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Serverless Analytics with Amazon Athena

You're reading from  Serverless Analytics with Amazon Athena

Product type Book
Published in Nov 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800562349
Pages 438 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Authors (3):
Anthony Virtuoso Anthony Virtuoso
Profile icon Anthony Virtuoso
Mert Turkay Hocanin Mert Turkay Hocanin
Profile icon Mert Turkay Hocanin
Aaron Wishnick Aaron Wishnick
Profile icon Aaron Wishnick
View More author details

Table of Contents (20) Chapters

Preface 1. Section 1: Fundamentals Of Amazon Athena
2. Chapter 1: Your First Query 3. Chapter 2: Introduction to Amazon Athena 4. Chapter 3: Key Features, Query Types, and Functions 5. Section 2: Building and Connecting to Your Data Lake
6. Chapter 4: Metastores, Data Sources, and Data Lakes 7. Chapter 5: Securing Your Data 8. Chapter 6: AWS Glue and AWS Lake Formation 9. Section 3: Using Amazon Athena
10. Chapter 7: Ad Hoc Analytics 11. Chapter 8: Querying Unstructured and Semi-Structured Data 12. Chapter 9: Serverless ETL Pipelines 13. Chapter 10: Building Applications with Amazon Athena 14. Chapter 11: Operational Excellence – Monitoring, Optimization, and Troubleshooting 15. Section 4: Advanced Topics
16. Chapter 12: Athena Query Federation 17. Chapter 13: Athena UDFs and ML 18. Chapter 14: Lake Formation – Advanced Topics 19. Other Books You May Enjoy

Querying arbitrary log data

One very common use case for system engineers or software developers is to scan log files to find a particular logline. This may be to find when bugs have occurred, gather metrics about how a specific system performs, how users interact with a system, or to diagnose user or customer issues. There is a vast amount of useful and valuable data that comes out of log data. It's a great idea to store application log data in data to be mined in the future. Many of the AWS services are already pushing log data into S3 or can easily be configured. Athena's documentation provides templates for reading many of these services' log files, which can be found at https://amzn.to/3dJzt6H. Let's learn how Athena can be used to quickly and easily scan through logs stored on S3.

Doing full log scans on S3

Many logs are pushed to S3. Reading through those log files can be difficult and/or time-consuming when stored on S3. If those logs need to be read...

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