Spark SQL, DataFrames and Datasets Guide

Overview

Spark SQL is a Spark module for structured data processing. Unlike the basic Spark RDD API, the interfaces provided by Spark SQL provide Spark with more information about the structure of both the data and the computation being performed. Internally, Spark SQL uses this extra information to perform extra optimizations. There are several ways to interact with Spark SQL including SQL and the Dataset API. When computing a result the same execution engine is used, independent of which API/language you are using to express the computation. This unification means that developers can easily switch back and forth between different APIs based on which provides the most natural way to express a given transformation.

All of the examples on this page use sample data included in the Spark distribution and can be run in the spark-shell, pyspark shell, or sparkR shell.

SQL

One use of Spark SQL is to execute SQL queries. Spark SQL can also be used to read data from an existing Hive installation. For more on how to configure this feature, please refer to the Hive Tables section. When running SQL from within another programming language the results will be returned as a Dataset/DataFrame. You can also interact with the SQL interface using the command-line or over JDBC/ODBC.

Datasets and DataFrames

A Dataset is a distributed collection of data. Dataset is a new interface added in Spark 1.6 that provides the benefits of RDDs (strong typing, ability to use powerful lambda functions) with the benefits of Spark SQL’s optimized execution engine. A Dataset can be constructed from JVM objects and then manipulated using functional transformations (map, flatMap, filter, etc.). The Dataset API is available in Scala and Java. Python does not have the support for the Dataset API. But due to Python’s dynamic nature, many of the benefits of the Dataset API are already available (i.e. you can access the field of a row by name naturally row.columnName). The case for R is similar.

A DataFrame is a Dataset organized into named columns. It is conceptually equivalent to a table in a relational database or a data frame in R/Python, but with richer optimizations under the hood. DataFrames can be constructed from a wide array of sources such as: structured data files, tables in Hive, external databases, or existing RDDs. The DataFrame API is available in Scala, Java, Python, and R. In Scala and Java, a DataFrame is represented by a Dataset of Rows. In the Scala API, DataFrame is simply a type alias of Dataset[Row]. While, in Java API, users need to use Dataset<Row> to represent a DataFrame.

Throughout this document, we will often refer to Scala/Java Datasets of Rows as DataFrames.

Getting Started

Starting Point: SparkSession

The entry point into all functionality in Spark is the SparkSession class. To create a basic SparkSession, just use SparkSession.builder():

import org.apache.spark.sql.SparkSession

val spark = SparkSession
  .builder()
  .appName("Spark SQL basic example")
  .config("spark.some.config.option", "some-value")
  .getOrCreate()

// For implicit conversions like converting RDDs to DataFrames
import spark.implicits._
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/scala/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/SparkSQLExample.scala" in the Spark repo.

The entry point into all functionality in Spark is the SparkSession class. To create a basic SparkSession, just use SparkSession.builder():

import org.apache.spark.sql.SparkSession;

SparkSession spark = SparkSession
  .builder()
  .appName("Java Spark SQL basic example")
  .config("spark.some.config.option", "some-value")
  .getOrCreate();
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/java/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/JavaSparkSQLExample.java" in the Spark repo.

The entry point into all functionality in Spark is the SparkSession class. To create a basic SparkSession, just use SparkSession.builder:

from pyspark.sql import SparkSession

spark = SparkSession \
    .builder \
    .appName("Python Spark SQL basic example") \
    .config("spark.some.config.option", "some-value") \
    .getOrCreate()
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/python/sql/basic.py" in the Spark repo.

The entry point into all functionality in Spark is the SparkSession class. To initialize a basic SparkSession, just call sparkR.session():

sparkR.session(appName = "R Spark SQL basic example", sparkConfig = list(spark.some.config.option = "some-value"))
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/r/RSparkSQLExample.R" in the Spark repo.

Note that when invoked for the first time, sparkR.session() initializes a global SparkSession singleton instance, and always returns a reference to this instance for successive invocations. In this way, users only need to initialize the SparkSession once, then SparkR functions like read.df will be able to access this global instance implicitly, and users don’t need to pass the SparkSession instance around.

SparkSession in Spark 2.0 provides builtin support for Hive features including the ability to write queries using HiveQL, access to Hive UDFs, and the ability to read data from Hive tables. To use these features, you do not need to have an existing Hive setup.

Creating DataFrames

With a SparkSession, applications can create DataFrames from an existing RDD, from a Hive table, or from Spark data sources.

As an example, the following creates a DataFrame based on the content of a JSON file:

val df = spark.read.json("examples/src/main/resources/people.json")

// Displays the content of the DataFrame to stdout
df.show()
// +----+-------+
// | age|   name|
// +----+-------+
// |null|Michael|
// |  30|   Andy|
// |  19| Justin|
// +----+-------+
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/scala/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/SparkSQLExample.scala" in the Spark repo.

With a SparkSession, applications can create DataFrames from an existing RDD, from a Hive table, or from Spark data sources.

As an example, the following creates a DataFrame based on the content of a JSON file:

import org.apache.spark.sql.Dataset;
import org.apache.spark.sql.Row;

Dataset<Row> df = spark.read().json("examples/src/main/resources/people.json");

// Displays the content of the DataFrame to stdout
df.show();
// +----+-------+
// | age|   name|
// +----+-------+
// |null|Michael|
// |  30|   Andy|
// |  19| Justin|
// +----+-------+
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/java/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/JavaSparkSQLExample.java" in the Spark repo.

With a SparkSession, applications can create DataFrames from an existing RDD, from a Hive table, or from Spark data sources.

As an example, the following creates a DataFrame based on the content of a JSON file:

# spark is an existing SparkSession
df = spark.read.json("examples/src/main/resources/people.json")
# Displays the content of the DataFrame to stdout
df.show()
# +----+-------+
# | age|   name|
# +----+-------+
# |null|Michael|
# |  30|   Andy|
# |  19| Justin|
# +----+-------+
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/python/sql/basic.py" in the Spark repo.

With a SparkSession, applications can create DataFrames from a local R data.frame, from a Hive table, or from Spark data sources.

As an example, the following creates a DataFrame based on the content of a JSON file:

df <- read.json("examples/src/main/resources/people.json")

# Displays the content of the DataFrame
head(df)
##   age    name
## 1  NA Michael
## 2  30    Andy
## 3  19  Justin

# Another method to print the first few rows and optionally truncate the printing of long values
showDF(df)
## +----+-------+
## | age|   name|
## +----+-------+
## |null|Michael|
## |  30|   Andy|
## |  19| Justin|
## +----+-------+
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/r/RSparkSQLExample.R" in the Spark repo.

Untyped Dataset Operations (aka DataFrame Operations)

DataFrames provide a domain-specific language for structured data manipulation in Scala, Java, Python and R.

As mentioned above, in Spark 2.0, DataFrames are just Dataset of Rows in Scala and Java API. These operations are also referred as “untyped transformations” in contrast to “typed transformations” come with strongly typed Scala/Java Datasets.

Here we include some basic examples of structured data processing using Datasets:

// This import is needed to use the $-notation
import spark.implicits._
// Print the schema in a tree format
df.printSchema()
// root
// |-- age: long (nullable = true)
// |-- name: string (nullable = true)

// Select only the "name" column
df.select("name").show()
// +-------+
// |   name|
// +-------+
// |Michael|
// |   Andy|
// | Justin|
// +-------+

// Select everybody, but increment the age by 1
df.select($"name", $"age" + 1).show()
// +-------+---------+
// |   name|(age + 1)|
// +-------+---------+
// |Michael|     null|
// |   Andy|       31|
// | Justin|       20|
// +-------+---------+

// Select people older than 21
df.filter($"age" > 21).show()
// +---+----+
// |age|name|
// +---+----+
// | 30|Andy|
// +---+----+

// Count people by age
df.groupBy("age").count().show()
// +----+-----+
// | age|count|
// +----+-----+
// |  19|    1|
// |null|    1|
// |  30|    1|
// +----+-----+
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/scala/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/SparkSQLExample.scala" in the Spark repo.

For a complete list of the types of operations that can be performed on a Dataset refer to the API Documentation.

In addition to simple column references and expressions, Datasets also have a rich library of functions including string manipulation, date arithmetic, common math operations and more. The complete list is available in the DataFrame Function Reference.

// col("...") is preferable to df.col("...")
import static org.apache.spark.sql.functions.col;

// Print the schema in a tree format
df.printSchema();
// root
// |-- age: long (nullable = true)
// |-- name: string (nullable = true)

// Select only the "name" column
df.select("name").show();
// +-------+
// |   name|
// +-------+
// |Michael|
// |   Andy|
// | Justin|
// +-------+

// Select everybody, but increment the age by 1
df.select(col("name"), col("age").plus(1)).show();
// +-------+---------+
// |   name|(age + 1)|
// +-------+---------+
// |Michael|     null|
// |   Andy|       31|
// | Justin|       20|
// +-------+---------+

// Select people older than 21
df.filter(col("age").gt(21)).show();
// +---+----+
// |age|name|
// +---+----+
// | 30|Andy|
// +---+----+

// Count people by age
df.groupBy("age").count().show();
// +----+-----+
// | age|count|
// +----+-----+
// |  19|    1|
// |null|    1|
// |  30|    1|
// +----+-----+
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/java/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/JavaSparkSQLExample.java" in the Spark repo.

For a complete list of the types of operations that can be performed on a Dataset refer to the API Documentation.

In addition to simple column references and expressions, Datasets also have a rich library of functions including string manipulation, date arithmetic, common math operations and more. The complete list is available in the DataFrame Function Reference.

In Python it’s possible to access a DataFrame’s columns either by attribute (df.age) or by indexing (df['age']). While the former is convenient for interactive data exploration, users are highly encouraged to use the latter form, which is future proof and won’t break with column names that are also attributes on the DataFrame class.

# spark, df are from the previous example
# Print the schema in a tree format
df.printSchema()
# root
# |-- age: long (nullable = true)
# |-- name: string (nullable = true)

# Select only the "name" column
df.select("name").show()
# +-------+
# |   name|
# +-------+
# |Michael|
# |   Andy|
# | Justin|
# +-------+

# Select everybody, but increment the age by 1
df.select(df['name'], df['age'] + 1).show()
# +-------+---------+
# |   name|(age + 1)|
# +-------+---------+
# |Michael|     null|
# |   Andy|       31|
# | Justin|       20|
# +-------+---------+

# Select people older than 21
df.filter(df['age'] > 21).show()
# +---+----+
# |age|name|
# +---+----+
# | 30|Andy|
# +---+----+

# Count people by age
df.groupBy("age").count().show()
# +----+-----+
# | age|count|
# +----+-----+
# |  19|    1|
# |null|    1|
# |  30|    1|
# +----+-----+
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/python/sql/basic.py" in the Spark repo.

For a complete list of the types of operations that can be performed on a DataFrame refer to the API Documentation.

In addition to simple column references and expressions, DataFrames also have a rich library of functions including string manipulation, date arithmetic, common math operations and more. The complete list is available in the DataFrame Function Reference.

# Create the DataFrame
df <- read.json("examples/src/main/resources/people.json")

# Show the content of the DataFrame
head(df)
##   age    name
## 1  NA Michael
## 2  30    Andy
## 3  19  Justin


# Print the schema in a tree format
printSchema(df)
## root
## |-- age: long (nullable = true)
## |-- name: string (nullable = true)

# Select only the "name" column
head(select(df, "name"))
##      name
## 1 Michael
## 2    Andy
## 3  Justin

# Select everybody, but increment the age by 1
head(select(df, df$name, df$age + 1))
##      name (age + 1.0)
## 1 Michael          NA
## 2    Andy          31
## 3  Justin          20

# Select people older than 21
head(where(df, df$age > 21))
##   age name
## 1  30 Andy

# Count people by age
head(count(groupBy(df, "age")))
##   age count
## 1  19     1
## 2  NA     1
## 3  30     1
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/r/RSparkSQLExample.R" in the Spark repo.

For a complete list of the types of operations that can be performed on a DataFrame refer to the API Documentation.

In addition to simple column references and expressions, DataFrames also have a rich library of functions including string manipulation, date arithmetic, common math operations and more. The complete list is available in the DataFrame Function Reference.

Running SQL Queries Programmatically

The sql function on a SparkSession enables applications to run SQL queries programmatically and returns the result as a DataFrame.

// Register the DataFrame as a SQL temporary view
df.createOrReplaceTempView("people")

val sqlDF = spark.sql("SELECT * FROM people")
sqlDF.show()
// +----+-------+
// | age|   name|
// +----+-------+
// |null|Michael|
// |  30|   Andy|
// |  19| Justin|
// +----+-------+
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/scala/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/SparkSQLExample.scala" in the Spark repo.

The sql function on a SparkSession enables applications to run SQL queries programmatically and returns the result as a Dataset<Row>.

import org.apache.spark.sql.Dataset;
import org.apache.spark.sql.Row;

// Register the DataFrame as a SQL temporary view
df.createOrReplaceTempView("people");

Dataset<Row> sqlDF = spark.sql("SELECT * FROM people");
sqlDF.show();
// +----+-------+
// | age|   name|
// +----+-------+
// |null|Michael|
// |  30|   Andy|
// |  19| Justin|
// +----+-------+
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/java/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/JavaSparkSQLExample.java" in the Spark repo.

The sql function on a SparkSession enables applications to run SQL queries programmatically and returns the result as a DataFrame.

# Register the DataFrame as a SQL temporary view
df.createOrReplaceTempView("people")

sqlDF = spark.sql("SELECT * FROM people")
sqlDF.show()
# +----+-------+
# | age|   name|
# +----+-------+
# |null|Michael|
# |  30|   Andy|
# |  19| Justin|
# +----+-------+
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/python/sql/basic.py" in the Spark repo.

The sql function enables applications to run SQL queries programmatically and returns the result as a SparkDataFrame.

df <- sql("SELECT * FROM table")
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/r/RSparkSQLExample.R" in the Spark repo.

Global Temporary View

Temporary views in Spark SQL are session-scoped and will disappear if the session that creates it terminates. If you want to have a temporary view that is shared among all sessions and keep alive until the Spark application terminates, you can create a global temporary view. Global temporary view is tied to a system preserved database global_temp, and we must use the qualified name to refer it, e.g. SELECT * FROM global_temp.view1.

// Register the DataFrame as a global temporary view
df.createGlobalTempView("people")

// Global temporary view is tied to a system preserved database `global_temp`
spark.sql("SELECT * FROM global_temp.people").show()
// +----+-------+
// | age|   name|
// +----+-------+
// |null|Michael|
// |  30|   Andy|
// |  19| Justin|
// +----+-------+

// Global temporary view is cross-session
spark.newSession().sql("SELECT * FROM global_temp.people").show()
// +----+-------+
// | age|   name|
// +----+-------+
// |null|Michael|
// |  30|   Andy|
// |  19| Justin|
// +----+-------+
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/scala/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/SparkSQLExample.scala" in the Spark repo.
// Register the DataFrame as a global temporary view
df.createGlobalTempView("people");

// Global temporary view is tied to a system preserved database `global_temp`
spark.sql("SELECT * FROM global_temp.people").show();
// +----+-------+
// | age|   name|
// +----+-------+
// |null|Michael|
// |  30|   Andy|
// |  19| Justin|
// +----+-------+

// Global temporary view is cross-session
spark.newSession().sql("SELECT * FROM global_temp.people").show();
// +----+-------+
// | age|   name|
// +----+-------+
// |null|Michael|
// |  30|   Andy|
// |  19| Justin|
// +----+-------+
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/java/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/JavaSparkSQLExample.java" in the Spark repo.
# Register the DataFrame as a global temporary view
df.createGlobalTempView("people")

# Global temporary view is tied to a system preserved database `global_temp`
spark.sql("SELECT * FROM global_temp.people").show()
# +----+-------+
# | age|   name|
# +----+-------+
# |null|Michael|
# |  30|   Andy|
# |  19| Justin|
# +----+-------+

# Global temporary view is cross-session
spark.newSession().sql("SELECT * FROM global_temp.people").show()
# +----+-------+
# | age|   name|
# +----+-------+
# |null|Michael|
# |  30|   Andy|
# |  19| Justin|
# +----+-------+
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/python/sql/basic.py" in the Spark repo.
CREATE GLOBAL TEMPORARY VIEW temp_view AS SELECT a + 1, b * 2 FROM tbl

SELECT * FROM global_temp.temp_view

Creating Datasets

Datasets are similar to RDDs, however, instead of using Java serialization or Kryo they use a specialized Encoder to serialize the objects for processing or transmitting over the network. While both encoders and standard serialization are responsible for turning an object into bytes, encoders are code generated dynamically and use a format that allows Spark to perform many operations like filtering, sorting and hashing without deserializing the bytes back into an object.

case class Person(name: String, age: Long)

// Encoders are created for case classes
val caseClassDS = Seq(Person("Andy", 32)).toDS()
caseClassDS.show()
// +----+---+
// |name|age|
// +----+---+
// |Andy| 32|
// +----+---+

// Encoders for most common types are automatically provided by importing spark.implicits._
val primitiveDS = Seq(1, 2, 3).toDS()
primitiveDS.map(_ + 1).collect() // Returns: Array(2, 3, 4)

// DataFrames can be converted to a Dataset by providing a class. Mapping will be done by name
val path = "examples/src/main/resources/people.json"
val peopleDS = spark.read.json(path).as[Person]
peopleDS.show()
// +----+-------+
// | age|   name|
// +----+-------+
// |null|Michael|
// |  30|   Andy|
// |  19| Justin|
// +----+-------+
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/scala/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/SparkSQLExample.scala" in the Spark repo.
import java.util.Arrays;
import java.util.Collections;
import java.io.Serializable;

import org.apache.spark.api.java.function.MapFunction;
import org.apache.spark.sql.Dataset;
import org.apache.spark.sql.Row;
import org.apache.spark.sql.Encoder;
import org.apache.spark.sql.Encoders;

public static class Person implements Serializable {
  private String name;
  private int age;

  public String getName() {
    return name;
  }

  public void setName(String name) {
    this.name = name;
  }

  public int getAge() {
    return age;
  }

  public void setAge(int age) {
    this.age = age;
  }
}

// Create an instance of a Bean class
Person person = new Person();
person.setName("Andy");
person.setAge(32);

// Encoders are created for Java beans
Encoder<Person> personEncoder = Encoders.bean(Person.class);
Dataset<Person> javaBeanDS = spark.createDataset(
  Collections.singletonList(person),
  personEncoder
);
javaBeanDS.show();
// +---+----+
// |age|name|
// +---+----+
// | 32|Andy|
// +---+----+

// Encoders for most common types are provided in class Encoders
Encoder<Integer> integerEncoder = Encoders.INT();
Dataset<Integer> primitiveDS = spark.createDataset(Arrays.asList(1, 2, 3), integerEncoder);
Dataset<Integer> transformedDS = primitiveDS.map(
    (MapFunction<Integer, Integer>) value -> value + 1,
    integerEncoder);
transformedDS.collect(); // Returns [2, 3, 4]

// DataFrames can be converted to a Dataset by providing a class. Mapping based on name
String path = "examples/src/main/resources/people.json";
Dataset<Person> peopleDS = spark.read().json(path).as(personEncoder);
peopleDS.show();
// +----+-------+
// | age|   name|
// +----+-------+
// |null|Michael|
// |  30|   Andy|
// |  19| Justin|
// +----+-------+
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/java/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/JavaSparkSQLExample.java" in the Spark repo.

Interoperating with RDDs

Spark SQL supports two different methods for converting existing RDDs into Datasets. The first method uses reflection to infer the schema of an RDD that contains specific types of objects. This reflection based approach leads to more concise code and works well when you already know the schema while writing your Spark application.

The second method for creating Datasets is through a programmatic interface that allows you to construct a schema and then apply it to an existing RDD. While this method is more verbose, it allows you to construct Datasets when the columns and their types are not known until runtime.

Inferring the Schema Using Reflection

The Scala interface for Spark SQL supports automatically converting an RDD containing case classes to a DataFrame. The case class defines the schema of the table. The names of the arguments to the case class are read using reflection and become the names of the columns. Case classes can also be nested or contain complex types such as Seqs or Arrays. This RDD can be implicitly converted to a DataFrame and then be registered as a table. Tables can be used in subsequent SQL statements.

// For implicit conversions from RDDs to DataFrames
import spark.implicits._

// Create an RDD of Person objects from a text file, convert it to a Dataframe
val peopleDF = spark.sparkContext
  .textFile("examples/src/main/resources/people.txt")
  .map(_.split(","))
  .map(attributes => Person(attributes(0), attributes(1).trim.toInt))
  .toDF()
// Register the DataFrame as a temporary view
peopleDF.createOrReplaceTempView("people")

// SQL statements can be run by using the sql methods provided by Spark
val teenagersDF = spark.sql("SELECT name, age FROM people WHERE age BETWEEN 13 AND 19")

// The columns of a row in the result can be accessed by field index
teenagersDF.map(teenager => "Name: " + teenager(0)).show()
// +------------+
// |       value|
// +------------+
// |Name: Justin|
// +------------+

// or by field name
teenagersDF.map(teenager => "Name: " + teenager.getAs[String]("name")).show()
// +------------+
// |       value|
// +------------+
// |Name: Justin|
// +------------+

// No pre-defined encoders for Dataset[Map[K,V]], define explicitly
implicit val mapEncoder = org.apache.spark.sql.Encoders.kryo[Map[String, Any]]
// Primitive types and case classes can be also defined as
// implicit val stringIntMapEncoder: Encoder[Map[String, Any]] = ExpressionEncoder()

// row.getValuesMap[T] retrieves multiple columns at once into a Map[String, T]
teenagersDF.map(teenager => teenager.getValuesMap[Any](List("name", "age"))).collect()
// Array(Map("name" -> "Justin", "age" -> 19))
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/scala/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/SparkSQLExample.scala" in the Spark repo.

Spark SQL supports automatically converting an RDD of JavaBeans into a DataFrame. The BeanInfo, obtained using reflection, defines the schema of the table. Currently, Spark SQL does not support JavaBeans that contain Map field(s). Nested JavaBeans and List or Array fields are supported though. You can create a JavaBean by creating a class that implements Serializable and has getters and setters for all of its fields.

import org.apache.spark.api.java.JavaRDD;
import org.apache.spark.api.java.function.Function;
import org.apache.spark.api.java.function.MapFunction;
import org.apache.spark.sql.Dataset;
import org.apache.spark.sql.Row;
import org.apache.spark.sql.Encoder;
import org.apache.spark.sql.Encoders;

// Create an RDD of Person objects from a text file
JavaRDD<Person> peopleRDD = spark.read()
  .textFile("examples/src/main/resources/people.txt")
  .javaRDD()
  .map(line -> {
    String[] parts = line.split(",");
    Person person = new Person();
    person.setName(parts[0]);
    person.setAge(Integer.parseInt(parts[1].trim()));
    return person;
  });

// Apply a schema to an RDD of JavaBeans to get a DataFrame
Dataset<Row> peopleDF = spark.createDataFrame(peopleRDD, Person.class);
// Register the DataFrame as a temporary view
peopleDF.createOrReplaceTempView("people");

// SQL statements can be run by using the sql methods provided by spark
Dataset<Row> teenagersDF = spark.sql("SELECT name FROM people WHERE age BETWEEN 13 AND 19");

// The columns of a row in the result can be accessed by field index
Encoder<String> stringEncoder = Encoders.STRING();
Dataset<String> teenagerNamesByIndexDF = teenagersDF.map(
    (MapFunction<Row, String>) row -> "Name: " + row.getString(0),
    stringEncoder);
teenagerNamesByIndexDF.show();
// +------------+
// |       value|
// +------------+
// |Name: Justin|
// +------------+

// or by field name
Dataset<String> teenagerNamesByFieldDF = teenagersDF.map(
    (MapFunction<Row, String>) row -> "Name: " + row.<String>getAs("name"),
    stringEncoder);
teenagerNamesByFieldDF.show();
// +------------+
// |       value|
// +------------+
// |Name: Justin|
// +------------+
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/java/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/JavaSparkSQLExample.java" in the Spark repo.

Spark SQL can convert an RDD of Row objects to a DataFrame, inferring the datatypes. Rows are constructed by passing a list of key/value pairs as kwargs to the Row class. The keys of this list define the column names of the table, and the types are inferred by sampling the whole dataset, similar to the inference that is performed on JSON files.

from pyspark.sql import Row

sc = spark.sparkContext

# Load a text file and convert each line to a Row.
lines = sc.textFile("examples/src/main/resources/people.txt")
parts = lines.map(lambda l: l.split(","))
people = parts.map(lambda p: Row(name=p[0], age=int(p[1])))

# Infer the schema, and register the DataFrame as a table.
schemaPeople = spark.createDataFrame(people)
schemaPeople.createOrReplaceTempView("people")

# SQL can be run over DataFrames that have been registered as a table.
teenagers = spark.sql("SELECT name FROM people WHERE age >= 13 AND age <= 19")

# The results of SQL queries are Dataframe objects.
# rdd returns the content as an :class:`pyspark.RDD` of :class:`Row`.
teenNames = teenagers.rdd.map(lambda p: "Name: " + p.name).collect()
for name in teenNames:
    print(name)
# Name: Justin
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/python/sql/basic.py" in the Spark repo.

Programmatically Specifying the Schema

When case classes cannot be defined ahead of time (for example, the structure of records is encoded in a string, or a text dataset will be parsed and fields will be projected differently for different users), a DataFrame can be created programmatically with three steps.

  1. Create an RDD of Rows from the original RDD;
  2. Create the schema represented by a StructType matching the structure of Rows in the RDD created in Step 1.
  3. Apply the schema to the RDD of Rows via createDataFrame method provided by SparkSession.

For example:

import org.apache.spark.sql.types._

// Create an RDD
val peopleRDD = spark.sparkContext.textFile("examples/src/main/resources/people.txt")

// The schema is encoded in a string
val schemaString = "name age"

// Generate the schema based on the string of schema
val fields = schemaString.split(" ")
  .map(fieldName => StructField(fieldName, StringType, nullable = true))
val schema = StructType(fields)

// Convert records of the RDD (people) to Rows
val rowRDD = peopleRDD
  .map(_.split(","))
  .map(attributes => Row(attributes(0), attributes(1).trim))

// Apply the schema to the RDD
val peopleDF = spark.createDataFrame(rowRDD, schema)

// Creates a temporary view using the DataFrame
peopleDF.createOrReplaceTempView("people")

// SQL can be run over a temporary view created using DataFrames
val results = spark.sql("SELECT name FROM people")

// The results of SQL queries are DataFrames and support all the normal RDD operations
// The columns of a row in the result can be accessed by field index or by field name
results.map(attributes => "Name: " + attributes(0)).show()
// +-------------+
// |        value|
// +-------------+
// |Name: Michael|
// |   Name: Andy|
// | Name: Justin|
// +-------------+
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/scala/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/SparkSQLExample.scala" in the Spark repo.

When JavaBean classes cannot be defined ahead of time (for example, the structure of records is encoded in a string, or a text dataset will be parsed and fields will be projected differently for different users), a Dataset<Row> can be created programmatically with three steps.

  1. Create an RDD of Rows from the original RDD;
  2. Create the schema represented by a StructType matching the structure of Rows in the RDD created in Step 1.
  3. Apply the schema to the RDD of Rows via createDataFrame method provided by SparkSession.

For example:

import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.List;

import org.apache.spark.api.java.JavaRDD;
import org.apache.spark.api.java.function.Function;

import org.apache.spark.sql.Dataset;
import org.apache.spark.sql.Row;

import org.apache.spark.sql.types.DataTypes;
import org.apache.spark.sql.types.StructField;
import org.apache.spark.sql.types.StructType;

// Create an RDD
JavaRDD<String> peopleRDD = spark.sparkContext()
  .textFile("examples/src/main/resources/people.txt", 1)
  .toJavaRDD();

// The schema is encoded in a string
String schemaString = "name age";

// Generate the schema based on the string of schema
List<StructField> fields = new ArrayList<>();
for (String fieldName : schemaString.split(" ")) {
  StructField field = DataTypes.createStructField(fieldName, DataTypes.StringType, true);
  fields.add(field);
}
StructType schema = DataTypes.createStructType(fields);

// Convert records of the RDD (people) to Rows
JavaRDD<Row> rowRDD = peopleRDD.map((Function<String, Row>) record -> {
  String[] attributes = record.split(",");
  return RowFactory.create(attributes[0], attributes[1].trim());
});

// Apply the schema to the RDD
Dataset<Row> peopleDataFrame = spark.createDataFrame(rowRDD, schema);

// Creates a temporary view using the DataFrame
peopleDataFrame.createOrReplaceTempView("people");

// SQL can be run over a temporary view created using DataFrames
Dataset<Row> results = spark.sql("SELECT name FROM people");

// The results of SQL queries are DataFrames and support all the normal RDD operations
// The columns of a row in the result can be accessed by field index or by field name
Dataset<String> namesDS = results.map(
    (MapFunction<Row, String>) row -> "Name: " + row.getString(0),
    Encoders.STRING());
namesDS.show();
// +-------------+
// |        value|
// +-------------+
// |Name: Michael|
// |   Name: Andy|
// | Name: Justin|
// +-------------+
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/java/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/JavaSparkSQLExample.java" in the Spark repo.

When a dictionary of kwargs cannot be defined ahead of time (for example, the structure of records is encoded in a string, or a text dataset will be parsed and fields will be projected differently for different users), a DataFrame can be created programmatically with three steps.

  1. Create an RDD of tuples or lists from the original RDD;
  2. Create the schema represented by a StructType matching the structure of tuples or lists in the RDD created in the step 1.
  3. Apply the schema to the RDD via createDataFrame method provided by SparkSession.

For example:

# Import data types
from pyspark.sql.types import *

sc = spark.sparkContext

# Load a text file and convert each line to a Row.
lines = sc.textFile("examples/src/main/resources/people.txt")
parts = lines.map(lambda l: l.split(","))
# Each line is converted to a tuple.
people = parts.map(lambda p: (p[0], p[1].strip()))

# The schema is encoded in a string.
schemaString = "name age"

fields = [StructField(field_name, StringType(), True) for field_name in schemaString.split()]
schema = StructType(fields)

# Apply the schema to the RDD.
schemaPeople = spark.createDataFrame(people, schema)

# Creates a temporary view using the DataFrame
schemaPeople.createOrReplaceTempView("people")

# SQL can be run over DataFrames that have been registered as a table.
results = spark.sql("SELECT name FROM people")

results.show()
# +-------+
# |   name|
# +-------+
# |Michael|
# |   Andy|
# | Justin|
# +-------+
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/python/sql/basic.py" in the Spark repo.

Aggregations

The built-in DataFrames functions provide common aggregations such as count(), countDistinct(), avg(), max(), min(), etc. While those functions are designed for DataFrames, Spark SQL also has type-safe versions for some of them in Scala and Java to work with strongly typed Datasets. Moreover, users are not limited to the predefined aggregate functions and can create their own.

Untyped User-Defined Aggregate Functions

Users have to extend the UserDefinedAggregateFunction abstract class to implement a custom untyped aggregate function. For example, a user-defined average can look like:

import org.apache.spark.sql.{Row, SparkSession}
import org.apache.spark.sql.expressions.MutableAggregationBuffer
import org.apache.spark.sql.expressions.UserDefinedAggregateFunction
import org.apache.spark.sql.types._

object MyAverage extends UserDefinedAggregateFunction {
  // Data types of input arguments of this aggregate function
  def inputSchema: StructType = StructType(StructField("inputColumn", LongType) :: Nil)
  // Data types of values in the aggregation buffer
  def bufferSchema: StructType = {
    StructType(StructField("sum", LongType) :: StructField("count", LongType) :: Nil)
  }
  // The data type of the returned value
  def dataType: DataType = DoubleType
  // Whether this function always returns the same output on the identical input
  def deterministic: Boolean = true
  // Initializes the given aggregation buffer. The buffer itself is a `Row` that in addition to
  // standard methods like retrieving a value at an index (e.g., get(), getBoolean()), provides
  // the opportunity to update its values. Note that arrays and maps inside the buffer are still
  // immutable.
  def initialize(buffer: MutableAggregationBuffer): Unit = {
    buffer(0) = 0L
    buffer(1) = 0L
  }
  // Updates the given aggregation buffer `buffer` with new input data from `input`
  def update(buffer: MutableAggregationBuffer, input: Row): Unit = {
    if (!input.isNullAt(0)) {
      buffer(0) = buffer.getLong(0) + input.getLong(0)
      buffer(1) = buffer.getLong(1) + 1
    }
  }
  // Merges two aggregation buffers and stores the updated buffer values back to `buffer1`
  def merge(buffer1: MutableAggregationBuffer, buffer2: Row): Unit = {
    buffer1(0) = buffer1.getLong(0) + buffer2.getLong(0)
    buffer1(1) = buffer1.getLong(1) + buffer2.getLong(1)
  }
  // Calculates the final result
  def evaluate(buffer: Row): Double = buffer.getLong(0).toDouble / buffer.getLong(1)
}

// Register the function to access it
spark.udf.register("myAverage", MyAverage)

val df = spark.read.json("examples/src/main/resources/employees.json")
df.createOrReplaceTempView("employees")
df.show()
// +-------+------+
// |   name|salary|
// +-------+------+
// |Michael|  3000|
// |   Andy|  4500|
// | Justin|  3500|
// |  Berta|  4000|
// +-------+------+

val result = spark.sql("SELECT myAverage(salary) as average_salary FROM employees")
result.show()
// +--------------+
// |average_salary|
// +--------------+
// |        3750.0|
// +--------------+
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/scala/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/UserDefinedUntypedAggregation.scala" in the Spark repo.
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.List;

import org.apache.spark.sql.Dataset;
import org.apache.spark.sql.Row;
import org.apache.spark.sql.SparkSession;
import org.apache.spark.sql.expressions.MutableAggregationBuffer;
import org.apache.spark.sql.expressions.UserDefinedAggregateFunction;
import org.apache.spark.sql.types.DataType;
import org.apache.spark.sql.types.DataTypes;
import org.apache.spark.sql.types.StructField;
import org.apache.spark.sql.types.StructType;

public static class MyAverage extends UserDefinedAggregateFunction {

  private StructType inputSchema;
  private StructType bufferSchema;

  public MyAverage() {
    List<StructField> inputFields = new ArrayList<>();
    inputFields.add(DataTypes.createStructField("inputColumn", DataTypes.LongType, true));
    inputSchema = DataTypes.createStructType(inputFields);

    List<StructField> bufferFields = new ArrayList<>();
    bufferFields.add(DataTypes.createStructField("sum", DataTypes.LongType, true));
    bufferFields.add(DataTypes.createStructField("count", DataTypes.LongType, true));
    bufferSchema = DataTypes.createStructType(bufferFields);
  }
  // Data types of input arguments of this aggregate function
  public StructType inputSchema() {
    return inputSchema;
  }
  // Data types of values in the aggregation buffer
  public StructType bufferSchema() {
    return bufferSchema;
  }
  // The data type of the returned value
  public DataType dataType() {
    return DataTypes.DoubleType;
  }
  // Whether this function always returns the same output on the identical input
  public boolean deterministic() {
    return true;
  }
  // Initializes the given aggregation buffer. The buffer itself is a `Row` that in addition to
  // standard methods like retrieving a value at an index (e.g., get(), getBoolean()), provides
  // the opportunity to update its values. Note that arrays and maps inside the buffer are still
  // immutable.
  public void initialize(MutableAggregationBuffer buffer) {
    buffer.update(0, 0L);
    buffer.update(1, 0L);
  }
  // Updates the given aggregation buffer `buffer` with new input data from `input`
  public void update(MutableAggregationBuffer buffer, Row input) {
    if (!input.isNullAt(0)) {
      long updatedSum = buffer.getLong(0) + input.getLong(0);
      long updatedCount = buffer.getLong(1) + 1;
      buffer.update(0, updatedSum);
      buffer.update(1, updatedCount);
    }
  }
  // Merges two aggregation buffers and stores the updated buffer values back to `buffer1`
  public void merge(MutableAggregationBuffer buffer1, Row buffer2) {
    long mergedSum = buffer1.getLong(0) + buffer2.getLong(0);
    long mergedCount = buffer1.getLong(1) + buffer2.getLong(1);
    buffer1.update(0, mergedSum);
    buffer1.update(1, mergedCount);
  }
  // Calculates the final result
  public Double evaluate(Row buffer) {
    return ((double) buffer.getLong(0)) / buffer.getLong(1);
  }
}

// Register the function to access it
spark.udf().register("myAverage", new MyAverage());

Dataset<Row> df = spark.read().json("examples/src/main/resources/employees.json");
df.createOrReplaceTempView("employees");
df.show();
// +-------+------+
// |   name|salary|
// +-------+------+
// |Michael|  3000|
// |   Andy|  4500|
// | Justin|  3500|
// |  Berta|  4000|
// +-------+------+

Dataset<Row> result = spark.sql("SELECT myAverage(salary) as average_salary FROM employees");
result.show();
// +--------------+
// |average_salary|
// +--------------+
// |        3750.0|
// +--------------+
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/java/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/JavaUserDefinedUntypedAggregation.java" in the Spark repo.

Type-Safe User-Defined Aggregate Functions

User-defined aggregations for strongly typed Datasets revolve around the Aggregator abstract class. For example, a type-safe user-defined average can look like:

import org.apache.spark.sql.{Encoder, Encoders, SparkSession}
import org.apache.spark.sql.expressions.Aggregator

case class Employee(name: String, salary: Long)
case class Average(var sum: Long, var count: Long)

object MyAverage extends Aggregator[Employee, Average, Double] {
  // A zero value for this aggregation. Should satisfy the property that any b + zero = b
  def zero: Average = Average(0L, 0L)
  // Combine two values to produce a new value. For performance, the function may modify `buffer`
  // and return it instead of constructing a new object
  def reduce(buffer: Average, employee: Employee): Average = {
    buffer.sum += employee.salary
    buffer.count += 1
    buffer
  }
  // Merge two intermediate values
  def merge(b1: Average, b2: Average): Average = {
    b1.sum += b2.sum
    b1.count += b2.count
    b1
  }
  // Transform the output of the reduction
  def finish(reduction: Average): Double = reduction.sum.toDouble / reduction.count
  // Specifies the Encoder for the intermediate value type
  def bufferEncoder: Encoder[Average] = Encoders.product
  // Specifies the Encoder for the final output value type
  def outputEncoder: Encoder[Double] = Encoders.scalaDouble
}

val ds = spark.read.json("examples/src/main/resources/employees.json").as[Employee]
ds.show()
// +-------+------+
// |   name|salary|
// +-------+------+
// |Michael|  3000|
// |   Andy|  4500|
// | Justin|  3500|
// |  Berta|  4000|
// +-------+------+

// Convert the function to a `TypedColumn` and give it a name
val averageSalary = MyAverage.toColumn.name("average_salary")
val result = ds.select(averageSalary)
result.show()
// +--------------+
// |average_salary|
// +--------------+
// |        3750.0|
// +--------------+
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/scala/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/UserDefinedTypedAggregation.scala" in the Spark repo.
import java.io.Serializable;

import org.apache.spark.sql.Dataset;
import org.apache.spark.sql.Encoder;
import org.apache.spark.sql.Encoders;
import org.apache.spark.sql.SparkSession;
import org.apache.spark.sql.TypedColumn;
import org.apache.spark.sql.expressions.Aggregator;

public static class Employee implements Serializable {
  private String name;
  private long salary;

  // Constructors, getters, setters...

}

public static class Average implements Serializable  {
  private long sum;
  private long count;

  // Constructors, getters, setters...

}

public static class MyAverage extends Aggregator<Employee, Average, Double> {
  // A zero value for this aggregation. Should satisfy the property that any b + zero = b
  public Average zero() {
    return new Average(0L, 0L);
  }
  // Combine two values to produce a new value. For performance, the function may modify `buffer`
  // and return it instead of constructing a new object
  public Average reduce(Average buffer, Employee employee) {
    long newSum = buffer.getSum() + employee.getSalary();
    long newCount = buffer.getCount() + 1;
    buffer.setSum(newSum);
    buffer.setCount(newCount);
    return buffer;
  }
  // Merge two intermediate values
  public Average merge(Average b1, Average b2) {
    long mergedSum = b1.getSum() + b2.getSum();
    long mergedCount = b1.getCount() + b2.getCount();
    b1.setSum(mergedSum);
    b1.setCount(mergedCount);
    return b1;
  }
  // Transform the output of the reduction
  public Double finish(Average reduction) {
    return ((double) reduction.getSum()) / reduction.getCount();
  }
  // Specifies the Encoder for the intermediate value type
  public Encoder<Average> bufferEncoder() {
    return Encoders.bean(Average.class);
  }
  // Specifies the Encoder for the final output value type
  public Encoder<Double> outputEncoder() {
    return Encoders.DOUBLE();
  }
}

Encoder<Employee> employeeEncoder = Encoders.bean(Employee.class);
String path = "examples/src/main/resources/employees.json";
Dataset<Employee> ds = spark.read().json(path).as(employeeEncoder);
ds.show();
// +-------+------+
// |   name|salary|
// +-------+------+
// |Michael|  3000|
// |   Andy|  4500|
// | Justin|  3500|
// |  Berta|  4000|
// +-------+------+

MyAverage myAverage = new MyAverage();
// Convert the function to a `TypedColumn` and give it a name
TypedColumn<Employee, Double> averageSalary = myAverage.toColumn().name("average_salary");
Dataset<Double> result = ds.select(averageSalary);
result.show();
// +--------------+
// |average_salary|
// +--------------+
// |        3750.0|
// +--------------+
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/java/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/JavaUserDefinedTypedAggregation.java" in the Spark repo.

Data Sources

Spark SQL supports operating on a variety of data sources through the DataFrame interface. A DataFrame can be operated on using relational transformations and can also be used to create a temporary view. Registering a DataFrame as a temporary view allows you to run SQL queries over its data. This section describes the general methods for loading and saving data using the Spark Data Sources and then goes into specific options that are available for the built-in data sources.

Generic Load/Save Functions

In the simplest form, the default data source (parquet unless otherwise configured by spark.sql.sources.default) will be used for all operations.

val usersDF = spark.read.load("examples/src/main/resources/users.parquet")
usersDF.select("name", "favorite_color").write.save("namesAndFavColors.parquet")
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/scala/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/SQLDataSourceExample.scala" in the Spark repo.
Dataset<Row> usersDF = spark.read().load("examples/src/main/resources/users.parquet");
usersDF.select("name", "favorite_color").write().save("namesAndFavColors.parquet");
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/java/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/JavaSQLDataSourceExample.java" in the Spark repo.
df = spark.read.load("examples/src/main/resources/users.parquet")
df.select("name", "favorite_color").write.save("namesAndFavColors.parquet")
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/python/sql/datasource.py" in the Spark repo.
df <- read.df("examples/src/main/resources/users.parquet")
write.df(select(df, "name", "favorite_color"), "namesAndFavColors.parquet")
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/r/RSparkSQLExample.R" in the Spark repo.

Manually Specifying Options

You can also manually specify the data source that will be used along with any extra options that you would like to pass to the data source. Data sources are specified by their fully qualified name (i.e., org.apache.spark.sql.parquet), but for built-in sources you can also use their short names (json, parquet, jdbc, orc, libsvm, csv, text). DataFrames loaded from any data source type can be converted into other types using this syntax.

To load a JSON file you can use:

val peopleDF = spark.read.format("json").load("examples/src/main/resources/people.json")
peopleDF.select("name", "age").write.format("parquet").save("namesAndAges.parquet")
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/scala/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/SQLDataSourceExample.scala" in the Spark repo.
Dataset<Row> peopleDF =
  spark.read().format("json").load("examples/src/main/resources/people.json");
peopleDF.select("name", "age").write().format("parquet").save("namesAndAges.parquet");
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/java/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/JavaSQLDataSourceExample.java" in the Spark repo.
df = spark.read.load("examples/src/main/resources/people.json", format="json")
df.select("name", "age").write.save("namesAndAges.parquet", format="parquet")
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/python/sql/datasource.py" in the Spark repo.
df <- read.df("examples/src/main/resources/people.json", "json")
namesAndAges <- select(df, "name", "age")
write.df(namesAndAges, "namesAndAges.parquet", "parquet")
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/r/RSparkSQLExample.R" in the Spark repo.

To load a CSV file you can use:

val peopleDFCsv = spark.read.format("csv")
  .option("sep", ";")
  .option("inferSchema", "true")
  .option("header", "true")
  .load("examples/src/main/resources/people.csv")
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/scala/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/SQLDataSourceExample.scala" in the Spark repo.
Dataset<Row> peopleDFCsv = spark.read().format("csv")
  .option("sep", ";")
  .option("inferSchema", "true")
  .option("header", "true")
  .load("examples/src/main/resources/people.csv");
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/java/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/JavaSQLDataSourceExample.java" in the Spark repo.
df = spark.read.load("examples/src/main/resources/people.csv",
                     format="csv", sep=":", inferSchema="true", header="true")
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/python/sql/datasource.py" in the Spark repo.
df <- read.df("examples/src/main/resources/people.csv", "csv")
namesAndAges <- select(df, "name", "age")
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/r/RSparkSQLExample.R" in the Spark repo.

Run SQL on files directly

Instead of using read API to load a file into DataFrame and query it, you can also query that file directly with SQL.

val sqlDF = spark.sql("SELECT * FROM parquet.`examples/src/main/resources/users.parquet`")
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/scala/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/SQLDataSourceExample.scala" in the Spark repo.
Dataset<Row> sqlDF =
  spark.sql("SELECT * FROM parquet.`examples/src/main/resources/users.parquet`");
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/java/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/JavaSQLDataSourceExample.java" in the Spark repo.
df = spark.sql("SELECT * FROM parquet.`examples/src/main/resources/users.parquet`")
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/python/sql/datasource.py" in the Spark repo.
df <- sql("SELECT * FROM parquet.`examples/src/main/resources/users.parquet`")
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/r/RSparkSQLExample.R" in the Spark repo.

Save Modes

Save operations can optionally take a SaveMode, that specifies how to handle existing data if present. It is important to realize that these save modes do not utilize any locking and are not atomic. Additionally, when performing an Overwrite, the data will be deleted before writing out the new data.

Scala/JavaAny LanguageMeaning
SaveMode.ErrorIfExists (default) "error" or "errorifexists" (default) When saving a DataFrame to a data source, if data already exists, an exception is expected to be thrown.
SaveMode.Append "append" When saving a DataFrame to a data source, if data/table already exists, contents of the DataFrame are expected to be appended to existing data.
SaveMode.Overwrite "overwrite" Overwrite mode means that when saving a DataFrame to a data source, if data/table already exists, existing data is expected to be overwritten by the contents of the DataFrame.
SaveMode.Ignore "ignore" Ignore mode means that when saving a DataFrame to a data source, if data already exists, the save operation is expected to not save the contents of the DataFrame and to not change the existing data. This is similar to a CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS in SQL.

Saving to Persistent Tables

DataFrames can also be saved as persistent tables into Hive metastore using the saveAsTable command. Notice that an existing Hive deployment is not necessary to use this feature. Spark will create a default local Hive metastore (using Derby) for you. Unlike the createOrReplaceTempView command, saveAsTable will materialize the contents of the DataFrame and create a pointer to the data in the Hive metastore. Persistent tables will still exist even after your Spark program has restarted, as long as you maintain your connection to the same metastore. A DataFrame for a persistent table can be created by calling the table method on a SparkSession with the name of the table.

For file-based data source, e.g. text, parquet, json, etc. you can specify a custom table path via the path option, e.g. df.write.option("path", "/some/path").saveAsTable("t"). When the table is dropped, the custom table path will not be removed and the table data is still there. If no custom table path is specified, Spark will write data to a default table path under the warehouse directory. When the table is dropped, the default table path will be removed too.

Starting from Spark 2.1, persistent datasource tables have per-partition metadata stored in the Hive metastore. This brings several benefits:

Note that partition information is not gathered by default when creating external datasource tables (those with a path option). To sync the partition information in the metastore, you can invoke MSCK REPAIR TABLE.

Bucketing, Sorting and Partitioning

For file-based data source, it is also possible to bucket and sort or partition the output. Bucketing and sorting are applicable only to persistent tables:

peopleDF.write.bucketBy(42, "name").sortBy("age").saveAsTable("people_bucketed")
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/scala/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/SQLDataSourceExample.scala" in the Spark repo.
peopleDF.write().bucketBy(42, "name").sortBy("age").saveAsTable("people_bucketed");
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/java/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/JavaSQLDataSourceExample.java" in the Spark repo.
df.write.bucketBy(42, "name").sortBy("age").saveAsTable("people_bucketed")
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/python/sql/datasource.py" in the Spark repo.
CREATE TABLE users_bucketed_by_name(
  name STRING,
  favorite_color STRING,
  favorite_numbers array<integer>
) USING parquet
CLUSTERED BY(name) INTO 42 BUCKETS;

while partitioning can be used with both save and saveAsTable when using the Dataset APIs.

usersDF.write.partitionBy("favorite_color").format("parquet").save("namesPartByColor.parquet")
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/scala/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/SQLDataSourceExample.scala" in the Spark repo.
usersDF
  .write()
  .partitionBy("favorite_color")
  .format("parquet")
  .save("namesPartByColor.parquet");
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/java/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/JavaSQLDataSourceExample.java" in the Spark repo.
df.write.partitionBy("favorite_color").format("parquet").save("namesPartByColor.parquet")
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/python/sql/datasource.py" in the Spark repo.
CREATE TABLE users_by_favorite_color(
  name STRING,
  favorite_color STRING,
  favorite_numbers array<integer>
) USING csv PARTITIONED BY(favorite_color);

It is possible to use both partitioning and bucketing for a single table:

usersDF
  .write
  .partitionBy("favorite_color")
  .bucketBy(42, "name")
  .saveAsTable("users_partitioned_bucketed")
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/scala/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/SQLDataSourceExample.scala" in the Spark repo.
peopleDF
  .write()
  .partitionBy("favorite_color")
  .bucketBy(42, "name")
  .saveAsTable("people_partitioned_bucketed");
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/java/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/JavaSQLDataSourceExample.java" in the Spark repo.
df = spark.read.parquet("examples/src/main/resources/users.parquet")
(df
    .write
    .partitionBy("favorite_color")
    .bucketBy(42, "name")
    .saveAsTable("people_partitioned_bucketed"))
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/python/sql/datasource.py" in the Spark repo.
CREATE TABLE users_bucketed_and_partitioned(
  name STRING,
  favorite_color STRING,
  favorite_numbers array<integer>
) USING parquet
PARTITIONED BY (favorite_color)
CLUSTERED BY(name) SORTED BY (favorite_numbers) INTO 42 BUCKETS;

partitionBy creates a directory structure as described in the Partition Discovery section. Thus, it has limited applicability to columns with high cardinality. In contrast bucketBy distributes data across a fixed number of buckets and can be used when a number of unique values is unbounded.

Parquet Files

Parquet is a columnar format that is supported by many other data processing systems. Spark SQL provides support for both reading and writing Parquet files that automatically preserves the schema of the original data. When writing Parquet files, all columns are automatically converted to be nullable for compatibility reasons.

Loading Data Programmatically

Using the data from the above example:

// Encoders for most common types are automatically provided by importing spark.implicits._
import spark.implicits._

val peopleDF = spark.read.json("examples/src/main/resources/people.json")

// DataFrames can be saved as Parquet files, maintaining the schema information
peopleDF.write.parquet("people.parquet")

// Read in the parquet file created above
// Parquet files are self-describing so the schema is preserved
// The result of loading a Parquet file is also a DataFrame
val parquetFileDF = spark.read.parquet("people.parquet")

// Parquet files can also be used to create a temporary view and then used in SQL statements
parquetFileDF.createOrReplaceTempView("parquetFile")
val namesDF = spark.sql("SELECT name FROM parquetFile WHERE age BETWEEN 13 AND 19")
namesDF.map(attributes => "Name: " + attributes(0)).show()
// +------------+
// |       value|
// +------------+
// |Name: Justin|
// +------------+
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/scala/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/SQLDataSourceExample.scala" in the Spark repo.
import org.apache.spark.api.java.function.MapFunction;
import org.apache.spark.sql.Encoders;
import org.apache.spark.sql.Dataset;
import org.apache.spark.sql.Row;

Dataset<Row> peopleDF = spark.read().json("examples/src/main/resources/people.json");

// DataFrames can be saved as Parquet files, maintaining the schema information
peopleDF.write().parquet("people.parquet");

// Read in the Parquet file created above.
// Parquet files are self-describing so the schema is preserved
// The result of loading a parquet file is also a DataFrame
Dataset<Row> parquetFileDF = spark.read().parquet("people.parquet");

// Parquet files can also be used to create a temporary view and then used in SQL statements
parquetFileDF.createOrReplaceTempView("parquetFile");
Dataset<Row> namesDF = spark.sql("SELECT name FROM parquetFile WHERE age BETWEEN 13 AND 19");
Dataset<String> namesDS = namesDF.map(
    (MapFunction<Row, String>) row -> "Name: " + row.getString(0),
    Encoders.STRING());
namesDS.show();
// +------------+
// |       value|
// +------------+
// |Name: Justin|
// +------------+
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/java/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/JavaSQLDataSourceExample.java" in the Spark repo.
peopleDF = spark.read.json("examples/src/main/resources/people.json")

# DataFrames can be saved as Parquet files, maintaining the schema information.
peopleDF.write.parquet("people.parquet")

# Read in the Parquet file created above.
# Parquet files are self-describing so the schema is preserved.
# The result of loading a parquet file is also a DataFrame.
parquetFile = spark.read.parquet("people.parquet")

# Parquet files can also be used to create a temporary view and then used in SQL statements.
parquetFile.createOrReplaceTempView("parquetFile")
teenagers = spark.sql("SELECT name FROM parquetFile WHERE age >= 13 AND age <= 19")
teenagers.show()
# +------+
# |  name|
# +------+
# |Justin|
# +------+
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/python/sql/datasource.py" in the Spark repo.
df <- read.df("examples/src/main/resources/people.json", "json")

# SparkDataFrame can be saved as Parquet files, maintaining the schema information.
write.parquet(df, "people.parquet")

# Read in the Parquet file created above. Parquet files are self-describing so the schema is preserved.
# The result of loading a parquet file is also a DataFrame.
parquetFile <- read.parquet("people.parquet")

# Parquet files can also be used to create a temporary view and then used in SQL statements.
createOrReplaceTempView(parquetFile, "parquetFile")
teenagers <- sql("SELECT name FROM parquetFile WHERE age >= 13 AND age <= 19")
head(teenagers)
##     name
## 1 Justin

# We can also run custom R-UDFs on Spark DataFrames. Here we prefix all the names with "Name:"
schema <- structType(structField("name", "string"))
teenNames <- dapply(df, function(p) { cbind(paste("Name:", p$name)) }, schema)
for (teenName in collect(teenNames)$name) {
  cat(teenName, "\n")
}
## Name: Michael
## Name: Andy
## Name: Justin
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/r/RSparkSQLExample.R" in the Spark repo.
CREATE TEMPORARY VIEW parquetTable
USING org.apache.spark.sql.parquet
OPTIONS (
  path "examples/src/main/resources/people.parquet"
)

SELECT * FROM parquetTable

Partition Discovery

Table partitioning is a common optimization approach used in systems like Hive. In a partitioned table, data are usually stored in different directories, with partitioning column values encoded in the path of each partition directory. All built-in file sources (including Text/CSV/JSON/ORC/Parquet) are able to discover and infer partitioning information automatically. For example, we can store all our previously used population data into a partitioned table using the following directory structure, with two extra columns, gender and country as partitioning columns:

path
└── to
    └── table
        ├── gender=male
        │   ├── ...
        │   │
        │   ├── country=US
        │   │   └── data.parquet
        │   ├── country=CN
        │   │   └── data.parquet
        │   └── ...
        └── gender=female
            ├── ...
            │
            ├── country=US
            │   └── data.parquet
            ├── country=CN
            │   └── data.parquet
            └── ...

By passing path/to/table to either SparkSession.read.parquet or SparkSession.read.load, Spark SQL will automatically extract the partitioning information from the paths. Now the schema of the returned DataFrame becomes:

root
|-- name: string (nullable = true)
|-- age: long (nullable = true)
|-- gender: string (nullable = true)
|-- country: string (nullable = true)

Notice that the data types of the partitioning columns are automatically inferred. Currently, numeric data types, date, timestamp and string type are supported. Sometimes users may not want to automatically infer the data types of the partitioning columns. For these use cases, the automatic type inference can be configured by spark.sql.sources.partitionColumnTypeInference.enabled, which is default to true. When type inference is disabled, string type will be used for the partitioning columns.

Starting from Spark 1.6.0, partition discovery only finds partitions under the given paths by default. For the above example, if users pass path/to/table/gender=male to either SparkSession.read.parquet or SparkSession.read.load, gender will not be considered as a partitioning column. If users need to specify the base path that partition discovery should start with, they can set basePath in the data source options. For example, when path/to/table/gender=male is the path of the data and users set basePath to path/to/table/, gender will be a partitioning column.

Schema Merging

Like ProtocolBuffer, Avro, and Thrift, Parquet also supports schema evolution. Users can start with a simple schema, and gradually add more columns to the schema as needed. In this way, users may end up with multiple Parquet files with different but mutually compatible schemas. The Parquet data source is now able to automatically detect this case and merge schemas of all these files.

Since schema merging is a relatively expensive operation, and is not a necessity in most cases, we turned it off by default starting from 1.5.0. You may enable it by

  1. setting data source option mergeSchema to true when reading Parquet files (as shown in the examples below), or
  2. setting the global SQL option spark.sql.parquet.mergeSchema to true.
// This is used to implicitly convert an RDD to a DataFrame.
import spark.implicits._

// Create a simple DataFrame, store into a partition directory
val squaresDF = spark.sparkContext.makeRDD(1 to 5).map(i => (i, i * i)).toDF("value", "square")
squaresDF.write.parquet("data/test_table/key=1")

// Create another DataFrame in a new partition directory,
// adding a new column and dropping an existing column
val cubesDF = spark.sparkContext.makeRDD(6 to 10).map(i => (i, i * i * i)).toDF("value", "cube")
cubesDF.write.parquet("data/test_table/key=2")

// Read the partitioned table
val mergedDF = spark.read.option("mergeSchema", "true").parquet("data/test_table")
mergedDF.printSchema()

// The final schema consists of all 3 columns in the Parquet files together
// with the partitioning column appeared in the partition directory paths
// root
//  |-- value: int (nullable = true)
//  |-- square: int (nullable = true)
//  |-- cube: int (nullable = true)
//  |-- key: int (nullable = true)
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/scala/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/SQLDataSourceExample.scala" in the Spark repo.
import java.io.Serializable;
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.Arrays;
import java.util.List;

import org.apache.spark.sql.Dataset;
import org.apache.spark.sql.Row;

public static class Square implements Serializable {
  private int value;
  private int square;

  // Getters and setters...

}

public static class Cube implements Serializable {
  private int value;
  private int cube;

  // Getters and setters...

}

List<Square> squares = new ArrayList<>();
for (int value = 1; value <= 5; value++) {
  Square square = new Square();
  square.setValue(value);
  square.setSquare(value * value);
  squares.add(square);
}

// Create a simple DataFrame, store into a partition directory
Dataset<Row> squaresDF = spark.createDataFrame(squares, Square.class);
squaresDF.write().parquet("data/test_table/key=1");

List<Cube> cubes = new ArrayList<>();
for (int value = 6; value <= 10; value++) {
  Cube cube = new Cube();
  cube.setValue(value);
  cube.setCube(value * value * value);
  cubes.add(cube);
}

// Create another DataFrame in a new partition directory,
// adding a new column and dropping an existing column
Dataset<Row> cubesDF = spark.createDataFrame(cubes, Cube.class);
cubesDF.write().parquet("data/test_table/key=2");

// Read the partitioned table
Dataset<Row> mergedDF = spark.read().option("mergeSchema", true).parquet("data/test_table");
mergedDF.printSchema();

// The final schema consists of all 3 columns in the Parquet files together
// with the partitioning column appeared in the partition directory paths
// root
//  |-- value: int (nullable = true)
//  |-- square: int (nullable = true)
//  |-- cube: int (nullable = true)
//  |-- key: int (nullable = true)
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/java/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/JavaSQLDataSourceExample.java" in the Spark repo.
from pyspark.sql import Row

# spark is from the previous example.
# Create a simple DataFrame, stored into a partition directory
sc = spark.sparkContext

squaresDF = spark.createDataFrame(sc.parallelize(range(1, 6))
                                  .map(lambda i: Row(single=i, double=i ** 2)))
squaresDF.write.parquet("data/test_table/key=1")

# Create another DataFrame in a new partition directory,
# adding a new column and dropping an existing column
cubesDF = spark.createDataFrame(sc.parallelize(range(6, 11))
                                .map(lambda i: Row(single=i, triple=i ** 3)))
cubesDF.write.parquet("data/test_table/key=2")

# Read the partitioned table
mergedDF = spark.read.option("mergeSchema", "true").parquet("data/test_table")
mergedDF.printSchema()

# The final schema consists of all 3 columns in the Parquet files together
# with the partitioning column appeared in the partition directory paths.
# root
#  |-- double: long (nullable = true)
#  |-- single: long (nullable = true)
#  |-- triple: long (nullable = true)
#  |-- key: integer (nullable = true)
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/python/sql/datasource.py" in the Spark repo.
df1 <- createDataFrame(data.frame(single=c(12, 29), double=c(19, 23)))
df2 <- createDataFrame(data.frame(double=c(19, 23), triple=c(23, 18)))

# Create a simple DataFrame, stored into a partition directory
write.df(df1, "data/test_table/key=1", "parquet", "overwrite")

# Create another DataFrame in a new partition directory,
# adding a new column and dropping an existing column
write.df(df2, "data/test_table/key=2", "parquet", "overwrite")

# Read the partitioned table
df3 <- read.df("data/test_table", "parquet", mergeSchema = "true")
printSchema(df3)
# The final schema consists of all 3 columns in the Parquet files together
# with the partitioning column appeared in the partition directory paths
## root
##  |-- single: double (nullable = true)
##  |-- double: double (nullable = true)
##  |-- triple: double (nullable = true)
##  |-- key: integer (nullable = true)
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/r/RSparkSQLExample.R" in the Spark repo.

Hive metastore Parquet table conversion

When reading from and writing to Hive metastore Parquet tables, Spark SQL will try to use its own Parquet support instead of Hive SerDe for better performance. This behavior is controlled by the spark.sql.hive.convertMetastoreParquet configuration, and is turned on by default.

Hive/Parquet Schema Reconciliation

There are two key differences between Hive and Parquet from the perspective of table schema processing.

  1. Hive is case insensitive, while Parquet is not
  2. Hive considers all columns nullable, while nullability in Parquet is significant

Due to this reason, we must reconcile Hive metastore schema with Parquet schema when converting a Hive metastore Parquet table to a Spark SQL Parquet table. The reconciliation rules are:

  1. Fields that have the same name in both schema must have the same data type regardless of nullability. The reconciled field should have the data type of the Parquet side, so that nullability is respected.

  2. The reconciled schema contains exactly those fields defined in Hive metastore schema.

    • Any fields that only appear in the Parquet schema are dropped in the reconciled schema.
    • Any fields that only appear in the Hive metastore schema are added as nullable field in the reconciled schema.

Metadata Refreshing

Spark SQL caches Parquet metadata for better performance. When Hive metastore Parquet table conversion is enabled, metadata of those converted tables are also cached. If these tables are updated by Hive or other external tools, you need to refresh them manually to ensure consistent metadata.

// spark is an existing SparkSession
spark.catalog.refreshTable("my_table")
// spark is an existing SparkSession
spark.catalog().refreshTable("my_table");
# spark is an existing SparkSession
spark.catalog.refreshTable("my_table")
refreshTable("my_table")
REFRESH TABLE my_table;

Configuration

Configuration of Parquet can be done using the setConf method on SparkSession or by running SET key=value commands using SQL.

Property NameDefaultMeaning
spark.sql.parquet.binaryAsString false Some other Parquet-producing systems, in particular Impala, Hive, and older versions of Spark SQL, do not differentiate between binary data and strings when writing out the Parquet schema. This flag tells Spark SQL to interpret binary data as a string to provide compatibility with these systems.
spark.sql.parquet.int96AsTimestamp true Some Parquet-producing systems, in particular Impala and Hive, store Timestamp into INT96. This flag tells Spark SQL to interpret INT96 data as a timestamp to provide compatibility with these systems.
spark.sql.parquet.compression.codec snappy Sets the compression codec used when writing Parquet files. If either `compression` or `parquet.compression` is specified in the table-specific options/properties, the precedence would be `compression`, `parquet.compression`, `spark.sql.parquet.compression.codec`. Acceptable values include: none, uncompressed, snappy, gzip, lzo.
spark.sql.parquet.filterPushdown true Enables Parquet filter push-down optimization when set to true.
spark.sql.hive.convertMetastoreParquet true When set to false, Spark SQL will use the Hive SerDe for parquet tables instead of the built in support.
spark.sql.parquet.mergeSchema false

When true, the Parquet data source merges schemas collected from all data files, otherwise the schema is picked from the summary file or a random data file if no summary file is available.

spark.sql.optimizer.metadataOnly true

When true, enable the metadata-only query optimization that use the table's metadata to produce the partition columns instead of table scans. It applies when all the columns scanned are partition columns and the query has an aggregate operator that satisfies distinct semantics.

ORC Files

Since Spark 2.3, Spark supports a vectorized ORC reader with a new ORC file format for ORC files. To do that, the following configurations are newly added. The vectorized reader is used for the native ORC tables (e.g., the ones created using the clause USING ORC) when spark.sql.orc.impl is set to native and spark.sql.orc.enableVectorizedReader is set to true. For the Hive ORC serde tables (e.g., the ones created using the clause USING HIVE OPTIONS (fileFormat 'ORC')), the vectorized reader is used when spark.sql.hive.convertMetastoreOrc is also set to true.

Property NameDefaultMeaning
spark.sql.orc.impl hive The name of ORC implementation. It can be one of native and hive. native means the native ORC support that is built on Apache ORC 1.4.1. `hive` means the ORC library in Hive 1.2.1.
spark.sql.orc.enableVectorizedReader true Enables vectorized orc decoding in native implementation. If false, a new non-vectorized ORC reader is used in native implementation. For hive implementation, this is ignored.

JSON Datasets

Spark SQL can automatically infer the schema of a JSON dataset and load it as a Dataset[Row]. This conversion can be done using SparkSession.read.json() on either a Dataset[String], or a JSON file.

Note that the file that is offered as a json file is not a typical JSON file. Each line must contain a separate, self-contained valid JSON object. For more information, please see JSON Lines text format, also called newline-delimited JSON.

For a regular multi-line JSON file, set the multiLine option to true.

// Primitive types (Int, String, etc) and Product types (case classes) encoders are
// supported by importing this when creating a Dataset.
import spark.implicits._

// A JSON dataset is pointed to by path.
// The path can be either a single text file or a directory storing text files
val path = "examples/src/main/resources/people.json"
val peopleDF = spark.read.json(path)

// The inferred schema can be visualized using the printSchema() method
peopleDF.printSchema()
// root
//  |-- age: long (nullable = true)
//  |-- name: string (nullable = true)

// Creates a temporary view using the DataFrame
peopleDF.createOrReplaceTempView("people")

// SQL statements can be run by using the sql methods provided by spark
val teenagerNamesDF = spark.sql("SELECT name FROM people WHERE age BETWEEN 13 AND 19")
teenagerNamesDF.show()
// +------+
// |  name|
// +------+
// |Justin|
// +------+

// Alternatively, a DataFrame can be created for a JSON dataset represented by
// a Dataset[String] storing one JSON object per string
val otherPeopleDataset = spark.createDataset(
  """{"name":"Yin","address":{"city":"Columbus","state":"Ohio"}}""" :: Nil)
val otherPeople = spark.read.json(otherPeopleDataset)
otherPeople.show()
// +---------------+----+
// |        address|name|
// +---------------+----+
// |[Columbus,Ohio]| Yin|
// +---------------+----+
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/scala/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/SQLDataSourceExample.scala" in the Spark repo.

Spark SQL can automatically infer the schema of a JSON dataset and load it as a Dataset<Row>. This conversion can be done using SparkSession.read().json() on either a Dataset<String>, or a JSON file.

Note that the file that is offered as a json file is not a typical JSON file. Each line must contain a separate, self-contained valid JSON object. For more information, please see JSON Lines text format, also called newline-delimited JSON.

For a regular multi-line JSON file, set the multiLine option to true.

import org.apache.spark.sql.Dataset;
import org.apache.spark.sql.Row;

// A JSON dataset is pointed to by path.
// The path can be either a single text file or a directory storing text files
Dataset<Row> people = spark.read().json("examples/src/main/resources/people.json");

// The inferred schema can be visualized using the printSchema() method
people.printSchema();
// root
//  |-- age: long (nullable = true)
//  |-- name: string (nullable = true)

// Creates a temporary view using the DataFrame
people.createOrReplaceTempView("people");

// SQL statements can be run by using the sql methods provided by spark
Dataset<Row> namesDF = spark.sql("SELECT name FROM people WHERE age BETWEEN 13 AND 19");
namesDF.show();
// +------+
// |  name|
// +------+
// |Justin|
// +------+

// Alternatively, a DataFrame can be created for a JSON dataset represented by
// a Dataset<String> storing one JSON object per string.
List<String> jsonData = Arrays.asList(
        "{\"name\":\"Yin\",\"address\":{\"city\":\"Columbus\",\"state\":\"Ohio\"}}");
Dataset<String> anotherPeopleDataset = spark.createDataset(jsonData, Encoders.STRING());
Dataset<Row> anotherPeople = spark.read().json(anotherPeopleDataset);
anotherPeople.show();
// +---------------+----+
// |        address|name|
// +---------------+----+
// |[Columbus,Ohio]| Yin|
// +---------------+----+
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/java/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/JavaSQLDataSourceExample.java" in the Spark repo.

Spark SQL can automatically infer the schema of a JSON dataset and load it as a DataFrame. This conversion can be done using SparkSession.read.json on a JSON file.

Note that the file that is offered as a json file is not a typical JSON file. Each line must contain a separate, self-contained valid JSON object. For more information, please see JSON Lines text format, also called newline-delimited JSON.

For a regular multi-line JSON file, set the multiLine parameter to True.

# spark is from the previous example.
sc = spark.sparkContext

# A JSON dataset is pointed to by path.
# The path can be either a single text file or a directory storing text files
path = "examples/src/main/resources/people.json"
peopleDF = spark.read.json(path)

# The inferred schema can be visualized using the printSchema() method
peopleDF.printSchema()
# root
#  |-- age: long (nullable = true)
#  |-- name: string (nullable = true)

# Creates a temporary view using the DataFrame
peopleDF.createOrReplaceTempView("people")

# SQL statements can be run by using the sql methods provided by spark
teenagerNamesDF = spark.sql("SELECT name FROM people WHERE age BETWEEN 13 AND 19")
teenagerNamesDF.show()
# +------+
# |  name|
# +------+
# |Justin|
# +------+

# Alternatively, a DataFrame can be created for a JSON dataset represented by
# an RDD[String] storing one JSON object per string
jsonStrings = ['{"name":"Yin","address":{"city":"Columbus","state":"Ohio"}}']
otherPeopleRDD = sc.parallelize(jsonStrings)
otherPeople = spark.read.json(otherPeopleRDD)
otherPeople.show()
# +---------------+----+
# |        address|name|
# +---------------+----+
# |[Columbus,Ohio]| Yin|
# +---------------+----+
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/python/sql/datasource.py" in the Spark repo.

Spark SQL can automatically infer the schema of a JSON dataset and load it as a DataFrame. using the read.json() function, which loads data from a directory of JSON files where each line of the files is a JSON object.

Note that the file that is offered as a json file is not a typical JSON file. Each line must contain a separate, self-contained valid JSON object. For more information, please see JSON Lines text format, also called newline-delimited JSON.

For a regular multi-line JSON file, set a named parameter multiLine to TRUE.

# A JSON dataset is pointed to by path.
# The path can be either a single text file or a directory storing text files.
path <- "examples/src/main/resources/people.json"
# Create a DataFrame from the file(s) pointed to by path
people <- read.json(path)

# The inferred schema can be visualized using the printSchema() method.
printSchema(people)
## root
##  |-- age: long (nullable = true)
##  |-- name: string (nullable = true)

# Register this DataFrame as a table.
createOrReplaceTempView(people, "people")

# SQL statements can be run by using the sql methods.
teenagers <- sql("SELECT name FROM people WHERE age >= 13 AND age <= 19")
head(teenagers)
##     name
## 1 Justin
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/r/RSparkSQLExample.R" in the Spark repo.
CREATE TEMPORARY VIEW jsonTable
USING org.apache.spark.sql.json
OPTIONS (
  path "examples/src/main/resources/people.json"
)

SELECT * FROM jsonTable

Hive Tables

Spark SQL also supports reading and writing data stored in Apache Hive. However, since Hive has a large number of dependencies, these dependencies are not included in the default Spark distribution. If Hive dependencies can be found on the classpath, Spark will load them automatically. Note that these Hive dependencies must also be present on all of the worker nodes, as they will need access to the Hive serialization and deserialization libraries (SerDes) in order to access data stored in Hive.

Configuration of Hive is done by placing your hive-site.xml, core-site.xml (for security configuration), and hdfs-site.xml (for HDFS configuration) file in conf/.

When working with Hive, one must instantiate SparkSession with Hive support, including connectivity to a persistent Hive metastore, support for Hive serdes, and Hive user-defined functions. Users who do not have an existing Hive deployment can still enable Hive support. When not configured by the hive-site.xml, the context automatically creates metastore_db in the current directory and creates a directory configured by spark.sql.warehouse.dir, which defaults to the directory spark-warehouse in the current directory that the Spark application is started. Note that the hive.metastore.warehouse.dir property in hive-site.xml is deprecated since Spark 2.0.0. Instead, use spark.sql.warehouse.dir to specify the default location of database in warehouse. You may need to grant write privilege to the user who starts the Spark application.

import java.io.File

import org.apache.spark.sql.{Row, SaveMode, SparkSession}

case class Record(key: Int, value: String)

// warehouseLocation points to the default location for managed databases and tables
val warehouseLocation = new File("spark-warehouse").getAbsolutePath

val spark = SparkSession
  .builder()
  .appName("Spark Hive Example")
  .config("spark.sql.warehouse.dir", warehouseLocation)
  .enableHiveSupport()
  .getOrCreate()

import spark.implicits._
import spark.sql

sql("CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS src (key INT, value STRING) USING hive")
sql("LOAD DATA LOCAL INPATH 'examples/src/main/resources/kv1.txt' INTO TABLE src")

// Queries are expressed in HiveQL
sql("SELECT * FROM src").show()
// +---+-------+
// |key|  value|
// +---+-------+
// |238|val_238|
// | 86| val_86|
// |311|val_311|
// ...

// Aggregation queries are also supported.
sql("SELECT COUNT(*) FROM src").show()
// +--------+
// |count(1)|
// +--------+
// |    500 |
// +--------+

// The results of SQL queries are themselves DataFrames and support all normal functions.
val sqlDF = sql("SELECT key, value FROM src WHERE key < 10 ORDER BY key")

// The items in DataFrames are of type Row, which allows you to access each column by ordinal.
val stringsDS = sqlDF.map {
  case Row(key: Int, value: String) => s"Key: $key, Value: $value"
}
stringsDS.show()
// +--------------------+
// |               value|
// +--------------------+
// |Key: 0, Value: val_0|
// |Key: 0, Value: val_0|
// |Key: 0, Value: val_0|
// ...

// You can also use DataFrames to create temporary views within a SparkSession.
val recordsDF = spark.createDataFrame((1 to 100).map(i => Record(i, s"val_$i")))
recordsDF.createOrReplaceTempView("records")

// Queries can then join DataFrame data with data stored in Hive.
sql("SELECT * FROM records r JOIN src s ON r.key = s.key").show()
// +---+------+---+------+
// |key| value|key| value|
// +---+------+---+------+
// |  2| val_2|  2| val_2|
// |  4| val_4|  4| val_4|
// |  5| val_5|  5| val_5|
// ...

// Create a Hive managed Parquet table, with HQL syntax instead of the Spark SQL native syntax
// `USING hive`
sql("CREATE TABLE hive_records(key int, value string) STORED AS PARQUET")
// Save DataFrame to the Hive managed table
val df = spark.table("src")
df.write.mode(SaveMode.Overwrite).saveAsTable("hive_records")
// After insertion, the Hive managed table has data now
sql("SELECT * FROM hive_records").show()
// +---+-------+
// |key|  value|
// +---+-------+
// |238|val_238|
// | 86| val_86|
// |311|val_311|
// ...

// Prepare a Parquet data directory
val dataDir = "/tmp/parquet_data"
spark.range(10).write.parquet(dataDir)
// Create a Hive external Parquet table
sql(s"CREATE EXTERNAL TABLE hive_ints(key int) STORED AS PARQUET LOCATION '$dataDir'")
// The Hive external table should already have data
sql("SELECT * FROM hive_ints").show()
// +---+
// |key|
// +---+
// |  0|
// |  1|
// |  2|
// ...

// Turn on flag for Hive Dynamic Partitioning
spark.sqlContext.setConf("hive.exec.dynamic.partition", "true")
spark.sqlContext.setConf("hive.exec.dynamic.partition.mode", "nonstrict")
// Create a Hive partitioned table using DataFrame API
df.write.partitionBy("key").format("hive").saveAsTable("hive_part_tbl")
// Partitioned column `key` will be moved to the end of the schema.
sql("SELECT * FROM hive_part_tbl").show()
// +-------+---+
// |  value|key|
// +-------+---+
// |val_238|238|
// | val_86| 86|
// |val_311|311|
// ...

spark.stop()
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/scala/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/hive/SparkHiveExample.scala" in the Spark repo.
import java.io.File;
import java.io.Serializable;
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.List;

import org.apache.spark.api.java.function.MapFunction;
import org.apache.spark.sql.Dataset;
import org.apache.spark.sql.Encoders;
import org.apache.spark.sql.Row;
import org.apache.spark.sql.SparkSession;

public static class Record implements Serializable {
  private int key;
  private String value;

  public int getKey() {
    return key;
  }

  public void setKey(int key) {
    this.key = key;
  }

  public String getValue() {
    return value;
  }

  public void setValue(String value) {
    this.value = value;
  }
}

// warehouseLocation points to the default location for managed databases and tables
String warehouseLocation = new File("spark-warehouse").getAbsolutePath();
SparkSession spark = SparkSession
  .builder()
  .appName("Java Spark Hive Example")
  .config("spark.sql.warehouse.dir", warehouseLocation)
  .enableHiveSupport()
  .getOrCreate();

spark.sql("CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS src (key INT, value STRING) USING hive");
spark.sql("LOAD DATA LOCAL INPATH 'examples/src/main/resources/kv1.txt' INTO TABLE src");

// Queries are expressed in HiveQL
spark.sql("SELECT * FROM src").show();
// +---+-------+
// |key|  value|
// +---+-------+
// |238|val_238|
// | 86| val_86|
// |311|val_311|
// ...

// Aggregation queries are also supported.
spark.sql("SELECT COUNT(*) FROM src").show();
// +--------+
// |count(1)|
// +--------+
// |    500 |
// +--------+

// The results of SQL queries are themselves DataFrames and support all normal functions.
Dataset<Row> sqlDF = spark.sql("SELECT key, value FROM src WHERE key < 10 ORDER BY key");

// The items in DataFrames are of type Row, which lets you to access each column by ordinal.
Dataset<String> stringsDS = sqlDF.map(
    (MapFunction<Row, String>) row -> "Key: " + row.get(0) + ", Value: " + row.get(1),
    Encoders.STRING());
stringsDS.show();
// +--------------------+
// |               value|
// +--------------------+
// |Key: 0, Value: val_0|
// |Key: 0, Value: val_0|
// |Key: 0, Value: val_0|
// ...

// You can also use DataFrames to create temporary views within a SparkSession.
List<Record> records = new ArrayList<>();
for (int key = 1; key < 100; key++) {
  Record record = new Record();
  record.setKey(key);
  record.setValue("val_" + key);
  records.add(record);
}
Dataset<Row> recordsDF = spark.createDataFrame(records, Record.class);
recordsDF.createOrReplaceTempView("records");

// Queries can then join DataFrames data with data stored in Hive.
spark.sql("SELECT * FROM records r JOIN src s ON r.key = s.key").show();
// +---+------+---+------+
// |key| value|key| value|
// +---+------+---+------+
// |  2| val_2|  2| val_2|
// |  2| val_2|  2| val_2|
// |  4| val_4|  4| val_4|
// ...
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/java/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/hive/JavaSparkHiveExample.java" in the Spark repo.
from os.path import expanduser, join, abspath

from pyspark.sql import SparkSession
from pyspark.sql import Row

# warehouse_location points to the default location for managed databases and tables
warehouse_location = abspath('spark-warehouse')

spark = SparkSession \
    .builder \
    .appName("Python Spark SQL Hive integration example") \
    .config("spark.sql.warehouse.dir", warehouse_location) \
    .enableHiveSupport() \
    .getOrCreate()

# spark is an existing SparkSession
spark.sql("CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS src (key INT, value STRING) USING hive")
spark.sql("LOAD DATA LOCAL INPATH 'examples/src/main/resources/kv1.txt' INTO TABLE src")

# Queries are expressed in HiveQL
spark.sql("SELECT * FROM src").show()
# +---+-------+
# |key|  value|
# +---+-------+
# |238|val_238|
# | 86| val_86|
# |311|val_311|
# ...

# Aggregation queries are also supported.
spark.sql("SELECT COUNT(*) FROM src").show()
# +--------+
# |count(1)|
# +--------+
# |    500 |
# +--------+

# The results of SQL queries are themselves DataFrames and support all normal functions.
sqlDF = spark.sql("SELECT key, value FROM src WHERE key < 10 ORDER BY key")

# The items in DataFrames are of type Row, which allows you to access each column by ordinal.
stringsDS = sqlDF.rdd.map(lambda row: "Key: %d, Value: %s" % (row.key, row.value))
for record in stringsDS.collect():
    print(record)
# Key: 0, Value: val_0
# Key: 0, Value: val_0
# Key: 0, Value: val_0
# ...

# You can also use DataFrames to create temporary views within a SparkSession.
Record = Row("key", "value")
recordsDF = spark.createDataFrame([Record(i, "val_" + str(i)) for i in range(1, 101)])
recordsDF.createOrReplaceTempView("records")

# Queries can then join DataFrame data with data stored in Hive.
spark.sql("SELECT * FROM records r JOIN src s ON r.key = s.key").show()
# +---+------+---+------+
# |key| value|key| value|
# +---+------+---+------+
# |  2| val_2|  2| val_2|
# |  4| val_4|  4| val_4|
# |  5| val_5|  5| val_5|
# ...
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/python/sql/hive.py" in the Spark repo.

When working with Hive one must instantiate SparkSession with Hive support. This adds support for finding tables in the MetaStore and writing queries using HiveQL.

# enableHiveSupport defaults to TRUE
sparkR.session(enableHiveSupport = TRUE)
sql("CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS src (key INT, value STRING) USING hive")
sql("LOAD DATA LOCAL INPATH 'examples/src/main/resources/kv1.txt' INTO TABLE src")

# Queries can be expressed in HiveQL.
results <- collect(sql("FROM src SELECT key, value"))
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/r/RSparkSQLExample.R" in the Spark repo.

Specifying storage format for Hive tables

When you create a Hive table, you need to define how this table should read/write data from/to file system, i.e. the “input format” and “output format”. You also need to define how this table should deserialize the data to rows, or serialize rows to data, i.e. the “serde”. The following options can be used to specify the storage format(“serde”, “input format”, “output format”), e.g. CREATE TABLE src(id int) USING hive OPTIONS(fileFormat 'parquet'). By default, we will read the table files as plain text. Note that, Hive storage handler is not supported yet when creating table, you can create a table using storage handler at Hive side, and use Spark SQL to read it.

Property NameMeaning
fileFormat A fileFormat is kind of a package of storage format specifications, including "serde", "input format" and "output format". Currently we support 6 fileFormats: 'sequencefile', 'rcfile', 'orc', 'parquet', 'textfile' and 'avro'.
inputFormat, outputFormat These 2 options specify the name of a corresponding `InputFormat` and `OutputFormat` class as a string literal, e.g. `org.apache.hadoop.hive.ql.io.orc.OrcInputFormat`. These 2 options must be appeared in pair, and you can not specify them if you already specified the `fileFormat` option.
serde This option specifies the name of a serde class. When the `fileFormat` option is specified, do not specify this option if the given `fileFormat` already include the information of serde. Currently "sequencefile", "textfile" and "rcfile" don't include the serde information and you can use this option with these 3 fileFormats.
fieldDelim, escapeDelim, collectionDelim, mapkeyDelim, lineDelim These options can only be used with "textfile" fileFormat. They define how to read delimited files into rows.

All other properties defined with OPTIONS will be regarded as Hive serde properties.

Interacting with Different Versions of Hive Metastore

One of the most important pieces of Spark SQL’s Hive support is interaction with Hive metastore, which enables Spark SQL to access metadata of Hive tables. Starting from Spark 1.4.0, a single binary build of Spark SQL can be used to query different versions of Hive metastores, using the configuration described below. Note that independent of the version of Hive that is being used to talk to the metastore, internally Spark SQL will compile against Hive 1.2.1 and use those classes for internal execution (serdes, UDFs, UDAFs, etc).

The following options can be used to configure the version of Hive that is used to retrieve metadata:

Property NameDefaultMeaning
spark.sql.hive.metastore.version 1.2.1 Version of the Hive metastore. Available options are 0.12.0 through 1.2.1.
spark.sql.hive.metastore.jars builtin Location of the jars that should be used to instantiate the HiveMetastoreClient. This property can be one of three options:
  1. builtin
  2. Use Hive 1.2.1, which is bundled with the Spark assembly when -Phive is enabled. When this option is chosen, spark.sql.hive.metastore.version must be either 1.2.1 or not defined.
  3. maven
  4. Use Hive jars of specified version downloaded from Maven repositories. This configuration is not generally recommended for production deployments.
  5. A classpath in the standard format for the JVM. This classpath must include all of Hive and its dependencies, including the correct version of Hadoop. These jars only need to be present on the driver, but if you are running in yarn cluster mode then you must ensure they are packaged with your application.
spark.sql.hive.metastore.sharedPrefixes com.mysql.jdbc,
org.postgresql,
com.microsoft.sqlserver,
oracle.jdbc

A comma separated list of class prefixes that should be loaded using the classloader that is shared between Spark SQL and a specific version of Hive. An example of classes that should be shared is JDBC drivers that are needed to talk to the metastore. Other classes that need to be shared are those that interact with classes that are already shared. For example, custom appenders that are used by log4j.

spark.sql.hive.metastore.barrierPrefixes (empty)

A comma separated list of class prefixes that should explicitly be reloaded for each version of Hive that Spark SQL is communicating with. For example, Hive UDFs that are declared in a prefix that typically would be shared (i.e. org.apache.spark.*).

JDBC To Other Databases

Spark SQL also includes a data source that can read data from other databases using JDBC. This functionality should be preferred over using JdbcRDD. This is because the results are returned as a DataFrame and they can easily be processed in Spark SQL or joined with other data sources. The JDBC data source is also easier to use from Java or Python as it does not require the user to provide a ClassTag. (Note that this is different than the Spark SQL JDBC server, which allows other applications to run queries using Spark SQL).

To get started you will need to include the JDBC driver for your particular database on the spark classpath. For example, to connect to postgres from the Spark Shell you would run the following command:

bin/spark-shell --driver-class-path postgresql-9.4.1207.jar --jars postgresql-9.4.1207.jar

Tables from the remote database can be loaded as a DataFrame or Spark SQL temporary view using the Data Sources API. Users can specify the JDBC connection properties in the data source options. user and password are normally provided as connection properties for logging into the data sources. In addition to the connection properties, Spark also supports the following case-insensitive options:

Property NameMeaning
url The JDBC URL to connect to. The source-specific connection properties may be specified in the URL. e.g., jdbc:postgresql://localhost/test?user=fred&password=secret
dbtable The JDBC table that should be read. Note that anything that is valid in a FROM clause of a SQL query can be used. For example, instead of a full table you could also use a subquery in parentheses.
driver The class name of the JDBC driver to use to connect to this URL.
partitionColumn, lowerBound, upperBound These options must all be specified if any of them is specified. In addition, numPartitions must be specified. They describe how to partition the table when reading in parallel from multiple workers. partitionColumn must be a numeric column from the table in question. Notice that lowerBound and upperBound are just used to decide the partition stride, not for filtering the rows in table. So all rows in the table will be partitioned and returned. This option applies only to reading.
numPartitions The maximum number of partitions that can be used for parallelism in table reading and writing. This also determines the maximum number of concurrent JDBC connections. If the number of partitions to write exceeds this limit, we decrease it to this limit by calling coalesce(numPartitions) before writing.
fetchsize The JDBC fetch size, which determines how many rows to fetch per round trip. This can help performance on JDBC drivers which default to low fetch size (eg. Oracle with 10 rows). This option applies only to reading.
batchsize The JDBC batch size, which determines how many rows to insert per round trip. This can help performance on JDBC drivers. This option applies only to writing. It defaults to 1000.
isolationLevel The transaction isolation level, which applies to current connection. It can be one of NONE, READ_COMMITTED, READ_UNCOMMITTED, REPEATABLE_READ, or SERIALIZABLE, corresponding to standard transaction isolation levels defined by JDBC's Connection object, with default of READ_UNCOMMITTED. This option applies only to writing. Please refer the documentation in java.sql.Connection.
sessionInitStatement After each database session is opened to the remote DB and before starting to read data, this option executes a custom SQL statement (or a PL/SQL block). Use this to implement session initialization code. Example: option("sessionInitStatement", """BEGIN execute immediate 'alter session set "_serial_direct_read"=true'; END;""")
truncate This is a JDBC writer related option. When SaveMode.Overwrite is enabled, this option causes Spark to truncate an existing table instead of dropping and recreating it. This can be more efficient, and prevents the table metadata (e.g., indices) from being removed. However, it will not work in some cases, such as when the new data has a different schema. It defaults to false. This option applies only to writing.
createTableOptions This is a JDBC writer related option. If specified, this option allows setting of database-specific table and partition options when creating a table (e.g., CREATE TABLE t (name string) ENGINE=InnoDB.). This option applies only to writing.
createTableColumnTypes The database column data types to use instead of the defaults, when creating the table. Data type information should be specified in the same format as CREATE TABLE columns syntax (e.g: "name CHAR(64), comments VARCHAR(1024)"). The specified types should be valid spark sql data types. This option applies only to writing.
customSchema The custom schema to use for reading data from JDBC connectors. For example, "id DECIMAL(38, 0), name STRING". You can also specify partial fields, and the others use the default type mapping. For example, "id DECIMAL(38, 0)". The column names should be identical to the corresponding column names of JDBC table. Users can specify the corresponding data types of Spark SQL instead of using the defaults. This option applies only to reading.
// Note: JDBC loading and saving can be achieved via either the load/save or jdbc methods
// Loading data from a JDBC source
val jdbcDF = spark.read
  .format("jdbc")
  .option("url", "jdbc:postgresql:dbserver")
  .option("dbtable", "schema.tablename")
  .option("user", "username")
  .option("password", "password")
  .load()

val connectionProperties = new Properties()
connectionProperties.put("user", "username")
connectionProperties.put("password", "password")
val jdbcDF2 = spark.read
  .jdbc("jdbc:postgresql:dbserver", "schema.tablename", connectionProperties)
// Specifying the custom data types of the read schema
connectionProperties.put("customSchema", "id DECIMAL(38, 0), name STRING")
val jdbcDF3 = spark.read
  .jdbc("jdbc:postgresql:dbserver", "schema.tablename", connectionProperties)

// Saving data to a JDBC source
jdbcDF.write
  .format("jdbc")
  .option("url", "jdbc:postgresql:dbserver")
  .option("dbtable", "schema.tablename")
  .option("user", "username")
  .option("password", "password")
  .save()

jdbcDF2.write
  .jdbc("jdbc:postgresql:dbserver", "schema.tablename", connectionProperties)

// Specifying create table column data types on write
jdbcDF.write
  .option("createTableColumnTypes", "name CHAR(64), comments VARCHAR(1024)")
  .jdbc("jdbc:postgresql:dbserver", "schema.tablename", connectionProperties)
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/scala/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/SQLDataSourceExample.scala" in the Spark repo.
// Note: JDBC loading and saving can be achieved via either the load/save or jdbc methods
// Loading data from a JDBC source
Dataset<Row> jdbcDF = spark.read()
  .format("jdbc")
  .option("url", "jdbc:postgresql:dbserver")
  .option("dbtable", "schema.tablename")
  .option("user", "username")
  .option("password", "password")
  .load();

Properties connectionProperties = new Properties();
connectionProperties.put("user", "username");
connectionProperties.put("password", "password");
Dataset<Row> jdbcDF2 = spark.read()
  .jdbc("jdbc:postgresql:dbserver", "schema.tablename", connectionProperties);

// Saving data to a JDBC source
jdbcDF.write()
  .format("jdbc")
  .option("url", "jdbc:postgresql:dbserver")
  .option("dbtable", "schema.tablename")
  .option("user", "username")
  .option("password", "password")
  .save();

jdbcDF2.write()
  .jdbc("jdbc:postgresql:dbserver", "schema.tablename", connectionProperties);

// Specifying create table column data types on write
jdbcDF.write()
  .option("createTableColumnTypes", "name CHAR(64), comments VARCHAR(1024)")
  .jdbc("jdbc:postgresql:dbserver", "schema.tablename", connectionProperties);
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/java/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/JavaSQLDataSourceExample.java" in the Spark repo.
# Note: JDBC loading and saving can be achieved via either the load/save or jdbc methods
# Loading data from a JDBC source
jdbcDF = spark.read \
    .format("jdbc") \
    .option("url", "jdbc:postgresql:dbserver") \
    .option("dbtable", "schema.tablename") \
    .option("user", "username") \
    .option("password", "password") \
    .load()

jdbcDF2 = spark.read \
    .jdbc("jdbc:postgresql:dbserver", "schema.tablename",
          properties={"user": "username", "password": "password"})

# Specifying dataframe column data types on read
jdbcDF3 = spark.read \
    .format("jdbc") \
    .option("url", "jdbc:postgresql:dbserver") \
    .option("dbtable", "schema.tablename") \
    .option("user", "username") \
    .option("password", "password") \
    .option("customSchema", "id DECIMAL(38, 0), name STRING") \
    .load()

# Saving data to a JDBC source
jdbcDF.write \
    .format("jdbc") \
    .option("url", "jdbc:postgresql:dbserver") \
    .option("dbtable", "schema.tablename") \
    .option("user", "username") \
    .option("password", "password") \
    .save()

jdbcDF2.write \
    .jdbc("jdbc:postgresql:dbserver", "schema.tablename",
          properties={"user": "username", "password": "password"})

# Specifying create table column data types on write
jdbcDF.write \
    .option("createTableColumnTypes", "name CHAR(64), comments VARCHAR(1024)") \
    .jdbc("jdbc:postgresql:dbserver", "schema.tablename",
          properties={"user": "username", "password": "password"})
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/python/sql/datasource.py" in the Spark repo.
# Loading data from a JDBC source
df <- read.jdbc("jdbc:postgresql:dbserver", "schema.tablename", user = "username", password = "password")

# Saving data to a JDBC source
write.jdbc(df, "jdbc:postgresql:dbserver", "schema.tablename", user = "username", password = "password")
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/r/RSparkSQLExample.R" in the Spark repo.
CREATE TEMPORARY VIEW jdbcTable
USING org.apache.spark.sql.jdbc
OPTIONS (
  url "jdbc:postgresql:dbserver",
  dbtable "schema.tablename",
  user 'username',
  password 'password'
)

INSERT INTO TABLE jdbcTable
SELECT * FROM resultTable

Troubleshooting

Performance Tuning

For some workloads it is possible to improve performance by either caching data in memory, or by turning on some experimental options.

Caching Data In Memory

Spark SQL can cache tables using an in-memory columnar format by calling spark.catalog.cacheTable("tableName") or dataFrame.cache(). Then Spark SQL will scan only required columns and will automatically tune compression to minimize memory usage and GC pressure. You can call spark.catalog.uncacheTable("tableName") to remove the table from memory.

Configuration of in-memory caching can be done using the setConf method on SparkSession or by running SET key=value commands using SQL.

Property NameDefaultMeaning
spark.sql.inMemoryColumnarStorage.compressed true When set to true Spark SQL will automatically select a compression codec for each column based on statistics of the data.
spark.sql.inMemoryColumnarStorage.batchSize 10000 Controls the size of batches for columnar caching. Larger batch sizes can improve memory utilization and compression, but risk OOMs when caching data.

Other Configuration Options

The following options can also be used to tune the performance of query execution. It is possible that these options will be deprecated in future release as more optimizations are performed automatically.

Property NameDefaultMeaning
spark.sql.files.maxPartitionBytes 134217728 (128 MB) The maximum number of bytes to pack into a single partition when reading files.
spark.sql.files.openCostInBytes 4194304 (4 MB) The estimated cost to open a file, measured by the number of bytes could be scanned in the same time. This is used when putting multiple files into a partition. It is better to over estimated, then the partitions with small files will be faster than partitions with bigger files (which is scheduled first).
spark.sql.broadcastTimeout 300

Timeout in seconds for the broadcast wait time in broadcast joins

spark.sql.autoBroadcastJoinThreshold 10485760 (10 MB) Configures the maximum size in bytes for a table that will be broadcast to all worker nodes when performing a join. By setting this value to -1 broadcasting can be disabled. Note that currently statistics are only supported for Hive Metastore tables where the command ANALYZE TABLE <tableName> COMPUTE STATISTICS noscan has been run.
spark.sql.shuffle.partitions 200 Configures the number of partitions to use when shuffling data for joins or aggregations.

Broadcast Hint for SQL Queries

The BROADCAST hint guides Spark to broadcast each specified table when joining them with another table or view. When Spark deciding the join methods, the broadcast hash join (i.e., BHJ) is preferred, even if the statistics is above the configuration spark.sql.autoBroadcastJoinThreshold. When both sides of a join are specified, Spark broadcasts the one having the lower statistics. Note Spark does not guarantee BHJ is always chosen, since not all cases (e.g. full outer join) support BHJ. When the broadcast nested loop join is selected, we still respect the hint.

import org.apache.spark.sql.functions.broadcast
broadcast(spark.table("src")).join(spark.table("records"), "key").show()
import static org.apache.spark.sql.functions.broadcast;
broadcast(spark.table("src")).join(spark.table("records"), "key").show();
from pyspark.sql.functions import broadcast
broadcast(spark.table("src")).join(spark.table("records"), "key").show()
src <- sql("SELECT * FROM src")
records <- sql("SELECT * FROM records")
head(join(broadcast(src), records, src$key == records$key))
-- We accept BROADCAST, BROADCASTJOIN and MAPJOIN for broadcast hint
SELECT /*+ BROADCAST(r) */ * FROM records r JOIN src s ON r.key = s.key

Distributed SQL Engine

Spark SQL can also act as a distributed query engine using its JDBC/ODBC or command-line interface. In this mode, end-users or applications can interact with Spark SQL directly to run SQL queries, without the need to write any code.

Running the Thrift JDBC/ODBC server

The Thrift JDBC/ODBC server implemented here corresponds to the HiveServer2 in Hive 1.2.1 You can test the JDBC server with the beeline script that comes with either Spark or Hive 1.2.1.

To start the JDBC/ODBC server, run the following in the Spark directory:

./sbin/start-thriftserver.sh

This script accepts all bin/spark-submit command line options, plus a --hiveconf option to specify Hive properties. You may run ./sbin/start-thriftserver.sh --help for a complete list of all available options. By default, the server listens on localhost:10000. You may override this behaviour via either environment variables, i.e.:

export HIVE_SERVER2_THRIFT_PORT=<listening-port>
export HIVE_SERVER2_THRIFT_BIND_HOST=<listening-host>
./sbin/start-thriftserver.sh \
  --master <master-uri> \
  ...

or system properties:

./sbin/start-thriftserver.sh \
  --hiveconf hive.server2.thrift.port=<listening-port> \
  --hiveconf hive.server2.thrift.bind.host=<listening-host> \
  --master <master-uri>
  ...

Now you can use beeline to test the Thrift JDBC/ODBC server:

./bin/beeline

Connect to the JDBC/ODBC server in beeline with:

beeline> !connect jdbc:hive2://localhost:10000

Beeline will ask you for a username and password. In non-secure mode, simply enter the username on your machine and a blank password. For secure mode, please follow the instructions given in the beeline documentation.

Configuration of Hive is done by placing your hive-site.xml, core-site.xml and hdfs-site.xml files in conf/.

You may also use the beeline script that comes with Hive.

Thrift JDBC server also supports sending thrift RPC messages over HTTP transport. Use the following setting to enable HTTP mode as system property or in hive-site.xml file in conf/:

hive.server2.transport.mode - Set this to value: http
hive.server2.thrift.http.port - HTTP port number to listen on; default is 10001
hive.server2.http.endpoint - HTTP endpoint; default is cliservice

To test, use beeline to connect to the JDBC/ODBC server in http mode with:

beeline> !connect jdbc:hive2://<host>:<port>/<database>?hive.server2.transport.mode=http;hive.server2.thrift.http.path=<http_endpoint>

Running the Spark SQL CLI

The Spark SQL CLI is a convenient tool to run the Hive metastore service in local mode and execute queries input from the command line. Note that the Spark SQL CLI cannot talk to the Thrift JDBC server.

To start the Spark SQL CLI, run the following in the Spark directory:

./bin/spark-sql

Configuration of Hive is done by placing your hive-site.xml, core-site.xml and hdfs-site.xml files in conf/. You may run ./bin/spark-sql --help for a complete list of all available options.

PySpark Usage Guide for Pandas with Apache Arrow

Apache Arrow in Spark

Apache Arrow is an in-memory columnar data format that is used in Spark to efficiently transfer data between JVM and Python processes. This currently is most beneficial to Python users that work with Pandas/NumPy data. Its usage is not automatic and might require some minor changes to configuration or code to take full advantage and ensure compatibility. This guide will give a high-level description of how to use Arrow in Spark and highlight any differences when working with Arrow-enabled data.

Ensure PyArrow Installed

If you install PySpark using pip, then PyArrow can be brought in as an extra dependency of the SQL module with the command pip install pyspark[sql]. Otherwise, you must ensure that PyArrow is installed and available on all cluster nodes. The current supported version is 0.8.0. You can install using pip or conda from the conda-forge channel. See PyArrow installation for details.

Enabling for Conversion to/from Pandas

Arrow is available as an optimization when converting a Spark DataFrame to a Pandas DataFrame using the call toPandas() and when creating a Spark DataFrame from a Pandas DataFrame with createDataFrame(pandas_df). To use Arrow when executing these calls, users need to first set the Spark configuration ‘spark.sql.execution.arrow.enabled’ to ‘true’. This is disabled by default.

import numpy as np
import pandas as pd

# Enable Arrow-based columnar data transfers
spark.conf.set("spark.sql.execution.arrow.enabled", "true")

# Generate a Pandas DataFrame
pdf = pd.DataFrame(np.random.rand(100, 3))

# Create a Spark DataFrame from a Pandas DataFrame using Arrow
df = spark.createDataFrame(pdf)

# Convert the Spark DataFrame back to a Pandas DataFrame using Arrow
result_pdf = df.select("*").toPandas()
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/python/sql/arrow.py" in the Spark repo.

Using the above optimizations with Arrow will produce the same results as when Arrow is not enabled. Note that even with Arrow, toPandas() results in the collection of all records in the DataFrame to the driver program and should be done on a small subset of the data. Not all Spark data types are currently supported and an error can be raised if a column has an unsupported type, see Supported SQL Types. If an error occurs during createDataFrame(), Spark will fall back to create the DataFrame without Arrow.

Pandas UDFs (a.k.a. Vectorized UDFs)

Pandas UDFs are user defined functions that are executed by Spark using Arrow to transfer data and Pandas to work with the data. A Pandas UDF is defined using the keyword pandas_udf as a decorator or to wrap the function, no additional configuration is required. Currently, there are two types of Pandas UDF: Scalar and Grouped Map.

Scalar

Scalar Pandas UDFs are used for vectorizing scalar operations. They can be used with functions such as select and withColumn. The Python function should take pandas.Series as inputs and return a pandas.Series of the same length. Internally, Spark will execute a Pandas UDF by splitting columns into batches and calling the function for each batch as a subset of the data, then concatenating the results together.

The following example shows how to create a scalar Pandas UDF that computes the product of 2 columns.

import pandas as pd

from pyspark.sql.functions import col, pandas_udf
from pyspark.sql.types import LongType

# Declare the function and create the UDF
def multiply_func(a, b):
    return a * b

multiply = pandas_udf(multiply_func, returnType=LongType())

# The function for a pandas_udf should be able to execute with local Pandas data
x = pd.Series([1, 2, 3])
print(multiply_func(x, x))
# 0    1
# 1    4
# 2    9
# dtype: int64

# Create a Spark DataFrame, 'spark' is an existing SparkSession
df = spark.createDataFrame(pd.DataFrame(x, columns=["x"]))

# Execute function as a Spark vectorized UDF
df.select(multiply(col("x"), col("x"))).show()
# +-------------------+
# |multiply_func(x, x)|
# +-------------------+
# |                  1|
# |                  4|
# |                  9|
# +-------------------+
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/python/sql/arrow.py" in the Spark repo.

Grouped Map

Grouped map Pandas UDFs are used with groupBy().apply() which implements the “split-apply-combine” pattern. Split-apply-combine consists of three steps:

To use groupBy().apply(), the user needs to define the following:

Note that all data for a group will be loaded into memory before the function is applied. This can lead to out of memory exceptons, especially if the group sizes are skewed. The configuration for maxRecordsPerBatch is not applied on groups and it is up to the user to ensure that the grouped data will fit into the available memory.

The following example shows how to use groupby().apply() to subtract the mean from each value in the group.

from pyspark.sql.functions import pandas_udf, PandasUDFType

df = spark.createDataFrame(
    [(1, 1.0), (1, 2.0), (2, 3.0), (2, 5.0), (2, 10.0)],
    ("id", "v"))

@pandas_udf("id long, v double", PandasUDFType.GROUPED_MAP)
def substract_mean(pdf):
    # pdf is a pandas.DataFrame
    v = pdf.v
    return pdf.assign(v=v - v.mean())

df.groupby("id").apply(substract_mean).show()
# +---+----+
# | id|   v|
# +---+----+
# |  1|-0.5|
# |  1| 0.5|
# |  2|-3.0|
# |  2|-1.0|
# |  2| 4.0|
# +---+----+
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/python/sql/arrow.py" in the Spark repo.

For detailed usage, please see pyspark.sql.functions.pandas_udf and pyspark.sql.GroupedData.apply.

Usage Notes

Supported SQL Types

Currently, all Spark SQL data types are supported by Arrow-based conversion except BinaryType, MapType, ArrayType of TimestampType, and nested StructType.

Setting Arrow Batch Size

Data partitions in Spark are converted into Arrow record batches, which can temporarily lead to high memory usage in the JVM. To avoid possible out of memory exceptions, the size of the Arrow record batches can be adjusted by setting the conf “spark.sql.execution.arrow.maxRecordsPerBatch” to an integer that will determine the maximum number of rows for each batch. The default value is 10,000 records per batch. If the number of columns is large, the value should be adjusted accordingly. Using this limit, each data partition will be made into 1 or more record batches for processing.

Timestamp with Time Zone Semantics

Spark internally stores timestamps as UTC values, and timestamp data that is brought in without a specified time zone is converted as local time to UTC with microsecond resolution. When timestamp data is exported or displayed in Spark, the session time zone is used to localize the timestamp values. The session time zone is set with the configuration ‘spark.sql.session.timeZone’ and will default to the JVM system local time zone if not set. Pandas uses a datetime64 type with nanosecond resolution, datetime64[ns], with optional time zone on a per-column basis.

When timestamp data is transferred from Spark to Pandas it will be converted to nanoseconds and each column will be converted to the Spark session time zone then localized to that time zone, which removes the time zone and displays values as local time. This will occur when calling toPandas() or pandas_udf with timestamp columns.

When timestamp data is transferred from Pandas to Spark, it will be converted to UTC microseconds. This occurs when calling createDataFrame with a Pandas DataFrame or when returning a timestamp from a pandas_udf. These conversions are done automatically to ensure Spark will have data in the expected format, so it is not necessary to do any of these conversions yourself. Any nanosecond values will be truncated.

Note that a standard UDF (non-Pandas) will load timestamp data as Python datetime objects, which is different than a Pandas timestamp. It is recommended to use Pandas time series functionality when working with timestamps in pandas_udfs to get the best performance, see here for details.

Migration Guide

Upgrading From Spark SQL 2.2 to 2.3

Upgrading From Spark SQL 2.1 to 2.2

Upgrading From Spark SQL 2.0 to 2.1

Upgrading From Spark SQL 1.6 to 2.0

Upgrading From Spark SQL 1.5 to 1.6

   ./sbin/start-thriftserver.sh \
     --conf spark.sql.hive.thriftServer.singleSession=true \
     ...
   

Upgrading From Spark SQL 1.4 to 1.5

Upgrading from Spark SQL 1.3 to 1.4

DataFrame data reader/writer interface

Based on user feedback, we created a new, more fluid API for reading data in (SQLContext.read) and writing data out (DataFrame.write), and deprecated the old APIs (e.g., SQLContext.parquetFile, SQLContext.jsonFile).

See the API docs for SQLContext.read ( Scala, Java, Python ) and DataFrame.write ( Scala, Java, Python ) more information.

DataFrame.groupBy retains grouping columns

Based on user feedback, we changed the default behavior of DataFrame.groupBy().agg() to retain the grouping columns in the resulting DataFrame. To keep the behavior in 1.3, set spark.sql.retainGroupColumns to false.

// In 1.3.x, in order for the grouping column "department" to show up,
// it must be included explicitly as part of the agg function call.
df.groupBy("department").agg($"department", max("age"), sum("expense"))

// In 1.4+, grouping column "department" is included automatically.
df.groupBy("department").agg(max("age"), sum("expense"))

// Revert to 1.3 behavior (not retaining grouping column) by:
sqlContext.setConf("spark.sql.retainGroupColumns", "false")
// In 1.3.x, in order for the grouping column "department" to show up,
// it must be included explicitly as part of the agg function call.
df.groupBy("department").agg(col("department"), max("age"), sum("expense"));

// In 1.4+, grouping column "department" is included automatically.
df.groupBy("department").agg(max("age"), sum("expense"));

// Revert to 1.3 behavior (not retaining grouping column) by:
sqlContext.setConf("spark.sql.retainGroupColumns", "false");
import pyspark.sql.functions as func

# In 1.3.x, in order for the grouping column "department" to show up,
# it must be included explicitly as part of the agg function call.
df.groupBy("department").agg(df["department"], func.max("age"), func.sum("expense"))

# In 1.4+, grouping column "department" is included automatically.
df.groupBy("department").agg(func.max("age"), func.sum("expense"))

# Revert to 1.3.x behavior (not retaining grouping column) by:
sqlContext.setConf("spark.sql.retainGroupColumns", "false")

Behavior change on DataFrame.withColumn

Prior to 1.4, DataFrame.withColumn() supports adding a column only. The column will always be added as a new column with its specified name in the result DataFrame even if there may be any existing columns of the same name. Since 1.4, DataFrame.withColumn() supports adding a column of a different name from names of all existing columns or replacing existing columns of the same name.

Note that this change is only for Scala API, not for PySpark and SparkR.

Upgrading from Spark SQL 1.0-1.2 to 1.3

In Spark 1.3 we removed the “Alpha” label from Spark SQL and as part of this did a cleanup of the available APIs. From Spark 1.3 onwards, Spark SQL will provide binary compatibility with other releases in the 1.X series. This compatibility guarantee excludes APIs that are explicitly marked as unstable (i.e., DeveloperAPI or Experimental).

Rename of SchemaRDD to DataFrame

The largest change that users will notice when upgrading to Spark SQL 1.3 is that SchemaRDD has been renamed to DataFrame. This is primarily because DataFrames no longer inherit from RDD directly, but instead provide most of the functionality that RDDs provide though their own implementation. DataFrames can still be converted to RDDs by calling the .rdd method.

In Scala there is a type alias from SchemaRDD to DataFrame to provide source compatibility for some use cases. It is still recommended that users update their code to use DataFrame instead. Java and Python users will need to update their code.

Unification of the Java and Scala APIs

Prior to Spark 1.3 there were separate Java compatible classes (JavaSQLContext and JavaSchemaRDD) that mirrored the Scala API. In Spark 1.3 the Java API and Scala API have been unified. Users of either language should use SQLContext and DataFrame. In general these classes try to use types that are usable from both languages (i.e. Array instead of language specific collections). In some cases where no common type exists (e.g., for passing in closures or Maps) function overloading is used instead.

Additionally the Java specific types API has been removed. Users of both Scala and Java should use the classes present in org.apache.spark.sql.types to describe schema programmatically.

Isolation of Implicit Conversions and Removal of dsl Package (Scala-only)

Many of the code examples prior to Spark 1.3 started with import sqlContext._, which brought all of the functions from sqlContext into scope. In Spark 1.3 we have isolated the implicit conversions for converting RDDs into DataFrames into an object inside of the SQLContext. Users should now write import sqlContext.implicits._.

Additionally, the implicit conversions now only augment RDDs that are composed of Products (i.e., case classes or tuples) with a method toDF, instead of applying automatically.

When using function inside of the DSL (now replaced with the DataFrame API) users used to import org.apache.spark.sql.catalyst.dsl. Instead the public dataframe functions API should be used: import org.apache.spark.sql.functions._.

Removal of the type aliases in org.apache.spark.sql for DataType (Scala-only)

Spark 1.3 removes the type aliases that were present in the base sql package for DataType. Users should instead import the classes in org.apache.spark.sql.types

UDF Registration Moved to sqlContext.udf (Java & Scala)

Functions that are used to register UDFs, either for use in the DataFrame DSL or SQL, have been moved into the udf object in SQLContext.

sqlContext.udf.register("strLen", (s: String) => s.length())
sqlContext.udf().register("strLen", (String s) -> s.length(), DataTypes.IntegerType);

Python UDF registration is unchanged.

Python DataTypes No Longer Singletons

When using DataTypes in Python you will need to construct them (i.e. StringType()) instead of referencing a singleton.

Compatibility with Apache Hive

Spark SQL is designed to be compatible with the Hive Metastore, SerDes and UDFs. Currently Hive SerDes and UDFs are based on Hive 1.2.1, and Spark SQL can be connected to different versions of Hive Metastore (from 0.12.0 to 2.1.1. Also see [Interacting with Different Versions of Hive Metastore] (#interacting-with-different-versions-of-hive-metastore)).

Deploying in Existing Hive Warehouses

The Spark SQL Thrift JDBC server is designed to be “out of the box” compatible with existing Hive installations. You do not need to modify your existing Hive Metastore or change the data placement or partitioning of your tables.

Supported Hive Features

Spark SQL supports the vast majority of Hive features, such as:

Unsupported Hive Functionality

Below is a list of Hive features that we don’t support yet. Most of these features are rarely used in Hive deployments.

Major Hive Features

Esoteric Hive Features

Hive Input/Output Formats

Hive Optimizations

A handful of Hive optimizations are not yet included in Spark. Some of these (such as indexes) are less important due to Spark SQL’s in-memory computational model. Others are slotted for future releases of Spark SQL.

Hive UDF/UDTF/UDAF

Not all the APIs of the Hive UDF/UDTF/UDAF are supported by Spark SQL. Below are the unsupported APIs:

Incompatible Hive UDF

Below are the scenarios in which Hive and Spark generate different results:

Reference

Data Types

Spark SQL and DataFrames support the following data types:

All data types of Spark SQL are located in the package org.apache.spark.sql.types. You can access them by doing

import org.apache.spark.sql.types._
Find full example code at "examples/src/main/scala/org/apache/spark/examples/sql/SparkSQLExample.scala" in the Spark repo.
Data type Value type in Scala API to access or create a data type
ByteType Byte ByteType
ShortType Short ShortType
IntegerType Int IntegerType
LongType Long LongType
FloatType Float FloatType
DoubleType Double DoubleType
DecimalType java.math.BigDecimal DecimalType
StringType String StringType
BinaryType Array[Byte] BinaryType
BooleanType Boolean BooleanType
TimestampType java.sql.Timestamp TimestampType
DateType java.sql.Date DateType
ArrayType scala.collection.Seq ArrayType(elementType, [containsNull])
Note: The default value of containsNull is true.
MapType scala.collection.Map MapType(keyType, valueType, [valueContainsNull])
Note: The default value of valueContainsNull is true.
StructType org.apache.spark.sql.Row StructType(fields)
Note: fields is a Seq of StructFields. Also, two fields with the same name are not allowed.
StructField The value type in Scala of the data type of this field (For example, Int for a StructField with the data type IntegerType) StructField(name, dataType, [nullable])
Note: The default value of nullable is true.

All data types of Spark SQL are located in the package of org.apache.spark.sql.types. To access or create a data type, please use factory methods provided in org.apache.spark.sql.types.DataTypes.

Data type Value type in Java API to access or create a data type
ByteType byte or Byte DataTypes.ByteType
ShortType short or Short DataTypes.ShortType
IntegerType int or Integer DataTypes.IntegerType
LongType long or Long DataTypes.LongType
FloatType float or Float DataTypes.FloatType
DoubleType double or Double DataTypes.DoubleType
DecimalType java.math.BigDecimal DataTypes.createDecimalType()
DataTypes.createDecimalType(precision, scale).
StringType String DataTypes.StringType
BinaryType byte[] DataTypes.BinaryType
BooleanType boolean or Boolean DataTypes.BooleanType
TimestampType java.sql.Timestamp DataTypes.TimestampType
DateType java.sql.Date DataTypes.DateType
ArrayType java.util.List DataTypes.createArrayType(elementType)
Note: The value of containsNull will be true
DataTypes.createArrayType(elementType, containsNull).
MapType java.util.Map DataTypes.createMapType(keyType, valueType)
Note: The value of valueContainsNull will be true.
DataTypes.createMapType(keyType, valueType, valueContainsNull)
StructType org.apache.spark.sql.Row DataTypes.createStructType(fields)
Note: fields is a List or an array of StructFields. Also, two fields with the same name are not allowed.
StructField The value type in Java of the data type of this field (For example, int for a StructField with the data type IntegerType) DataTypes.createStructField(name, dataType, nullable)

All data types of Spark SQL are located in the package of pyspark.sql.types. You can access them by doing

from pyspark.sql.types import *
Data type Value type in Python API to access or create a data type
ByteType int or long
Note: Numbers will be converted to 1-byte signed integer numbers at runtime. Please make sure that numbers are within the range of -128 to 127.
ByteType()
ShortType int or long
Note: Numbers will be converted to 2-byte signed integer numbers at runtime. Please make sure that numbers are within the range of -32768 to 32767.
ShortType()
IntegerType int or long IntegerType()
LongType long
Note: Numbers will be converted to 8-byte signed integer numbers at runtime. Please make sure that numbers are within the range of -9223372036854775808 to 9223372036854775807. Otherwise, please convert data to decimal.Decimal and use DecimalType.
LongType()
FloatType float
Note: Numbers will be converted to 4-byte single-precision floating point numbers at runtime.
FloatType()
DoubleType float DoubleType()
DecimalType decimal.Decimal DecimalType()
StringType string StringType()
BinaryType bytearray BinaryType()
BooleanType bool BooleanType()
TimestampType datetime.datetime TimestampType()
DateType datetime.date DateType()
ArrayType list, tuple, or array ArrayType(elementType, [containsNull])
Note: The default value of containsNull is True.
MapType dict MapType(keyType, valueType, [valueContainsNull])
Note: The default value of valueContainsNull is True.
StructType list or tuple StructType(fields)
Note: fields is a Seq of StructFields. Also, two fields with the same name are not allowed.
StructField The value type in Python of the data type of this field (For example, Int for a StructField with the data type IntegerType) StructField(name, dataType, [nullable])
Note: The default value of nullable is True.
Data type Value type in R API to access or create a data type
ByteType integer
Note: Numbers will be converted to 1-byte signed integer numbers at runtime. Please make sure that numbers are within the range of -128 to 127.
"byte"
ShortType integer
Note: Numbers will be converted to 2-byte signed integer numbers at runtime. Please make sure that numbers are within the range of -32768 to 32767.
"short"
IntegerType integer "integer"
LongType integer
Note: Numbers will be converted to 8-byte signed integer numbers at runtime. Please make sure that numbers are within the range of -9223372036854775808 to 9223372036854775807. Otherwise, please convert data to decimal.Decimal and use DecimalType.
"long"
FloatType numeric
Note: Numbers will be converted to 4-byte single-precision floating point numbers at runtime.
"float"
DoubleType numeric "double"
DecimalType Not supported Not supported
StringType character "string"
BinaryType raw "binary"
BooleanType logical "bool"
TimestampType POSIXct "timestamp"
DateType Date "date"
ArrayType vector or list list(type="array", elementType=elementType, containsNull=[containsNull])
Note: The default value of containsNull is TRUE.
MapType environment list(type="map", keyType=keyType, valueType=valueType, valueContainsNull=[valueContainsNull])
Note: The default value of valueContainsNull is TRUE.
StructType named list list(type="struct", fields=fields)
Note: fields is a Seq of StructFields. Also, two fields with the same name are not allowed.
StructField The value type in R of the data type of this field (For example, integer for a StructField with the data type IntegerType) list(name=name, type=dataType, nullable=[nullable])
Note: The default value of nullable is TRUE.

NaN Semantics

There is specially handling for not-a-number (NaN) when dealing with float or double types that does not exactly match standard floating point semantics. Specifically: