Best Query Engines - Page 2

Compare the Top Query Engines as of August 2024 - Page 2

  • 1
    Polars

    Polars

    Polars

    Knowing of data wrangling habits, Polars exposes a complete Python API, including the full set of features to manipulate DataFrames using an expression language that will empower you to create readable and performant code. Polars is written in Rust, uncompromising in its choices to provide a feature-complete DataFrame API to the Rust ecosystem. Use it as a DataFrame library or as a query engine backend for your data models.
  • 2
    VeloDB

    VeloDB

    VeloDB

    Powered by Apache Doris, VeloDB is a modern data warehouse for lightning-fast analytics on real-time data at scale. Push-based micro-batch and pull-based streaming data ingestion within seconds. Storage engine with real-time upsert、append and pre-aggregation. Unparalleled performance in both real-time data serving and interactive ad-hoc queries. Not just structured but also semi-structured data. Not just real-time analytics but also batch processing. Not just run queries against internal data but also work as a federate query engine to access external data lakes and databases. Distributed design to support linear scalability. Whether on-premise deployment or cloud service, separation or integration of storage and compute, resource usage can be flexibly and efficiently adjusted according to workload requirements. Built on and fully compatible with open source Apache Doris. Support MySQL protocol, functions, and SQL for easy integration with other data tools.
  • 3
    Baidu Palo

    Baidu Palo

    Baidu AI Cloud

    Palo helps enterprises to create the PB-level MPP architecture data warehouse service within several minutes and import the massive data from RDS, BOS, and BMR. Thus, Palo can perform the multi-dimensional analytics of big data. Palo is compatible with mainstream BI tools. Data analysts can analyze and display the data visually and gain insights quickly to assist decision-making. It has the industry-leading MPP query engine, with column storage, intelligent index,and vector execution functions. It can also provide in-library analytics, window functions, and other advanced analytics functions. You can create a materialized view and change the table structure without the suspension of service. It supports flexible and efficient data recovery.
  • 4
    Arroyo

    Arroyo

    Arroyo

    Scale from zero to millions of events per second. Arroyo ships as a single, compact binary. Run locally on MacOS or Linux for development, and deploy to production with Docker or Kubernetes. Arroyo is a new kind of stream processing engine, built from the ground up to make real-time easier than batch. Arroyo was designed from the start so that anyone with SQL experience can build reliable, efficient, and correct streaming pipelines. Data scientists and engineers can build end-to-end real-time applications, models, and dashboards, without a separate team of streaming experts. Transform, filter, aggregate, and join data streams by writing SQL, with sub-second results. Your streaming pipelines shouldn't page someone just because Kubernetes decided to reschedule your pods. Arroyo is built to run in modern, elastic cloud environments, from simple container runtimes like Fargate to large, distributed deployments on the Kubernetes logo Kubernetes.
  • 5
    Dremio

    Dremio

    Dremio

    Dremio delivers lightning-fast queries and a self-service semantic layer directly on your data lake storage. No moving data to proprietary data warehouses, no cubes, no aggregation tables or extracts. Just flexibility and control for data architects, and self-service for data consumers. Dremio technologies like Data Reflections, Columnar Cloud Cache (C3) and Predictive Pipelining work alongside Apache Arrow to make queries on your data lake storage very, very fast. An abstraction layer enables IT to apply security and business meaning, while enabling analysts and data scientists to explore data and derive new virtual datasets. Dremio’s semantic layer is an integrated, searchable catalog that indexes all of your metadata, so business users can easily make sense of your data. Virtual datasets and spaces make up the semantic layer, and are all indexed and searchable.