Chapter 8. Operations
"Overall system speed is governed by the slowest component."
—Gene Amdahl
Developing ETL processes that load the data warehouse is just part of the ETL development lifecycle. The remainder of the lifecycle is dedicated to precisely executing those processes. The timing, order, and circumstances of the jobs are crucial while loading the data warehouse, whether your jobs are executed real-time or in batch. Moreover, as new jobs are built, their execution must integrate seamlessly with existing ETL processes. This chapter assumes that your ETL jobs are already built and concentrates on the operations strategy of the ETL.
In this chapter, we discuss how to build an ETL operations strategy that supports the data warehouse to make its data reliably on time. In the first half of this chapter, we discuss ETL schedulers as well as tips and techniques for supporting ETL operations once the system has been designed.
The second half of this chapter discusses the many ways in which you can measure and control ETL system performance at the job or system level. (We discuss database software performance in Chapter 7.) You have more than a dozen knobs for controlling performance, and we give you a balanced perspective on which are most important in your environment.
At the end of this chapter, we recommend a simple but effective approach to ETL system security at the database, development environment, QA-environment, production-environment, and basic file-system levels.
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