b517f991fe
### What changes were proposed in this pull request? Remove automatically resource coordination support from Standalone. ### Why are the changes needed? Resource coordination is mainly designed for the scenario where multiple workers launched on the same host. However, it's, actually, a non-existed scenario for today's Spark. Because, Spark now can start multiple executors in a single Worker, while it only allow one executor per Worker at very beginning. So, now, it really help nothing for user to launch multiple workers on the same host. Thus, it's not worth for us to bring over complicated implementation and potential high maintain cost for such an impossible scenario. ### Does this PR introduce any user-facing change? No, it's Spark 3.0 feature. ### How was this patch tested? Pass Jenkins. Closes #27722 from Ngone51/abandon_coordination. Authored-by: yi.wu <yi.wu@databricks.com> Signed-off-by: Xingbo Jiang <xingbo.jiang@databricks.com> |
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docs | ||
lib | ||
pyspark | ||
test_coverage | ||
test_support | ||
.coveragerc | ||
.gitignore | ||
MANIFEST.in | ||
pylintrc | ||
README.md | ||
run-tests | ||
run-tests-with-coverage | ||
run-tests.py | ||
setup.cfg | ||
setup.py |
Apache Spark
Spark is a unified analytics engine for large-scale data processing. 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 Structured Streaming for stream processing.
Online Documentation
You can find the latest Spark documentation, including a programming guide, on the project web page
Python Packaging
This README file only contains basic information related to pip installed PySpark. This packaging is currently experimental and may change in future versions (although we will do our best to keep compatibility). Using PySpark requires the Spark JARs, and if you are building this from source please see the builder instructions at "Building Spark".
The Python packaging for Spark is not intended to replace all of the other use cases. This Python packaged version of Spark is suitable for interacting with an existing cluster (be it Spark standalone, YARN, or Mesos) - but does not contain the tools required to set up your own standalone Spark cluster. You can download the full version of Spark from the Apache Spark downloads page.
NOTE: If you are using this with a Spark standalone cluster you must ensure that the version (including minor version) matches or you may experience odd errors.
Python Requirements
At its core PySpark depends on Py4J, but some additional sub-packages have their own extra requirements for some features (including numpy, pandas, and pyarrow).