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Apache Spark 2.x Cookbook

You're reading from   Apache Spark 2.x Cookbook Over 70 cloud-ready recipes for distributed Big Data processing and analytics

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2017
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781787127265
Length 294 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Rishi Yadav Rishi Yadav
Author Profile Icon Rishi Yadav
Rishi Yadav
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Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with Apache Spark FREE CHAPTER 2. Developing Applications with Spark 3. Spark SQL 4. Working with External Data Sources 5. Spark Streaming 6. Getting Started with Machine Learning 7. Supervised Learning with MLlib — Regression 8. Supervised Learning with MLlib — Classification 9. Unsupervised Learning 10. Recommendations Using Collaborative Filtering 11. Graph Processing Using GraphX and GraphFrames 12. Optimizations and Performance Tuning

Understanding resilient distributed dataset - RDD

Though RDD is getting replaced with DataFrame/DataSet-based APIs, there are still a lot of APIs that have not been migrated yet. In this recipe, we will look at how the concept of lineage works in RDD.

Externally, RDD is a distributed, immutable collection of objects. Internally, it consists of the following five parts:

  • Set of partitions (rdd.getPartitions)
  • List of dependencies on parent RDDs (rdd.dependencies)
  • Function to compute a partition, given its parents
  • Partitioner, which is optional (rdd.partitioner)
  • Preferred location of each partition, which is optional (rdd.preferredLocations)

The first three are needed for an RDD to be recomputed in case data is lost. When combined, it is called lineage. The last two parts are optimizations.

A set of partitions is how data is divided into nodes. In the case of HDFS, it means InputSplits, which are mostly the same as the block (except when a record crosses block boundaries; in that case, it will be slightly bigger than a block).

How to do it...

Let's revisit our word count example to understand these five parts. This is how an RDD graph looks for wordCount at the dataset level view:

Basically, this is how the flow goes:

  1. Load the words folder as an RDD:
        scala> val words = sc.textFile("hdfs://localhost:9000/user/hduser/words")

The following are the five parts of the words RDD:

Part Description
Partitions One partition per HDFS inputsplit/block (org.apache.spark.rdd.HadoopPartition)
Dependencies None
Compute function To read the block
Preferred location The HDFS block's location
Partitioner None
  1. Tokenize the words of the words RDD with each word on a separate line:
        scala> val wordsFlatMap = words.flatMap(_.split("W+"))

The following are the five parts of the wordsFlatMap RDD:

Part Description
Partitions Same as the parent RDD, that is, words (org.apache.spark.rdd.HadoopPartition)
Dependencies Same as the parent RDD, that is, words (org.apache.spark.OneToOneDependency)
Compute function To compute the parent and split each element, which flattens the results
Preferred location Ask parent RDD
Partitioner None
  1. Transform each word in the wordsFlatMap RDD into the (word,1) tuple:
        scala> val wordsMap = wordsFlatMap.map( w => (w,1))

The following are the five parts of the wordsMap RDD:

Part Description
Partitions Same as the parent RDD, that is, wordsFlatMap (org.apache.spark.rdd.HadoopPartition)
Dependencies Same as the parent RDD, that is, wordsFlatMap (org.apache.spark.OneToOneDependency)
Compute function To compute the parent and map it to PairRDD
Preferred Location Ask parent RDD
Partitioner None
  1. Reduce all the values of a given key and sum them up:
        scala> val wordCount = wordsMap.reduceByKey(_+_)

The following are the five parts of the wordCount RDD:

Part Description
Partitions One per reduce task (org.apache.spark.rdd.ShuffledRDDPartition)
Dependencies Shuffle dependency on each parent (org.apache.spark.ShuffleDependency)
Compute function To perform additions on shuffled data
Preferred location None
Partitioner HashPartitioner (org.apache.spark.HashPartitioner)

This is how an RDD graph of wordcount looks at the partition level view:

You have been reading a chapter from
Apache Spark 2.x Cookbook
Published in: May 2017
Publisher:
ISBN-13: 9781787127265
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