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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

Using serialization to improve performance


Serialization plays an important part in distributed computing. There are two persistence (storage) levels that support serializing RDDs:

  • MEMORY_ONLY_SER: This stores RDDs as serialized objects. It will create one byte array per partition.
  • MEMORY_AND_DISK_SER: This is similar to MEMORY_ONLY_SER, but it spills partitions that do not fit in the memory to disk.

How to do it...

The following are the steps to add appropriate persistence levels:

  1. Start the Spark shell:
$ spark-shell
  1. Import the StorageLevel object as enumeration of persistence levels and the implicits associated with it:
scala> import org.apache.spark.storage.StorageLevel._
  1. Create a dataset:
scala> val words = spark.read.textFile("words")
  1. Persist the dataset:
scala> words.persist(MEMORY_ONLY_SER)

Though serialization reduces the memory footprint substantially, it adds extra CPU cycles due to deserialization.

Note

By default, Spark uses Java's serialization. Since the Java serialization is slow...

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