[SPARK-11338: HistoryPage not multi-tenancy enabled ...](https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/SPARK-11338)
- `HistoryPage.scala` ...prepending all page links with the web proxy (`uiRoot`) path
- `HistoryServerSuite.scala` ...adding a test case to verify all site-relative links are prefixed when the environment variable `APPLICATION_WEB_PROXY_BASE` (or System property `spark.ui.proxyBase`) is set
Author: Christian Kadner <ckadner@us.ibm.com>
Closes#9291 from ckadner/SPARK-11338 and squashes the following commits:
01d2f35 [Christian Kadner] [SPARK-11338][WebUI] nit fixes
d054bd7 [Christian Kadner] [SPARK-11338][WebUI] prependBaseUri in method makePageLink
8bcb3dc [Christian Kadner] [SPARK-11338][WebUI] Prepend application links on HistoryPage with uiRoot path
Remove Hadoop third party distro page, and move Hadoop cluster config info to configuration page
CC pwendell
Author: Sean Owen <sowen@cloudera.com>
Closes#9298 from srowen/SPARK-11305.
This PR fixes two issues:
1. `PhysicalRDD.outputsUnsafeRows` is always `false`
Thus a `ConvertToUnsafe` operator is often required even if the underlying data source relation does output `UnsafeRow`.
1. Internal/external row conversion for `HadoopFsRelation` is kinda messy
Currently we're using `HadoopFsRelation.needConversion` and [dirty type erasure hacks][1] to indicate whether the relation outputs external row or internal row and apply external-to-internal conversion when necessary. Basically, all builtin `HadoopFsRelation` data sources, i.e. Parquet, JSON, ORC, and Text output `InternalRow`, while typical external `HadoopFsRelation` data sources, e.g. spark-avro and spark-csv, output `Row`.
This PR adds a `private[sql]` interface method `HadoopFsRelation.buildInternalScan`, which by default invokes `HadoopFsRelation.buildScan` and converts `Row`s to `UnsafeRow`s (which are also `InternalRow`s). All builtin `HadoopFsRelation` data sources override this method and directly output `UnsafeRow`s. In this way, now `HadoopFsRelation` always produces `UnsafeRow`s. Thus `PhysicalRDD.outputsUnsafeRows` can be properly set by checking whether the underlying data source is a `HadoopFsRelation`.
A remaining question is that, can we assume that all non-builtin `HadoopFsRelation` data sources output external rows? At least all well known ones do so. However it's possible that some users implemented their own `HadoopFsRelation` data sources that leverages `InternalRow` and thus all those unstable internal data representations. If this assumption is safe, we can deprecate `HadoopFsRelation.needConversion` and cleanup some more conversion code (like [here][2] and [here][3]).
This PR supersedes #9125.
Follow-ups:
1. Makes JSON and ORC data sources output `UnsafeRow` directly
1. Makes `HiveTableScan` output `UnsafeRow` directly
This is related to 1 since ORC data source shares the same `Writable` unwrapping code with `HiveTableScan`.
[1]: https://github.com/apache/spark/blob/v1.5.1/sql/core/src/main/scala/org/apache/spark/sql/execution/datasources/parquet/ParquetRelation.scala#L353
[2]: https://github.com/apache/spark/blob/v1.5.1/sql/core/src/main/scala/org/apache/spark/sql/execution/datasources/DataSourceStrategy.scala#L331-L335
[3]: https://github.com/apache/spark/blob/v1.5.1/sql/core/src/main/scala/org/apache/spark/sql/sources/interfaces.scala#L630-L669
Author: Cheng Lian <lian@databricks.com>
Closes#9305 from liancheng/spark-11345.unsafe-hadoop-fs-relation.
This is a fix for SPARK-11265; the introspection code to get Hive delegation tokens failing on Spark 1.5.1+, due to changes in the Hive codebase
Author: Steve Loughran <stevel@hortonworks.com>
Closes#9232 from steveloughran/stevel/patches/SPARK-11265-hive-tokens.
Add a rule in optimizer to convert NULL [NOT] IN (expr1,...,expr2) to
Literal(null).
This is a follow up defect to SPARK-8654
cloud-fan Can you please take a look ?
Author: Dilip Biswal <dbiswal@us.ibm.com>
Closes#9348 from dilipbiswal/spark_11024.
**TL;DR**: We can rule out one rare but potential cause of input stream corruption via defensive programming.
## Background
[MAPREDUCE-5918](https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/MAPREDUCE-5918) is a bug where an instance of a decompressor ends up getting placed into a pool multiple times. Since the pool is backed by a list instead of a set, this can lead to the same decompressor being used in different places at the same time, which is not safe because those decompressors will overwrite each other's buffers. Sometimes this buffer sharing will lead to exceptions but other times it will might silently result in invalid / garbled input.
That Hadoop bug is fixed in Hadoop 2.7 but is still present in many Hadoop versions that we wish to support. As a result, I think that we should try to work around this issue in Spark via defensive programming to prevent RecordReaders from being closed multiple times.
So far, I've had a hard time coming up with explanations of exactly how double-`close()`s occur in practice, but I do have a couple of explanations that work on paper.
For instance, it looks like https://github.com/apache/spark/pull/7424, added in 1.5, introduces at least one extremely~rare corner-case path where Spark could double-close() a LineRecordReader instance in a way that triggers the bug. Here are the steps involved in the bad execution that I brainstormed up:
* [The task has finished reading input, so we call close()](https://github.com/apache/spark/blob/v1.5.1/core/src/main/scala/org/apache/spark/rdd/NewHadoopRDD.scala#L168).
* [While handling the close call and trying to close the reader, reader.close() throws an exception]( https://github.com/apache/spark/blob/v1.5.1/core/src/main/scala/org/apache/spark/rdd/NewHadoopRDD.scala#L190)
* We don't set `reader = null` after handling this exception, so the [TaskCompletionListener also ends up calling NewHadoopRDD.close()](https://github.com/apache/spark/blob/v1.5.1/core/src/main/scala/org/apache/spark/rdd/NewHadoopRDD.scala#L156), which, in turn, closes the record reader again.
In this hypothetical situation, `LineRecordReader.close()` could [fail with an exception if its InputStream failed to close](https://github.com/apache/hadoop/blob/release-1.2.1/src/mapred/org/apache/hadoop/mapred/LineRecordReader.java#L212).
I googled for "Exception in RecordReader.close()" and it looks like it's possible for a closed Hadoop FileSystem to trigger an error there: [SPARK-757](https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/SPARK-757), [SPARK-2491](https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/SPARK-2491)
Looking at [SPARK-3052](https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/SPARK-3052), it seems like it's possible to get spurious exceptions there when there is an error reading from Hadoop. If the Hadoop FileSystem were to get into an error state _right_ after reading the last record then it looks like we could hit the bug here in 1.5.
## The fix
This patch guards against these issues by modifying `HadoopRDD.close()` and `NewHadoopRDD.close()` so that they set `reader = null` even if an exception occurs in the `reader.close()` call. In addition, I modified `NextIterator. closeIfNeeded()` to guard against double-close if the first `close()` call throws an exception.
I don't have an easy way to test this, since I haven't been able to reproduce the bug that prompted this patch, but these changes seem safe and seem to rule out the on-paper reproductions that I was able to brainstorm up.
Author: Josh Rosen <joshrosen@databricks.com>
Closes#9382 from JoshRosen/hadoop-decompressor-pooling-fix and squashes the following commits:
5ec97d7 [Josh Rosen] Add SqlNewHadoopRDD.unsetInputFileName() that I accidentally deleted.
ae46cf4 [Josh Rosen] Merge remote-tracking branch 'origin/master' into hadoop-decompressor-pooling-fix
087aa63 [Josh Rosen] Guard against double-close() of RecordReaders.
Currently the empty line in json file will be parsed into Row with all null field values. But in json, "{}" represents a json object, empty line is supposed to be skipped.
Make a trivial change for this.
Author: Jeff Zhang <zjffdu@apache.org>
Closes#9211 from zjffdu/SPARK-11226.
Made foreachActive public in MLLib's vector API
Author: Nakul Jindal <njindal@us.ibm.com>
Closes#9362 from nakul02/SPARK-11385_foreach_for_mllib_linalg_vector.
Since we do not need to preserve a page before calling compute(), MapPartitionsWithPreparationRDD is not needed anymore.
This PR basically revert #8543, #8511, #8038, #8011
Author: Davies Liu <davies@databricks.com>
Closes#9381 from davies/remove_prepare2.
Mapping spark.driver.memory from sparkEnvir to spark-submit commandline arguments.
shivaram suggested that we possibly add other spark.driver.* properties - do we want to add all of those? I thought those could be set in SparkConf?
sun-rui
Author: felixcheung <felixcheung_m@hotmail.com>
Closes#9290 from felixcheung/rdrivermem.
See [SPARK-10986](https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/SPARK-10986) for details.
This fixes the `ClassNotFoundException` for Spark classes in the serializer.
I am not sure this is the right way to handle the class loader, but I couldn't find any documentation on how the context class loader is used and who relies on it. It seems at least the serializer uses it to instantiate classes during deserialization.
I am open to suggestions (I tried this fix on a real Mesos cluster and it *does* fix the issue).
tnachen andrewor14
Author: Iulian Dragos <jaguarul@gmail.com>
Closes#9282 from dragos/issue/mesos-classloader.
When we cogroup 2 `GroupedIterator`s in `CoGroupedIterator`, if the right side is smaller, we will consume right data and keep the left data unchanged. Then we call `hasNext` which will call `left.hasNext`. This will make `GroupedIterator` generate an extra group as the previous one has not been comsumed yet.
Author: Wenchen Fan <wenchen@databricks.com>
Closes#9346 from cloud-fan/cogroup and squashes the following commits:
9be67c8 [Wenchen Fan] SPARK-11393
When enabling mergedSchema and predicate filter, this fails since Parquet does not accept filters pushed down when the columns of the filters do not exist in the schema.
This is related with Parquet issue (https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/PARQUET-389).
For now, it just simply disables predicate push down when using merged schema in this PR.
Author: hyukjinkwon <gurwls223@gmail.com>
Closes#9327 from HyukjinKwon/SPARK-11103.
…sion as followup. This is the follow up work of SPARK-10668.
* Fix miner style issues.
* Add test case for checking whether solver is selected properly.
Author: Lewuathe <lewuathe@me.com>
Author: lewuathe <lewuathe@me.com>
Closes#9180 from Lewuathe/SPARK-11207.
Older version of Janino (>2.7) does not support Override, we should not use that in codegen.
Author: Davies Liu <davies@databricks.com>
Closes#9372 from davies/no_override.
This PR introduce a mechanism to call spill() on those SQL operators that support spilling (for example, BytesToBytesMap, UnsafeExternalSorter and ShuffleExternalSorter) if there is not enough memory for execution. The preserved first page is needed anymore, so removed.
Other Spillable objects in Spark core (ExternalSorter and AppendOnlyMap) are not included in this PR, but those could benefit from this (trigger others' spilling).
The PrepareRDD may be not needed anymore, could be removed in follow up PR.
The following script will fail with OOM before this PR, finished in 150 seconds with 2G heap (also works in 1.5 branch, with similar duration).
```python
sqlContext.setConf("spark.sql.shuffle.partitions", "1")
df = sqlContext.range(1<<25).selectExpr("id", "repeat(id, 2) as s")
df2 = df.select(df.id.alias('id2'), df.s.alias('s2'))
j = df.join(df2, df.id==df2.id2).groupBy(df.id).max("id", "id2")
j.explain()
print j.count()
```
For thread-safety, here what I'm got:
1) Without calling spill(), the operators should only be used by single thread, no safety problems.
2) spill() could be triggered in two cases, triggered by itself, or by other operators. we can check trigger == this in spill(), so it's still in the same thread, so safety problems.
3) if it's triggered by other operators (right now cache will not trigger spill()), we only spill the data into disk when it's in scanning stage (building is finished), so the in-memory sorter or memory pages are read-only, we only need to synchronize the iterator and change it.
4) During scanning, the iterator will only use one record in one page, we can't free this page, because the downstream is currently using it (used by UnsafeRow or other objects). In BytesToBytesMap, we just skip the current page, and dump all others into disk. In UnsafeExternalSorter, we keep the page that is used by current record (having the same baseObject), free it when loading the next record. In ShuffleExternalSorter, the spill() will not trigger during scanning.
5) In order to avoid deadlock, we didn't call acquireMemory during spill (so we reused the pointer array in InMemorySorter).
Author: Davies Liu <davies@databricks.com>
Closes#9241 from davies/force_spill.
Upgrades the tachyon-client version to the latest release.
No new dependencies are added and no spark facing APIs are changed. The removal of the `tachyon-underfs-s3` exclusion will enable users to use S3 out of the box and there are no longer any additional external dependencies added by the module.
Author: Calvin Jia <jia.calvin@gmail.com>
Closes#9204 from calvinjia/spark-11236.
"profiles" give us the way that you can specify the set of credentials you want to use when you initialize a connection to AWS.
You can keep multiple sets of credentials in the same credentials files using different profile names.
For example, you can use --profile option to do that when you use "aws cli tool".
http://docs.aws.amazon.com/cli/latest/userguide/cli-chap-getting-started.html
Author: teramonagi <teramonagi@gmail.com>
Closes#8696 from teramonagi/SPARK-10532.
Only print the error message to the console for Analysis Exceptions in sql-shell.
Author: Dilip Biswal <dbiswal@us.ibm.com>
Closes#9194 from dilipbiswal/spark-11188.
The root cause is that when spark.sql.hive.convertMetastoreParquet=true by default, the cached InMemoryRelation of the ParquetRelation can not be looked up from the cachedData of CacheManager because the key comparison fails even though it is the same LogicalPlan representing the Subquery that wraps the ParquetRelation.
The solution in this PR is overriding the LogicalPlan.sameResult function in Subquery case class to eliminate subquery node first before directly comparing the child (ParquetRelation), which will find the key to the cached InMemoryRelation.
Author: xin Wu <xinwu@us.ibm.com>
Closes#9326 from xwu0226/spark-11246-commit.
Java 8 javadoc does not like self closing tags: ```<p/>```, ```<br/>```, ...
This PR fixes those.
Author: Herman van Hovell <hvanhovell@questtec.nl>
Closes#9339 from hvanhovell/SPARK-11388.
Before this PR, user has to consume the iterator of one group before process next group, or we will get into infinite loops.
Author: Wenchen Fan <wenchen@databricks.com>
Closes#9330 from cloud-fan/group.
This PR fixes a mistake in the code generated by `GenerateColumnAccessor`. Interestingly, although the code is illegal in Java (the class has two fields with the same name), Janino accepts it happily and accidentally works properly.
Author: Cheng Lian <lian@databricks.com>
Closes#9335 from liancheng/spark-11376.fix-generated-code.
JIRA: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/SPARK-11363
In SparkStrategies some places use LeftSemiJoin. It should be LeftSemi.
cc chenghao-intel liancheng
Author: Liang-Chi Hsieh <viirya@appier.com>
Closes#9318 from viirya/no-left-semi-join.
This is minor, but I ran into while writing Datasets and while it wasn't needed for the final solution, it was super confusing so we should fix it.
Basically we recurse into `Seq` to see if they have children. This breaks because we don't preserve the original subclass of `Seq` (and `StructType <:< Seq[StructField]`). Since a struct can never contain children, lets just not recurse into it.
Author: Michael Armbrust <michael@databricks.com>
Closes#9334 from marmbrus/structMakeCopy.
[SPARK-10668](https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/SPARK-10668) has provided ```WeightedLeastSquares``` solver("normal") in ```LinearRegression``` with L2 regularization in Scala and R, Python ML ```LinearRegression``` should also support setting solver("auto", "normal", "l-bfgs")
Author: Yanbo Liang <ybliang8@gmail.com>
Closes#9328 from yanboliang/spark-11367.
SparkR glm currently support :
```formula, family = c(“gaussian”, “binomial”), data, lambda = 0, alpha = 0```
We should also support setting standardize which has been defined at [design documentation](https://docs.google.com/document/d/10NZNSEurN2EdWM31uFYsgayIPfCFHiuIu3pCWrUmP_c/edit)
Author: Yanbo Liang <ybliang8@gmail.com>
Closes#9331 from yanboliang/spark-11369.
Recall by threshold snippet was using "precisionByThreshold"
Author: Mageswaran.D <mageswaran1989@gmail.com>
Closes#9333 from Mageswaran1989/Typo_in_mllib-evaluation-metrics.md.
WeightedLeastSquares now uses the common Instance class in ml.feature instead of a private one.
Author: Nakul Jindal <njindal@us.ibm.com>
Closes#9325 from nakul02/SPARK-11332_refactor_WeightedLeastSquares_dot_Instance.
Fix computation of root-sigma-inverse in multivariate Gaussian; add a test and fix related Python mixture model test.
Supersedes https://github.com/apache/spark/pull/9293
Author: Sean Owen <sowen@cloudera.com>
Closes#9309 from srowen/SPARK-11302.2.
In some cases, we can broadcast the smaller relation in cartesian join, which improve the performance significantly.
Author: Cheng Hao <hao.cheng@intel.com>
Closes#8652 from chenghao-intel/cartesian.
Commit af3bc59d1f introduced new
functionality so that if an executor dies for a reason that's not
caused by one of the tasks running on the executor (e.g., due to
pre-emption), Spark doesn't count the failure towards the maximum
number of failures for the task. That commit introduced some vague
naming that this commit attempts to fix; in particular:
(1) The variable "isNormalExit", which was used to refer to cases where
the executor died for a reason unrelated to the tasks running on the
machine, has been renamed (and reversed) to "exitCausedByApp". The problem
with the existing name is that it's not clear (at least to me!) what it
means for an exit to be "normal"; the new name is intended to make the
purpose of this variable more clear.
(2) The variable "shouldEventuallyFailJob" has been renamed to
"countTowardsTaskFailures". This variable is used to determine whether
a task's failure should be counted towards the maximum number of failures
allowed for a task before the associated Stage is aborted. The problem
with the existing name is that it can be confused with implying that
the task's failure should immediately cause the stage to fail because it
is somehow fatal (this is the case for a fetch failure, for example: if
a task fails because of a fetch failure, there's no point in retrying,
and the whole stage should be failed).
Author: Kay Ousterhout <kayousterhout@gmail.com>
Closes#9164 from kayousterhout/SPARK-11178.
… ReceiverTracker and ReceiverSchedulingPolicy to use it
This PR includes the following changes:
1. Add a new preferred location format, `executor_<host>_<executorID>` (e.g., "executor_localhost_2"), to support specifying the executor locations for RDD.
2. Use the new preferred location format in `ReceiverTracker` to optimize the starting time of Receivers when there are multiple executors in a host.
The goal of this PR is to enable the streaming scheduler to place receivers (which run as tasks) in specific executors. Basically, I want to have more control on the placement of the receivers such that they are evenly distributed among the executors. We tried to do this without changing the core scheduling logic. But it does not allow specifying particular executor as preferred location, only at the host level. So if there are two executors in the same host, and I want two receivers to run on them (one on each executor), I cannot specify that. Current code only specifies the host as preference, which may end up launching both receivers on the same executor. We try to work around it but restarting a receiver when it does not launch in the desired executor and hope that next time it will be started in the right one. But that cause lots of restarts, and delays in correctly launching the receiver.
So this change, would allow the streaming scheduler to specify the exact executor as the preferred location. Also this is not exposed to the user, only the streaming scheduler uses this.
Author: zsxwing <zsxwing@gmail.com>
Closes#9181 from zsxwing/executor-location.
Currently the Write Ahead Log in Spark Streaming flushes data as writes need to be made. S3 does not support flushing of data, data is written once the stream is actually closed.
In case of failure, the data for the last minute (default rolling interval) will not be properly written. Therefore we need a flag to close the stream after the write, so that we achieve read after write consistency.
cc tdas zsxwing
Author: Burak Yavuz <brkyvz@gmail.com>
Closes#9285 from brkyvz/caw-wal.
implement {RandomForest, GBT, TreeEnsemble, TreeClassifier, TreeRegressor}Params for Python API
in pyspark/ml/{classification, regression}.py
Author: vectorijk <jiangkai@gmail.com>
Closes#9233 from vectorijk/spark-10024.