Velociraptor – The Next Generation of RaptorX – Vladimir Rodionov, Carrot Cache

Velociraptor – The Next Generation of RaptorX – Vladimir Rodionov, Carrot Cache

Vladimir Rodionov, founder of Carrot Cache will present the Velociraptor – the next evolution of PrestoDB hierarchical caching framework RaptorX. Velociraptor enables efficient data and meta-data caching well beyond RaptorX limits in terms of number of data files (multi-billions), number of table partitions (multi-millions) and number of table columns (multi-thousands). Velociraptor replaces all five RaptorX caches (Hive meta-data, file list, query result fragments, ORC/Parquet meta-data and data I/O) with a scalable solution, based on Carrot Cache, which does not pollute JVM heap memory, does not affect Java Garbage Collector, keeps all data and meta-data off Java heap memory or on disk and can scale well beyond server’s physical RAM limit. Velociraptor supports server restart, by quickly saving and loading data to/from disk for automatic cache warm up.

Shared Foundations Of Composable Data Systems – Biswapesh Chattopadhyay, Google

Shared Foundations Of Composable Data Systems – Biswapesh Chattopadhyay, Google

Data processing systems have evolved significantly over the last decade, driven by various factors such as the advent of cloud computing, increasingly complexity of applications such as ML, HTAP, Streaming, Observability and Graph processing. However, historically, these frameworks have evolved independently, leading to significant fragmentation of the stack. In this talk, I will talk about how this has evolved in the open source and at Meta, and how we are solving this problem through the Shared Foundations effort, leading to composable systems. This has resulted in significantly better performance, more features, higher engineering velocity and a more consistent user experience.

Using Presto’s BigQuery Connector for Better Performance and Ad-hoc Query connector for better performance and ad-hoc query in the Cloud – George Wang & Roderick Yao

Using Presto’s BigQuery Connector for Better Performance and Ad-hoc Query connector for better performance and ad-hoc query in the Cloud – George Wang & Roderick Yao

The Google BigQuery connector gives users the ability to query tables in the BigQuery service, Google Cloud’s fully managed data warehouse. In this presentation, we’ll discuss the BigQuery Connector plugin for Presto which uses the BigQuery Storage API to stream data in parallel, allowing users to query from BigQuery tables via gPRC to achieve a better read performance. We’ll also discuss how the connector enables interactive ad-hoc query to join data across distributed systems for data lake analytics.