spark-instrumented-optimizer/sql
Matei Zaharia 7eefc9d2b3 SPARK-1708. Add a ClassTag on Serializer and things that depend on it
This pull request contains a rebased patch from @heathermiller (https://github.com/heathermiller/spark/pull/1) to add ClassTags on Serializer and types that depend on it (Broadcast and AccumulableCollection). Putting these in the public API signatures now will allow us to use Scala Pickling for serialization down the line without breaking binary compatibility.

One question remaining is whether we also want them on Accumulator -- Accumulator is passed as part of a bigger Task or TaskResult object via the closure serializer so it doesn't seem super useful to add the ClassTag there. Broadcast and AccumulableCollection in contrast were being serialized directly.

CC @rxin, @pwendell, @heathermiller

Author: Matei Zaharia <matei@databricks.com>

Closes #700 from mateiz/spark-1708 and squashes the following commits:

1a3d8b0 [Matei Zaharia] Use fake ClassTag in Java
3b449ed [Matei Zaharia] test fix
2209a27 [Matei Zaharia] Code style fixes
9d48830 [Matei Zaharia] Add a ClassTag on Serializer and things that depend on it
2014-05-10 12:10:24 -07:00
..
catalyst [SPARK-1754] [SQL] Add missing arithmetic DSL operations. 2014-05-08 15:31:47 -07:00
core SPARK-1708. Add a ClassTag on Serializer and things that depend on it 2014-05-10 12:10:24 -07:00
hive [WIP][Spark-SQL] Optimize the Constant Folding for Expression 2014-05-07 03:37:12 -04:00
README.md [SPARK-1342] Scala 2.10.4 2014-04-01 18:35:50 -07:00

Spark SQL

This module provides support for executing relational queries expressed in either SQL or a LINQ-like Scala DSL.

Spark SQL is broken up into three subprojects:

  • Catalyst (sql/catalyst) - An implementation-agnostic framework for manipulating trees of relational operators and expressions.
  • Execution (sql/core) - A query planner / execution engine for translating Catalysts logical query plans into Spark RDDs. This component also includes a new public interface, SQLContext, that allows users to execute SQL or LINQ statements against existing RDDs and Parquet files.
  • Hive Support (sql/hive) - Includes an extension of SQLContext called HiveContext that allows users to write queries using a subset of HiveQL and access data from a Hive Metastore using Hive SerDes. There are also wrappers that allows users to run queries that include Hive UDFs, UDAFs, and UDTFs.

Other dependencies for developers

In order to create new hive test cases , you will need to set several environmental variables.

export HIVE_HOME="<path to>/hive/build/dist"
export HIVE_DEV_HOME="<path to>/hive/"
export HADOOP_HOME="<path to>/hadoop-1.0.4"

Using the console

An interactive scala console can be invoked by running sbt/sbt hive/console. From here you can execute queries and inspect the various stages of query optimization.

catalyst$ sbt/sbt hive/console

[info] Starting scala interpreter...
import org.apache.spark.sql.catalyst.analysis._
import org.apache.spark.sql.catalyst.dsl._
import org.apache.spark.sql.catalyst.errors._
import org.apache.spark.sql.catalyst.expressions._
import org.apache.spark.sql.catalyst.plans.logical._
import org.apache.spark.sql.catalyst.rules._
import org.apache.spark.sql.catalyst.types._
import org.apache.spark.sql.catalyst.util._
import org.apache.spark.sql.execution
import org.apache.spark.sql.hive._
import org.apache.spark.sql.hive.TestHive._
Welcome to Scala version 2.10.4 (Java HotSpot(TM) 64-Bit Server VM, Java 1.7.0_45).
Type in expressions to have them evaluated.
Type :help for more information.

scala> val query = sql("SELECT * FROM (SELECT * FROM src) a")
query: org.apache.spark.sql.ExecutedQuery =
SELECT * FROM (SELECT * FROM src) a
=== Query Plan ===
Project [key#6:0.0,value#7:0.1]
 HiveTableScan [key#6,value#7], (MetastoreRelation default, src, None), None

Query results are RDDs and can be operated as such.

scala> query.collect()
res8: Array[org.apache.spark.sql.execution.Row] = Array([238,val_238], [86,val_86], [311,val_311]...

You can also build further queries on top of these RDDs using the query DSL.

scala> query.where('key === 100).toRdd.collect()
res11: Array[org.apache.spark.sql.execution.Row] = Array([100,val_100], [100,val_100])

From the console you can even write rules that transform query plans. For example, the above query has redundant project operators that aren't doing anything. This redundancy can be eliminated using the transform function that is available on all TreeNode objects.

scala> query.logicalPlan
res1: catalyst.plans.logical.LogicalPlan = 
Project {key#0,value#1}
 Project {key#0,value#1}
  MetastoreRelation default, src, None


scala> query.logicalPlan transform {
     |   case Project(projectList, child) if projectList == child.output => child
     | }
res2: catalyst.plans.logical.LogicalPlan = 
Project {key#0,value#1}
 MetastoreRelation default, src, None