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Table of Contents generated with DocToc

Custom Contexts and Context-specific Jobs

With Spark Jobserver 0.5.0, jobs no longer have to share just a plain SparkContext, but can share other types of contexts as well, such as a SQLContext or HiveContext. This allows Spark jobs to share the state of other contexts, such as SQL temporary tables. An example can be found in the SQLLoaderJob class, which creates a temporary table, and the SQLTestJob job, which runs a SQL query against the loaded table. This feature can also be used with other contexts than the ones supplied by Spark itself, such as the CassandraContext from Datastax's Cassandra Spark Connector.

Example

NOTE: To run these examples, you can either use job-server-extras/reStart from SBT, or you can run bin/server_package.sh, edit /tmp/job-server/settings.sh to point at your local Spark repo (with binaries built), then run /tmp/job-server/server_start.sh.

To run jobs for a specific type of context, first you need to start a context with the context-factory param:

curl -d "" '127.0.0.1:8090/contexts/sql-context?context-factory=spark.jobserver.context.SQLContextFactory'
OK⏎

Similarly, to use a HiveContext for jobs pass context-factory=spark.jobserver.context.HiveContextFactory, but be sure to run the HiveTestJob instead below.

Package up the job-server-extras example jar:

sbt 'job-server-extras/package'

Load it to job server:

curl --data-binary @job-server-extras/job-server-extras/target/scala-2.10/job-server-extras_2.10-0.6.2-SNAPSHOT-tests.jar  127.0.0.1:8090/jars/sql

Now you should be able to run jobs in that context. Note that SQL has to be quoted carefully when you are using curl.

curl -d "" '127.0.0.1:8090/jobs?appName=sql&classPath=spark.jobserver.SqlLoaderJob&context=sql-context&sync=true'

curl -d "sql = \"select * from addresses limit 10\"" '127.0.0.1:8090/jobs?appName=sql&classPath=spark.jobserver.SqlTestJob&context=sql-context&sync=true'

NOTE: you will get an error if you run the wrong type of job, such as a regular SparkJob in a SQLContext.

Initializing a Hive/SQLContext Automatically

You can skip the steps of context creation and jar upload with the latest job server using some config options.
Add the following to your job server config (the deprecated job-jar-paths will also work):

spark {
  jobserver {
    # Automatically load a set of jars at startup time.  Key is the appName, value is the path/URL.
    job-binary-paths {    # NOTE: you may need an absolute path below
      sql = job-server-extras/target/scala-2.10/job-server-extras_2.10-0.6.2-SNAPSHOT-tests.jar
    }
  }
  
  contexts {
    sql-context {
      num-cpu-cores = 1           # Number of cores to allocate.  Required.
      memory-per-node = 512m         # Executor memory per node, -Xmx style eg 512m, 1G, etc.
      context-factory = spark.jobserver.context.HiveContextFactory
    }
  }  
}

Now, when you start up the job server, you will see a context sql-context and a jar app sql pre-loaded, and you can execute your SQL queries immediately (assuming you have tables stored in your Hive Metastore).

NOTE: The above also works on DSE 4.8, which packages Job Server 0.5.2, but you need to edit the default configuration in resources/spark/spark-jobserver/dse.conf.

Extending Job Server for Custom Contexts

This can be done easily by extending the SparkContextFactory trait, like SQLContextFactory does. Then, extend the api.SparkJobBase trait in a job with a type matching your factory.

NOTE: If you have defined custom ContextFactorys from before 0.7.0, you will need to modify them as the isValidJob signature has changed.

Jars

If you wish to use the SQLContext or HiveContext, be sure to pull down the job-server-extras package.

StreamingContext

job-server-extras provides a context to run Spark Streaming jobs. There are a couple of configurations you can change in job-server's .conf file:

  • streaming.batch_interval: the streaming batch in millis
  • streaming.stopGracefully: if true, stops gracefully by waiting for the processing of all received data to be completed
  • streaming.stopSparkContext: if true, stops the SparkContext with the StreamingContext. The underlying SparkContext will be stopped regardless of whether the StreamingContext has been started.

Running Multiple HiveContexts (Thanks cgeorge-rms)

This isn't an issue, but wanted to give everyone heads up if someone is searching on this problem. When running context-per-jvm=true and running multiple HiveContexts without using a shared mysql database you will get an exception about derby locking. I found that if you put a hive-site.xml in spark/conf directory containing:

javax.jdo.option.ConnectionURL
jdbc:derby:memory:myDB;create=true
JDBC connect string for a JDBC metastore


javax.jdo.option.ConnectionDriverName
org.apache.derby.jdbc.EmbeddedDriver
Driver class name for a JDBC metastore

It will then create an in memory derby instance for the hive metastore (this is assuming you don't need persistent data stored in actual hive metastore) We are doing this because we want context isolation and are running HiveServer2 from a shared context for jdbc access which works really well for us.