crossplane | Cloud Native Control Planes | Continuous Deployment library
kandi X-RAY | crossplane Summary
kandi X-RAY | crossplane Summary
Crossplane is an open source Kubernetes add-on that transforms your cluster into a universal control plane. Crossplane enables platform teams to assemble infrastructure from multiple vendors, and expose higher level self-service APIs for application teams to consume, without having to write any code. Crossplane extends your Kubernetes cluster to support orchestrating any infrastructure or managed service. Compose Crossplane's granular resources into higher level abstractions that can be versioned, managed, deployed and consumed using your favorite tools and existing processes. Install Crossplane into any Kubernetes cluster to get started. Crossplane is a Cloud Native Compute Foundation project.
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QUESTION
I have below query which I am running and getting logs for Azure K8s, but its takes hour to generate the logs and i am hoping there is a better way to write what i have already written. Can some Kusto experts advice here as how can I better the performance?
...ANSWER
Answered 2022-Apr-03 at 10:56You could try starting your query as follow.
Please note the additional condition at the end.
QUESTION
I am trying to create a simple application where the app will consume Kafka message do some cql transform and publish to Kafka and below is the code:
JAVA: 1.8 Flink: 1.13 Scala: 2.11 flink-siddhi: 2.11-0.2.2-SNAPSHOT
I am using library: https://github.com/haoch/flink-siddhi
input json to Kafka:
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-May-25 at 07:59Initial guess: if you are using even time, are you sure you have defined watermarks correctly? As stated in the docs:
(...) an incoming element is initially put in a buffer where elements are sorted in ascending order based on their timestamp, and when a watermark arrives, all the elements in this buffer with timestamps smaller than that of the watermark are processed (...)
If this doesn't help, I would suggest to decompose/simplify the job to a bare minimum, for example just a source operator and some naive sink printing/logging elements. And if that works, start adding back operators one by one. You could also start by simplifying your CEP pattern as much as possible.
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