Book Image

Apache Spark 2.x Machine Learning Cookbook

By : Mohammed Guller, Siamak Amirghodsi, Shuen Mei, Meenakshi Rajendran, Broderick Hall
Book Image

Apache Spark 2.x Machine Learning Cookbook

By: Mohammed Guller, Siamak Amirghodsi, Shuen Mei, Meenakshi Rajendran, Broderick Hall

Overview of this book

Machine learning aims to extract knowledge from data, relying on fundamental concepts in computer science, statistics, probability, and optimization. Learning about algorithms enables a wide range of applications, from everyday tasks such as product recommendations and spam filtering to cutting edge applications such as self-driving cars and personalized medicine. You will gain hands-on experience of applying these principles using Apache Spark, a resilient cluster computing system well suited for large-scale machine learning tasks. This book begins with a quick overview of setting up the necessary IDEs to facilitate the execution of code examples that will be covered in various chapters. It also highlights some key issues developers face while working with machine learning algorithms on the Spark platform. We progress by uncovering the various Spark APIs and the implementation of ML algorithms with developing classification systems, recommendation engines, text analytics, clustering, and learning systems. Toward the final chapters, we’ll focus on building high-end applications and explain various unsupervised methodologies and challenges to tackle when implementing with big data ML systems.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

Common operations with the new Dataset API


In this recipe, we cover the Dataset API, which is the way for data wrangling in Spark 2.0 and beyond. In Chapter 3, Spark's Three Data Musketeers for Machine Learning - Perfect Together we covered three detailed recipes for dataset, and in this chapter we cover some of the common, repetitive operations that are required to work with these new API sets. Additionally, we demonstrate the query plan generated by the Spark SQL Catalyst optimizer.

How to do it...

  1. Start a new project in IntelliJ or in an IDE of your choice. Make sure that the necessary JAR files are included.
  1. We will use a JSON data file named cars.json, which has been created for this example:
name,city
Bears,Chicago
Packers,Green Bay
Lions,Detroit
Vikings,Minnesota
  1. Set up the package location where the program will reside:
package spark.ml.cookbook.chapter4
  1. Import the necessary packages for the Spark session to get access to the cluster and log4j.Logger to reduce the amount of output produced...