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Announcing zero-ETL integrations with AWS Databases and Amazon Redshift | Amazon Web Services

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As customers become more data driven and use data as a source of competitive advantage, they want to easily run analytics on their data to better understand their core business drivers to grow sales, reduce costs, and optimize their businesses. To run analytics on their operational data, customers often build solutions that are a combination of a database, a data warehouse, and an extract, transform, and load (ETL) pipeline. ETL is the process data engineers use to combine data from different sources.

Through customer feedback, we learned that lot of undifferentiated time and resources go towards building and managing ETL pipelines between transactional databases and data warehouses. At Amazon Web Services (AWS), our goal is to make it easier for our customers to connect to and use all of their data and to do it with the speed and agility they need. We think that by automating the undifferentiated parts, we can help our customers increase the pace of their data-driven innovation by breaking down data silos and simplifying data integration.

Bringing operational data closer to analytics workflows

Customers want flexible data architectures that let them integrate data across their organization to give them a better picture of their customers, streamline operations, and help teams make better, faster decisions. But integrating data isn’t easy. Today, building these pipelines and assembling the architecture to interconnect all the data sources and optimize analytics results is complex, requires highly skilled resources, and renders data that can be erroneous or is often inconsistent.

Amazon Redshift powers data driven decisions for tens of thousands of customers every day with a fully managed, artificial intelligence (AI)-powered cloud data warehouse that delivers the best price-performance for your analytics workloads.

Zero-ETL is a set of integrations that eliminates the need to build ETL data pipelines. Zero-ETL integrations with Amazon Redshift enable customers to access their data in place using federated queries or ingest it into Amazon Redshift with a fully managed solution from across their databases. With newer features, such as support for autocopy that simplifies and automates file ingestion from Amazon Simple Storage Service (Amazon S3), Redshift Streaming Ingestion capabilities to continuously ingest any amount of streaming data directly into the warehouse, and multi-cluster data sharing architectures that minimize data movement and even provide access to third-party data, Amazon Redshift enables data integration and quick access to data without building manual pipelines.

With all the data integrated and available, Amazon Redshift empowers every data user to run analytics and build AI, machine learning (ML), and generative AI applications. Developers can run Apache Spark applications directly on the data in their warehouse from AWS analytics services, such as Amazon EMR and AWS Glue. They can enrich their datasets by joining operational data replicated through zero-ETL integrations with other sources such as sales and marketing data from SaaS applications and can even create Amazon QuickSight dashboards on top of this data to track key metrics across sales, website analytics, operations, and more—all in one place.

Customers can also use Amazon Redshift data sharing to securely share this data with multiple consumer clusters used by different teams—both within and across AWS accounts—driving a unified view of business and facilitating self-service access to application data within team clusters while maintaining governance over sensitive operational data.

Furthermore, customers can build machine learning models directly on their operational data in Amazon Redshift ML (native integration into Amazon SageMaker) without needing to build any data pipelines and use them to run billions of predictions with SQL commands. Or they can build complex transformations and aggregations on the integrated data using Amazon Redshift materialized views.

We’re excited to share four AWS database zero-ETL integrations with Amazon Redshift:

By bringing different database services closer to analytics, AWS is streamlining access to data and enabling companies to accelerate innovation, create competitive advantage, and maximize the business value extracted from their data assets.

Amazon Aurora zero-ETL integration with Amazon Redshift

The Amazon Aurora zero-ETL integration with Amazon Redshift unifies transactional data from Amazon Aurora with near real-time analytics in Amazon Redshift. This eliminates the burden of building and maintaining custom ETL pipelines between the two systems. Unlike traditional siloed databases that force a tradeoff between performance and analytics, the zero-ETL integration replicates data from multiple Aurora clusters into the same Amazon Redshift warehouse. This enables holistic insights across applications without impacting production workloads. The entire system can be serverless and can auto-scale to handle fluctuations in data volume without infrastructure management.

Amazon Aurora MySQL zero-ETL integration with Amazon Redshift processes over 1 million transactions per minute (an equivalent of 17.5 million insert/update/delete row operations per minute) from multiple Aurora databases and makes them available in Amazon Redshift in less than 15 seconds (p50 latency lag). Figure 1 shows how the Aurora MySQL zero-ETL integration with Amazon Redshift works at a high level.

Figure 1: High level working of Aurora MySQL zero-ETL integration with Amazon Redshift

In their own words, see how one of our customers is using Aurora MySQL zero-ETL integration with Amazon Redshift.

In the retail industry, for example, Infosys wanted to gain faster insights about their business, such as best-selling products and high-revenue stores, based on transactions in a store management system. They used Amazon Aurora MySQL zero-ETL integration with Amazon Redshift to achieve this. With this integration, Infosys replicated Aurora data to Amazon Redshift and created Amazon QuickSight dashboards for product managers and channel leaders in just a few seconds, instead of several hours. Now, as part of Infosys Cobalt and Infosys Topaz blueprints, enterprises can have near real-time analytics on transactional data, which can help them make informed decisions related to store management.

– Sunil Senan, SVP and Global Head of Data, Analytics, and AI, Infosys

To learn more, see Aurora Docs, Amazon Redshift Docs, and the AWS News Blog.

Amazon RDS for MySQL zero-ETL integration with Amazon Redshift

The new Amazon RDS for MySQL integration with Amazon Redshift empowers customers to easily perform analytics on their RDS for MySQL data. With a few clicks, it seamlessly replicates RDS for MySQL data into Amazon Redshift, automatically handling initial data loads, ongoing change synchronization, and schema replication. This eliminates the complexity of traditional ETL jobs. The zero-ETL integration enables workload isolation for optimal performance; RDS for MySQL focuses on high-speed transactions while Amazon Redshift handles analytical workloads. Customers can also consolidate data from multiple sources into Amazon Redshift, such as Aurora MySQL-Compatible Edition and Aurora PostgreSQL-Compatible Edition. This unified view provides holistic insights across applications in one place, delivering significant cost and operational efficiencies.

Figure 2 shows how a customer can use the AWS Management Console for Amazon RDS to get started with creating a zero-ETL integration from RDS for MySQL, Aurora MySQL-Compatible Edition, and Aurora PostgreSQL-Compatible Edition to Amazon Redshift.

Figure 2: How to create a zero-ETL integration using Amazon RDS.

This integration is currently in public preview, visit the getting started guide to learn more.

Amazon DynamoDB zero-ETL integration with Amazon Redshift

The Amazon DynamoDB zero-ETL integration with Amazon Redshift (limited preview) provides a fully managed solution for making data from DynamoDB available for analytics in Amazon Redshift. With minimal configuration, customers can replicate DynamoDB data into Amazon Redshift for analytics without consuming the DynamoDB Read Capacity Units (RCU). This zero-ETL integration unlocks powerful Amazon Redshift capabilities on DynamoDB data such as high-speed SQL queries, machine learning integrations, materialized views for fast aggregations, and secure data sharing.

This integration is currently in limited preview, use this link to request access.

Integrated services bring us closer to zero-ETL

Our mission is to help customers get the most value from their data, and integrated services are key to this. That’s why we’re building towards a zero-ETL future today. By automating complex ETL processes, data engineers can redirect their focus on creating value from the data. With this modern approach to data management, organizations can accelerate their use of data to streamline operations and fuel business growth.


About the author

Jyoti Aggarwal is a Product Management lead for Amazon Redshift zero-ETL. She brings along an expertise in cloud compute and storage, data warehouse, and B2B/B2C customer experience.

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