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## What changes were proposed in this pull request? https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/SPARK-25250 reports a bug that, a task which is failed with `CommitDeniedException` gets retried many times. This can happen when a stage has 2 task set managers, one is zombie, one is active. A task from the zombie TSM completes, and commits to a central coordinator(assuming it's a file writing task). Then the corresponding task from the active TSM will fail with `CommitDeniedException`. `CommitDeniedException.countTowardsTaskFailures` is false, so the active TSM will keep retrying this task, until the job finishes. This wastes resource a lot. #21131 firstly implements that a previous successful completed task from zombie `TaskSetManager` could mark the task of the same partition completed in the active `TaskSetManager`. Later #23871 improves the implementation to cover a corner case that, an active `TaskSetManager` hasn't been created when a previous task succeed. However, #23871 has a bug and was reverted in #24359. With hindsight, #23781 is fragile because we need to sync the states between `DAGScheduler` and `TaskScheduler`, about which partitions are completed. This PR proposes a new fix: 1. When `DAGScheduler` gets a task success event from an earlier attempt, notify the `TaskSchedulerImpl` about it 2. When `TaskSchedulerImpl` knows a partition is already completed, ask the active `TaskSetManager` to mark the corresponding task as finished, if the task is not finished yet. This fix covers the corner case, because: 1. If `DAGScheduler` gets the task completion event from zombie TSM before submitting the new stage attempt, then `DAGScheduler` knows that this partition is completed, and it will exclude this partition when creating task set for the new stage attempt. See `DAGScheduler.submitMissingTasks` 2. If `DAGScheduler` gets the task completion event from zombie TSM after submitting the new stage attempt, then the active TSM is already created. Compared to the previous fix, the message loop becomes longer, so it's likely that, the active task set manager has already retried the task multiple times. But this failure window won't be too big, and we want to avoid the worse case that retries the task many times until the job finishes. So this solution is acceptable. ## How was this patch tested? a new test case. Closes #24375 from cloud-fan/fix2. Authored-by: Wenchen Fan <wenchen@databricks.com> Signed-off-by: Wenchen Fan <wenchen@databricks.com> |
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Apache Spark
Spark is a fast and general cluster computing system for Big Data. It provides high-level APIs in Scala, Java, Python, and R, and an optimized engine that supports general computation graphs for data analysis. It also supports a rich set of higher-level tools including Spark SQL for SQL and DataFrames, MLlib for machine learning, GraphX for graph processing, and Spark Streaming for stream processing.
Online Documentation
You can find the latest Spark documentation, including a programming guide, on the project web page. This README file only contains basic setup instructions.
Building Spark
Spark is built using Apache Maven. To build Spark and its example programs, run:
build/mvn -DskipTests clean package
(You do not need to do this if you downloaded a pre-built package.)
You can build Spark using more than one thread by using the -T option with Maven, see "Parallel builds in Maven 3". More detailed documentation is available from the project site, at "Building Spark".
For general development tips, including info on developing Spark using an IDE, see "Useful Developer Tools".
Interactive Scala Shell
The easiest way to start using Spark is through the Scala shell:
./bin/spark-shell
Try the following command, which should return 1000:
scala> sc.parallelize(1 to 1000).count()
Interactive Python Shell
Alternatively, if you prefer Python, you can use the Python shell:
./bin/pyspark
And run the following command, which should also return 1000:
>>> sc.parallelize(range(1000)).count()
Example Programs
Spark also comes with several sample programs in the examples
directory.
To run one of them, use ./bin/run-example <class> [params]
. For example:
./bin/run-example SparkPi
will run the Pi example locally.
You can set the MASTER environment variable when running examples to submit
examples to a cluster. This can be a mesos:// or spark:// URL,
"yarn" to run on YARN, and "local" to run
locally with one thread, or "local[N]" to run locally with N threads. You
can also use an abbreviated class name if the class is in the examples
package. For instance:
MASTER=spark://host:7077 ./bin/run-example SparkPi
Many of the example programs print usage help if no params are given.
Running Tests
Testing first requires building Spark. Once Spark is built, tests can be run using:
./dev/run-tests
Please see the guidance on how to run tests for a module, or individual tests.
There is also a Kubernetes integration test, see resource-managers/kubernetes/integration-tests/README.md
A Note About Hadoop Versions
Spark uses the Hadoop core library to talk to HDFS and other Hadoop-supported storage systems. Because the protocols have changed in different versions of Hadoop, you must build Spark against the same version that your cluster runs.
Please refer to the build documentation at "Specifying the Hadoop Version and Enabling YARN" for detailed guidance on building for a particular distribution of Hadoop, including building for particular Hive and Hive Thriftserver distributions.
Configuration
Please refer to the Configuration Guide in the online documentation for an overview on how to configure Spark.
Contributing
Please review the Contribution to Spark guide for information on how to get started contributing to the project.