Programming: Apache's Kafka, LLVM's Clang and Google's Go
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Building Apache Kafka Streams applications using Red Hat AMQ Streams: Part 2
The Apache Kafka project includes a Streams Domain-Specific Language (DSL) built on top of the lower-level Stream Processor API. This DSL provides developers with simple abstractions for performing data processing operations. However, how one builds a stream processing pipeline in a containerized environment with Kafka isn’t clear. This second article in a two-part series uses the basics from the previous article to build an example application using Red Hat AMQ Streams.
Now let’s create a multi-stage pipeline operating on real-world data and consume and visualize the data.
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Clang "Interface Stubs" Merged For Offering Interface Libraries To ELF Shared Objects
In addition to Clang-Scan-Deps being merged a few days ago, another new feature for LLVM's Clang is called the Clang Interface Stubs and brings a concept from Windows/macOS over to Linux/ELF systems.
Clang Interface Stubs allows generating stub files/libraries containing the mininal information needed to build against that library. The Clang Interface Stubs can be used for limiting access to a library's internal systems or breaking up build dependencies thanks to the minimal approach.
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Five Tech Companies Discuss Golang Advantages
Since it first appeared at Google in 2009, thousands of developers (and entire businesses) have adopted the open-source coding language Go for key software-based products and services. Designed to mimic core features of C, Go’s authors sought to maximize brevity and simplicity. Today, the language’s clarity and lack of ambiguity around its syntax makes it a favorite with developers.
We spoke with technologists at five tech companies about what they’ve built in Go, and why they chose it for those particular tools and services.
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