Appendix: Alternative cluster architectures
If the recommended three-tier architecture is infeasible or unnecessary due to low volume or a non-production setup, a two-tier or a one-tier architecture may suffice.
Two-tier architecture
If the recommended three-tier architecture is infeasible or unnecessary due to low volume or a non-production setup, a two-tier architecture may suffice. A two-tier architecture consists of:
Tier | Description |
---|---|
Source cluster(s) |
A dedicated cluster(s) for sources. In addition, for upsert sources:
|
Compute/Transform + Serving cluster |
A dedicated cluster for both compute/transformation and serving queries:
With a two-tier architecture, compute and queries compete for the same cluster resources.
💡 Tip: Except for when used with a sink,
subscribe, or temporal
filters, avoid creating
materialized views on a shared cluster used for both compute/transformat
operations and serving queries. Use indexed views instead.
Additional Considerations:
|
Benefits of a two-tier architecture include:
-
Support for blue/green deployments
-
More cost effective than a three-tier architecture.
However, with a two-tier architecture:
-
Compute/transform operations and queries compete for the same cluster resources.
-
Cluster restarts require rehydration of the indexes on views.
-
Clusters containing sources or sinks can only have a replication factor of 0 or 1.
One-tier architecture
If the recommended three-tier architecture is infeasible or unnecessary due to low volume or a non-production setup, a one-tier architecture may suffice for your sources, compute objects, and query serving needs.
Tier | Description |
---|---|
All-in-one cluster |
A cluster for sources, compute/transformation and serving queries:
With a 1-tier single-cluster architecture, sources, compute, and queries compete for the same cluster resources.
💡 Tip: Except for when used with a sink,
subscribe, or temporal
filters, avoid creating
materialized views on a shared cluster used for both compute/transformat
operations and serving queries. Use indexed views instead.
|
Benefits of a one-tier architecture include:
- Cost effective
Limitations of a one-tier architecture include:
-
Sources, compute objects, and queries compete for cluster resources.
-
Blue/green deployment is unsupported since sources would need to be dropped and recreated, putting strain on your upstream system during source recreation.
To support blue/green deployments, use a two-tier architecture by moving compute objects to a new cluster (i.e., recreating compute objects in a new cluster).
-
Cluster restarts require rehydration of the indexes on views.
-
Clusters containing sources or sinks can only have a replication factor of 0 or 1.