Designing Data-Intensive Applications

Data is at the center of many challenges in system design today. Difficult issues need to be figured out, such as scalability, consistency, reliability, efficiency, and maintainability. In addition, we have an overwhelming variety of tools, including relational databases, NoSQL datastores, stream or batch processors, and message brokers. What are the right choices for your application? How do you make sense of all these buzzwords?

In this practical and comprehensive guide, author Martin Kleppmann helps you navigate this diverse landscape by examining the pros and cons of various technologies for processing and storing data. Software keeps changing, but the fundamental principles remain the same. With this book, software engineers and architects will learn how to apply those ideas in practice, and how to make full use of data in modern applications.

614 pages. ISBN 978-1-4493-7332-0 (paperback), 978-1-4919-0308-7 (ebook). Available in all good bookshops; see dataintensive.net for links.

Praise for DDIA

“This book is awesome. It bridges the huge gap between distributed systems theory and practical engineering. I wish it had existed a decade ago, so I could have read it then and saved myself all the mistakes along the way.”

— Jay Kreps, Creator of Apache Kafka and CEO of Confluent

“This book should be required reading for software engineers. Designing Data-Intensive Applications is a rare resource that connects theory and practice to help developers make smart decisions as they design and implement data infrastructure and systems.”

— Kevin Scott, Chief Technology Officer at Microsoft

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Designing Data-Intensive Applications

I am an Associate Professor working on local-first software and security protocols at the University of Cambridge. If you find my work useful, please support me on Patreon.

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