Data Fabric: What Is It and Why Do You Need It?

Insight-driven businesses have the edge over others; they grow at an average of more than 30% annually. Noting this pattern, modern enterprises are trying to become data-driven organizations and get more business value out of their data. But the rise of the cloud, the emergence of the Internet of Things (IoT), and other factors mean that data is not limited to on-premises environments. In addition, there are voluminous amounts of data, many data types, and multiple storage locations. As a consequence, managing data is getting more difficult than ever.

One of the ways organizations are addressing these data management challenges is by implementing a data fabric. Using a data fabric is a viable strategy to help companies overcome the barriers that previously made it hard to access data and process it in a distributed data environment. It empowers organizations to manage mounting amounts of data with more efficiency. Data fabric is one of the more recent additions to the lexicon of data analytics. 

Gartner listed data fabric as one of the top 10 data and analytics trends for 2021.

What Is a Data Fabric?

A data fabric is an architecture that runs technologies and services to help an organization manage its data. This data can be stored in relational databases, tagged files, flat files, graph databases, and document stores.

A data fabric architecture facilitates data-centric tools and applications to access data while working with various services. These can include Apache Kafka (for real-time streaming), ODBC (open database connectivity), HDFS (Hadoop distributed file system), REST (representational state transfer) APIs, POSIX (portable operating system interface), NFS (network file system), and others. It’s also crucial for a data fabric architecture to support emerging standards.

A data fabric is agnostic to architectural approach, geographical locations, data use case, data process, and deployment platforms. With data fabric, organizations can work toward meeting one of their most desired goals: having access to the right data in real-time, with end-to-end governance-and all at a low cost.

Data Fabric vs. Data Lake

Often it happens that organizations lack clarity on what makes a data lake different from a data fabric. A data lake is a central location that stores large amounts of data in its raw and native format. However, there’s an increase in the trend of data decentralization. Some data engineers believe that it’s not practical to build a central data repository, which you can govern, clean, and update effectively.

On the other hand, a data fabric supports heterogeneous data locations. It simplifies managing data stored in disparate data repositories, which can be a data lake or a data warehouse. Therefore, a data fabric doesn’t replace a data lake. Instead, it helps it to operate better.

Why Do You Need Data fabric in Today’s Digital World?

Data fabrics empower businesses to use their existing data architectures more efficiently without structurally rebuilding every application or data store. But why is a data fabric relevant today?

Organizations are handling challenges of bigger scalability and complexity. Today, their IT systems are advanced and work with disparate environments while managing existing applications and modern applications powered by microservices.

Previously, software development teams went with their own implementation for data storage and retrieval. A typical enterprise data center stores data in relational databases (e.g., Microsoft SQL Server), non-relational databases (e.g., MongoDB), data repositories (e.g., a data warehouse), flat files, and other platforms. As a result, data is spread across rigid and isolated data silos, which creates issues for modern businesses.

Unifying this data isn’t trivial. Apps store data in a wide range of formats, even if they are using the same data. Besides, organizations store data in various siloed applications. Consolidating this data includes going through data deduplication — a process that removes duplicate copies of repeating data. Taking data to the right application at the right time is desirable, but it’s a tough nut to crack. That’s where a data fabric architecture can resolve your problem.

A data fabric helps to:

A data fabric architecture allows you to map data from different apps, making business analysis easier. Your team can draw decisions and insights from existing and new data points with connected data. For instance, suppose an authorized user in the sales department wants to look at data from marketing. A data fabric lets them access marketing data seamlessly, in the same way, they access sales data.

With a data fabric, you can build a global and agile data environment that can track and govern data across applications, environments, and users. For instance, if objects move from one environment to another, the data fabric notifies each component about this change and oversees the required processes, such as what process to run, how to run, and what’s the object’s state.

Data fabric Examples To Consider for Improving Organization’s Processes

The flexibility of a data fabric architecture helps in more ways than one. Some of the data fabric examples include the following:

Enhancing Machine Learning (ML) Models

When the right data is fed to machine learning (ML) models in a timely manner, their learning capabilities improve. ML algorithms can be used to monitor data pipelines and recommend suitable relationships and integrations. These algorithms can obtain information from data while being connected to the data fabric, go through all the business data, examine that data, and identify appropriate connections and relationships.

One of the most time-consuming elements of training ML models is getting the data ready. A data fabric architecture helps to use ML models more efficiently by reducing data preparation time. It also aids in increasing the usability of the prepared data across applications and models. When an organization distributes data across on-premises, cloud, and IoT, it’s the data fabric that provides controlled access to secure data, enhancing ML processes.

Building a Holistic Customer View

Businesses can employ a data fabric to harness data from customer activities and understand how interacting with customers can offer more value. This could include consolidating real-time data of different sales activities, the time it takes to onboard a customer, and customer satisfaction KPIs.

For instance, an IT consulting firm can consolidate data from customer support requests and rework their sales activities accordingly. The firm receives concerns from its clients regarding the lack of a tool that can help them to migrate their on-premises databases to multi-cloud environments without downtime. The firm can then recognize the need to resolve this issue, find a reliable tool to address it, and have its sales representatives recommend the tool to customers.

Security Is Key To a Successful Data Fabric Implementation

Over the past few years, cyberattacks, especially ransomware attacks, have grown at a rapid rate. So, it’s no surprise organizations are concerned about the risk these attacks pose to their data security while data is being moved from one point to another in the data fabric.

Organizations can improve data protection by incorporating security protocols to protect their data from cyber threats. These protocols include firewalls, IPSec (IP Security), and SFTP (Secure File Transfer Protocol). Another thing to consider is a dynamic and fluid access control policy, which can be adapted dynamically to tackle evolving cyber threats. With so many cyberattacks causing damages worth millions, securing your data across all points is integral for successfully implementing your data fabric architecture.

This can be addressed in multiple ways:

Building Your Data Fabric

Now that you know the benefits and some use cases of a data fabric, how can you start the transition towards a data fabric architecture in your organization? 

According to Gartner, a data fabric should have the following components:

  1. A data integration backbone that is compatible with a range of data delivery methods (including ETL, streaming, and replication).
  2. The ability to collect and curate all forms of metadata (the “data about the data”).
  3. The ability to analyze and make predictions from data and metadata using ML/AI models.
  4. A knowledge graph representing relationships between data.

While there are various ways to build a data fabric, the ideal solution simplifies the transition by complementing your existing technology stack. The right solution serves as the foundation for a data fabric by connecting with legacy and modern solutions alike. Its flexible and scalable data integration backbone supports real-time data delivery via intelligent pipelines that span hybrid cloud and multi-cloud environments. 


Striim enables a multi-cloud/hybrid cloud data fabric architecture with automated, intelligent pipelines that continuously deliver data to consumers including data warehouses and data lakes. It continuously ingests transaction data and metadata from on-premise and cloud sources and is designed ground-up for real-time streaming with:

The continuous movement of data (without data loss or duplication) is essential to mission-critical business processes. Whether a database schema changes, a node fails, or a transaction is larger than expected — Striim’s self-healing pipelines resolve the issue via automated corrective actions. For example, Striim detects schema changes in source databases (e.g. create a table, drop table, alter column/add column events), and users can set up intelligent workflows to perform desired actions in response to DDL changes. 

Learn More: On-Demand Data Fabric Webinar

Looking for more examples and use cases of enterprise data patterns including data fabric, data mesh, and more? Watch this on-demand webinar with James Serra (Data Platform Architecture Lead at EY) on “Building a Multi-Cloud Data Fabric for Analytics”. 

Topics covered include:

 

 

 

 

Top