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PySpark Cookbook

PySpark Cookbook

By : Lee, Drabas
1.7 (3)
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PySpark Cookbook

PySpark Cookbook

1.7 (3)
By: Lee, Drabas

Overview of this book

Apache Spark is an open source framework for efficient cluster computing with a strong interface for data parallelism and fault tolerance. The PySpark Cookbook presents effective and time-saving recipes for leveraging the power of Python and putting it to use in the Spark ecosystem. You’ll start by learning the Apache Spark architecture and how to set up a Python environment for Spark. You’ll then get familiar with the modules available in PySpark and start using them effortlessly. In addition to this, you’ll discover how to abstract data with RDDs and DataFrames, and understand the streaming capabilities of PySpark. You’ll then move on to using ML and MLlib in order to solve any problems related to the machine learning capabilities of PySpark and use GraphFrames to solve graph-processing problems. Finally, you will explore how to deploy your applications to the cloud using the spark-submit command. By the end of this book, you will be able to use the Python API for Apache Spark to solve any problems associated with building data-intensive applications.
Table of Contents (9 chapters)
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Running queries against the graph


Now that you have created your graph, start off by creating and running some simple queries against your GraphFrame.

Getting ready

Ensure that you have created the graph GraphFrame (derived from the vertices and edges DataFrames) from the previous section.

How to do it...

Let's start with some simple count queries to determine the number of airports (nodes or vertices; remember?) and the number of flights (the edges), which can be determined by applying count(). The call to count() is similar to a DataFrame except that you also need to include whether you are countingverticesoredges:

print "Airport count: %d" % graph.vertices.count()
print "Trips count: %d" % graph.edges.count()

The output of these queries should be similar to the following output, denoting the 279 vertices (that is, airports) and more than 1.3 million edges (that is, flights):

Output:
  Airports count: 279 
  Trips count: 1361141

Similar to DataFrames, you can also execute the filter and groupBy...

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