, model performance, and delays in data delivery. Not knowing exactly what data is being delivered, or precisely where failures are coming from, leads to persistent lack of trust. Pipeline logs, errors, and data quality metrics are captured and stored in independent, isolated systems.
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