Data engineering systems are complex and interconnected with myriad and often opaque chains of dependencies. As they scale, the problems of visibility and dependency management can increase at an exponential rate. In order to turn this into a tractable problem one approach is to define and enforce contracts between producers and consumers of data. Ananth Packildurai created Schemata as a way to make the creation of schema contracts a lightweight process, allowing the dependency chains to be constructed and evolved iteratively and integrating validation of changes into standard delivery systems. In this episode he shares the design of the project and how it fits into your development practices.
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Hello and welcome to the Data Engineering Podcast, the show about modern data management
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Your host is Tobias Macey and today I’m interviewing Ananth Packkildurai about Schemata, a modelling framework for decentralised domain-driven ownership of data.
Introduction
How did you get involved in the area of data management?
Can you describe what Schemata is and the story behind it?
How does the garbage in/garbage out problem manifest in data warehouse/data lake environments?
What are the different places in a data system that schema definitions need to be established?
What are the different ways that schema management gets complicated across those various points of interaction?
Can you walk me through the end-to-end flow of how Schemata integrates with engineering practices across an organization’s data lifecycle?
How does the use of Schemata help with capturing and propagating context that would otherwise be lost or siloed?
How is the Schemata utility implemented?
What are some of the design and scope questions that you had to work through while developing Schemata?
What is the broad vision that you have for Schemata and its impact on data practices?
How are you balancing the need for flexibility/adaptability with the desire for ease of adoption and quick wins?
The core of the utility is the generation of structured messages How are those messages propagated, stored, and analyzed?
What are the pieces of Schemata and its usage that are still undefined?
What are the most interesting, innovative, or unexpected ways that you have seen Schemata used?
What are the most interesting, unexpected, or challenging lessons that you have learned while working on Schemata?
When is Schemata the wrong choice?
What do you have planned for the future of Schemata?
ananthdurai) on GitHub
@ananthdurai) on Twitter
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