6 Integrations with VeloDB

View a list of VeloDB integrations and software that integrates with VeloDB below. Compare the best VeloDB integrations as well as features, ratings, user reviews, and pricing of software that integrates with VeloDB. Here are the current VeloDB 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.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 2
    Apache Kafka

    Apache Kafka

    The Apache Software Foundation

    Apache Kafka® is an open-source, distributed streaming platform. Scale production clusters up to a thousand brokers, trillions of messages per day, petabytes of data, hundreds of thousands of partitions. Elastically expand and contract storage and processing. Stretch clusters efficiently over availability zones or connect separate clusters across geographic regions. Process streams of events with joins, aggregations, filters, transformations, and more, using event-time and exactly-once processing. Kafka’s out-of-the-box Connect interface integrates with hundreds of event sources and event sinks including Postgres, JMS, Elasticsearch, AWS S3, and more. Read, write, and process streams of events in a vast array of programming languages.
  • 3
    dbt

    dbt

    dbt Labs

    Version control, quality assurance, documentation and modularity allow data teams to collaborate like software engineering teams. Analytics errors should be treated with the same level of urgency as bugs in a production product. Much of an analytic workflow is manual. We believe workflows should be built to execute with a single command. Data teams use dbt to codify business logic and make it accessible to the entire organization—for use in reporting, ML modeling, and operational workflows. Built-in CI/CD ensures that changes to data models move appropriately through development, staging, and production environments. dbt Cloud also provides guaranteed uptime and custom SLAs.
    Starting Price: $50 per user per month
  • 4
    Apache Doris

    Apache Doris

    The Apache Software Foundation

    Apache Doris is a modern data warehouse for real-time analytics. It delivers lightning-fast analytics on real-time data at scale. Push-based micro-batch and pull-based streaming data ingestion within a second. Storage engine with real-time upsert, append and pre-aggregation. Optimize for high-concurrency and high-throughput queries with columnar storage engine, MPP architecture, cost based query optimizer, vectorized execution engine. Federated querying of data lakes such as Hive, Iceberg and Hudi, and databases such as MySQL and PostgreSQL. Compound data types such as Array, Map and JSON. Variant data type to support auto data type inference of JSON data. NGram bloomfilter and inverted index for text searches. Distributed design for linear scalability. Workload isolation and tiered storage for efficient resource management. Supports shared-nothing clusters as well as separation of storage and compute.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 5
    Apache Spark

    Apache Spark

    Apache Software Foundation

    Apache Spark™ is a unified analytics engine for large-scale data processing. Apache Spark achieves high performance for both batch and streaming data, using a state-of-the-art DAG scheduler, a query optimizer, and a physical execution engine. Spark offers over 80 high-level operators that make it easy to build parallel apps. And you can use it interactively from the Scala, Python, R, and SQL shells. Spark powers a stack of libraries including SQL and DataFrames, MLlib for machine learning, GraphX, and Spark Streaming. You can combine these libraries seamlessly in the same application. Spark runs on Hadoop, Apache Mesos, Kubernetes, standalone, or in the cloud. It can access diverse data sources. You can run Spark using its standalone cluster mode, on EC2, on Hadoop YARN, on Mesos, or on Kubernetes. Access data in HDFS, Alluxio, Apache Cassandra, Apache HBase, Apache Hive, and hundreds of other data sources.
  • 6
    Apache Flink

    Apache Flink

    Apache Software Foundation

    Apache Flink is a framework and distributed processing engine for stateful computations over unbounded and bounded data streams. Flink has been designed to run in all common cluster environments, perform computations at in-memory speed and at any scale. Any kind of data is produced as a stream of events. Credit card transactions, sensor measurements, machine logs, or user interactions on a website or mobile application, all of these data are generated as a stream. Apache Flink excels at processing unbounded and bounded data sets. Precise control of time and state enable Flink’s runtime to run any kind of application on unbounded streams. Bounded streams are internally processed by algorithms and data structures that are specifically designed for fixed sized data sets, yielding excellent performance. Flink is designed to work well each of the previously listed resource managers.
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