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Scala and Spark for Big Data Analytics

You're reading from   Scala and Spark for Big Data Analytics Explore the concepts of functional programming, data streaming, and machine learning

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785280849
Length 796 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Concepts
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Authors (2):
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Sridhar Alla Sridhar Alla
Author Profile Icon Sridhar Alla
Sridhar Alla
Md. Rezaul Karim Md. Rezaul Karim
Author Profile Icon Md. Rezaul Karim
Md. Rezaul Karim
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Toc

Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction to Scala FREE CHAPTER 2. Object-Oriented Scala 3. Functional Programming Concepts 4. Collection APIs 5. Tackle Big Data – Spark Comes to the Party 6. Start Working with Spark – REPL and RDDs 7. Special RDD Operations 8. Introduce a Little Structure - Spark SQL 9. Stream Me Up, Scotty - Spark Streaming 10. Everything is Connected - GraphX 11. Learning Machine Learning - Spark MLlib and Spark ML 12. My Name is Bayes, Naive Bayes 13. Time to Put Some Order - Cluster Your Data with Spark MLlib 14. Text Analytics Using Spark ML 15. Spark Tuning 16. Time to Go to ClusterLand - Deploying Spark on a Cluster 17. Testing and Debugging Spark 18. PySpark and SparkR

Spark architecture in a cluster

Hadoop-based MapReduce framework has been widely used for the last few years; however, it has some issues with I/O, algorithmic complexity, low-latency streaming jobs, and fully disk-based operation. Hadoop provides the Hadoop Distributed File System (HDFS) for efficient computing and storing big data cheaply, but you can only do the computations with a high-latency batch model or static data using the Hadoop-based MapReduce framework. The main big data paradigm that Spark has brought for us is the introduction of in-memory computing and caching abstraction. This makes Spark ideal for large-scale data processing and enables the computing nodes to perform multiple operations by accessing the same input data.

Spark's Resilient Distributed Dataset (RDD) model can do everything that the MapReduce paradigm can, and even more. Nevertheless, Spark...

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