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Ssis-732-en-javhd-today-0804202302-26-30 Min — Direct & Latest

Finally, a wrote the CSV to /tmp/parsed_telemetry.csv . Dr. Liu ran the package. In the Execution Results window, the package executed in 12.3 seconds —far faster than Maya expected for a process involving a Docker container, a Kafka source, and a Java library.

Lila continued: “That aligns perfectly with what we’re piloting for a municipal traffic monitoring project. I’d love to set up a joint proof‑of‑concept with Meridian. Could we schedule a follow‑up?” The chat erupted with “Yes!” and “Let’s do it!” Dr. Liu promised to send a meeting invite after the session. Chapter 5: The Final 10 Minutes – From Theory to Practice Now the stage was set. With the memory issue resolved and the edge‑computing concept introduced, Dr. Liu turned the demo back on. SSIS-732-EN-JAVHD-TODAY-0804202302-26-30 Min

He reran the , now pointing to the enhanced Docker container with a 2 GB heap and gzip compression enabled. The execution log displayed: Finally, a wrote the CSV to /tmp/parsed_telemetry

“Okay, folks,” he said, “let’s use this moment to discuss . In a production environment, you won’t have the luxury of unlimited memory. Let’s walk through how to diagnose and fix this.” In the Execution Results window, the package executed in 12

Maya’s mind raced. If they could push the Java parser to the edge, the would drop dramatically. Instead of streaming massive LIDAR point clouds to the data center, the edge device would only send summary statistics —speed averages, anomaly flags, etc.

[00:00:00] Package started. [00:00:01] Kafka source read 1,200 messages (total 5.1 MB compressed). [00:00:02] Payload decompressed to 23.4 MB. [00:00:04] Web Service Task sent payload to http://localhost:8080/parseTelemetry. [00:00:06] Java parser processed data in streaming mode, memory usage peaked at 1.6 GB. [00:00:08] CSV output written to /tmp/parsed_telemetry.csv (3.2 MB). [00:00:10] Flat File Destination completed. [00:00:12] Package completed successfully in 12.1 seconds. The room erupted again—this time with applause. Dr. Liu turned to the camera, his eyes twinkling. “Ladies and gentlemen, we have just demonstrated the : a fully functional, production‑grade SSIS package that integrates Java code, streams data from Kafka, compresses and decompresses on the fly, and can be extended to edge devices. All of this in less time than it takes to brew a cup of coffee.” Maya felt a warm surge of accomplishment. She imagined herself presenting a similar demo to her own team next week. Epilogue: The After‑Hours Conversation When the session ended at 08:30 AM , Maya lingered in the virtual lobby, still buzzing with ideas. Dr. Liu opened a private chat with her. Dr. Liu: “Maya, I noticed you asked a question about the error handling for malformed LIDAR data. I’ve got a GitHub repo with a sample Retry Policy and **Dead