Compare the Top Query Engines that integrate with DQOps as of September 2024

This a list of Query Engines that integrate with DQOps. Use the filters on the left to add additional filters for products that have integrations with DQOps. View the products that work with DQOps in the table below.

What are Query Engines for DQOps?

Query engines are software tools designed to retrieve and process data from databases or large datasets in response to user queries. They efficiently interpret and execute search requests, optimizing the retrieval process to deliver accurate and relevant results quickly. Query engines can handle structured, semi-structured, and unstructured data, making them versatile for various applications such as data analytics, business intelligence, and search engines. They often support complex query languages like SQL and can integrate with multiple data sources to provide comprehensive insights. By optimizing data retrieval, query engines enhance the performance and usability of data-driven applications and decision-making processes. Compare and read user reviews of the best Query Engines for DQOps currently available using the table below. This list is updated regularly.

  • 1
    Google Cloud BigQuery
    BigQuery is a serverless, multicloud data warehouse that simplifies the process of working with all types of data so you can focus on getting valuable business insights quickly. At the core of Google’s data cloud, BigQuery allows you to simplify data integration, cost effectively and securely scale analytics, share rich data experiences with built-in business intelligence, and train and deploy ML models with a simple SQL interface, helping to make your organization’s operations more data-driven.
    Starting Price: $0.04 per slot hour
    View Software
    Visit Website
  • 2
    Snowflake

    Snowflake

    Snowflake

    Your cloud data platform. Secure and easy access to any data with infinite scalability. Get all the insights from all your data by all your users, with the instant and near-infinite performance, concurrency and scale your organization requires. Seamlessly share and consume shared data to collaborate across your organization, and beyond, to solve your toughest business problems in real time. Boost the productivity of your data professionals and shorten your time to value in order to deliver modern and integrated data solutions swiftly from anywhere in your organization. Whether you’re moving data into Snowflake or extracting insight out of Snowflake, our technology partners and system integrators will help you deploy Snowflake for your success.
    Starting Price: $40.00 per month
  • 3
    Amazon Athena
    Amazon Athena is an interactive query service that makes it easy to analyze data in Amazon S3 using standard SQL. Athena is serverless, so there is no infrastructure to manage, and you pay only for the queries that you run. Athena is easy to use. Simply point to your data in Amazon S3, define the schema, and start querying using standard SQL. Most results are delivered within seconds. With Athena, there’s no need for complex ETL jobs to prepare your data for analysis. This makes it easy for anyone with SQL skills to quickly analyze large-scale datasets. Athena is out-of-the-box integrated with AWS Glue Data Catalog, allowing you to create a unified metadata repository across various services, crawl data sources to discover schemas and populate your Catalog with new and modified table and partition definitions, and maintain schema versioning.
  • 4
    Trino

    Trino

    Trino

    Trino is a query engine that runs at ludicrous speed. Fast-distributed SQL query engine for big data analytics that helps you explore your data universe. Trino is a highly parallel and distributed query engine, that is built from the ground up for efficient, low-latency analytics. The largest organizations in the world use Trino to query exabyte-scale data lakes and massive data warehouses alike. Supports diverse use cases, ad-hoc analytics at interactive speeds, massive multi-hour batch queries, and high-volume apps that perform sub-second queries. Trino is an ANSI SQL-compliant query engine, that works with BI tools such as R, Tableau, Power BI, Superset, and many others. You can natively query data in Hadoop, S3, Cassandra, MySQL, and many others, without the need for complex, slow, and error-prone processes for copying the data. Access data from multiple systems within a single query.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 5
    Presto

    Presto

    Presto Foundation

    Presto is an open source distributed SQL query engine for running interactive analytic queries against data sources of all sizes ranging from gigabytes to petabytes. For data engineers who struggle with managing multiple query languages and interfaces to siloed databases and storage, Presto is the fast and reliable engine that provides one simple ANSI SQL interface for all your data analytics and your open lakehouse. Different engines for different workloads means you will have to re-platform down the road. With Presto, you get 1 familar ANSI SQL language and 1 engine for your data analytics so you don't need to graduate to another lakehouse engine. Presto can be used for interactive and batch workloads, small and large amounts of data, and scales from a few to thousands of users. Presto gives you one simple ANSI SQL interface for all of your data in various siloed data systems, helping you join your data ecosystem together.
  • 6
    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.
  • Previous
  • You're on page 1
  • Next