Spark yarn cluster vs client - how to choose which one to use? - apache-spark

The spark docs have the following paragraph that describes the difference between yarn client and yarn cluster:
There are two deploy modes that can be used to launch Spark applications on YARN. In cluster mode, the Spark driver runs inside an application master process which is managed by YARN on the cluster, and the client can go away after initiating the application. In client mode, the driver runs in the client process, and the application master is only used for requesting resources from YARN.
I'm assuming there are two choices for a reason. If so, how do you choose which one to use?
Please use facts to justify your response so that this question and answer(s) meet stackoverflow's requirements.
There are a few similar questions on stackoverflow, however those questions focus on the difference between the two approaches, but don't focus on when one approach is more suitable than the other.

A common deployment strategy is to submit your application from a gateway machine that is physically co-located with your worker machines (e.g. Master node in a standalone EC2 cluster). In this setup, client mode is appropriate. In client mode, the driver is launched directly within the spark-submit process which acts as a client to the cluster. The input and output of the application is attached to the console. Thus, this mode is especially suitable for applications that involve the REPL (e.g. Spark shell).
Alternatively, if your application is submitted from a machine far from the worker machines (e.g. locally on your laptop), it is common to use cluster mode to minimize network latency between the drivers and the executors. Note that cluster mode is currently not supported for Mesos clusters. Currently only YARN supports cluster mode for Python applications." -- Submitting Applications
What I understand from this is that both strategies use the cluster to distribute tasks; the difference is where the "driver program" runs: locally with spark-submit, or, also in the cluster.
When you should use either of them is detailed in the quote above, but I also did another thing: for big jars, I used rsync to copy them to the cluster (or even to master node) with 100 times the network speed, and then submitted from the cluster. This can be better than "cluster mode" for big jars. Note that client mode does not probably transfer the jar to the master. At that point the difference between the 2 is minimal. Probably client mode is better when the driver program is idle most of the time, to make full use of cores on the local machine and perhaps avoid transferring the jar to the master (even on loopback interface a big jar takes quite a bit of seconds). And with client mode you can transfer (rsync) the jar on any cluster node.
On the other hand, if the driver is very intensive, in cpu or I/O, cluster mode may be more appropriate, to better balance the cluster (in client mode, the local machine would run both the driver and as many workers as possible, making it over loaded and making it that local tasks will be slower, making it such that the whole job may end up waiting for a couple of tasks from the local machine).
Conclusion :
To sum up, if I am in the same local network with the cluster, I would
use the client mode and submit it from my laptop. If the cluster is
far away, I would either submit locally with cluster mode, or rsync
the jar to the remote cluster and submit it there, in client or
cluster mode, depending on how heavy the driver program is on
resources.*
AFAIK With the driver program running in the cluster, it is less vulnerable to remote disconnects crashing the driver and the entire spark job.This is especially useful for long running jobs such as stream processing type workloads.

Spark Jobs Running on YARN
When running Spark on YARN, each Spark executor runs as a YARN container. Where MapReduce schedules a container and fires up a JVM for each task, Spark hosts multiple tasks within the same container. This approach enables several orders of magnitude faster task startup time.
Spark supports two modes for running on YARN, “yarn-cluster” mode and “yarn-client” mode. Broadly, yarn-cluster mode makes sense for production jobs, while yarn-client mode makes sense for interactive and debugging uses where you want to see your application’s output immediately.
Understanding the difference requires an understanding of YARN’s Application Master concept. In YARN, each application instance has an Application Master process, which is the first container started for that application. The application is responsible for requesting resources from the ResourceManager, and, when allocated them, telling NodeManagers to start containers on its behalf. Application Masters obviate the need for an active client — the process starting the application can go away and coordination continues from a process managed by YARN running on the cluster.
In yarn-cluster mode, the driver runs in the Application Master. This means that the same process is responsible for both driving the application and requesting resources from YARN, and this process runs inside a YARN container. The client that starts the app doesn’t need to stick around for its entire lifetime.
yarn-cluster mode
The yarn-cluster mode is not well suited to using Spark interactively, but the yarn-client mode is. Spark applications that require user input, like spark-shell and PySpark, need the Spark driver to run inside the client process that initiates the Spark application. In yarn-client mode, the Application Master is merely present to request executor containers from YARN. The client communicates with those containers to schedule work after they start:
yarn-client mode
This table offers a concise list of differences between these modes:
Reference: https://blog.cloudera.com/blog/2014/05/apache-spark-resource-management-and-yarn-app-models/ - Apache Spark Resource Management and YARN App Models (web.archive.com mirror)

In yarn-cluster mode, the driver program will run on the node where application master is running where as in yarn-client mode the driver program will run on the node on which job is submitted on centralized gateway node.

Both answers by Ram and Chavati/Wai Lee are useful and helpful, but here I just want to added a couple of other points:
Much has been written about the proximity of driver to the executors, and that is a big factor. The other factors are:
Will the driver process be around until execution of job is finished?
How's returned data being handled?
#1. In spark client mode, the driver process must be up and running the whole time when the spark job is in execution. So if you have a truly long job that say take many hours to run, you need to make sure the driver process is still up and running, and that the driver session is not auto-logout.
On the other hand, after submitting a job to run in cluster mode, the process can go away. The cluster mode will keep running. So this is typically how a production job will run: the job can be triggered by a timer, or by an external event and then the job will run to its completion without worrying about the lifetime of the process submitting the spark job.
#2. In client mode, you can call sc.collect() to gather all the data back from all executors, and then write/save the returned data to a local Linux file on local disk. Now this may not work for cluster mode, as the 'driver' typically run in a different remote host. The data written up therefore need to be persisted in a common mounted volume (such as GPFS, NFS) or in distributed file system like HDFS. If the job is running under Hadoop/YARN, the more common way for cluster mode is simply ask each executor to persist the data to HDFS, and not to run collect( ) at all. Collect() actually have scalability issue when there are a large number of executors returning large amount of data - it can overwhelm the driver process.

Related

Apache Spark when and what creates the driver?

I am trying to understand the sequence of events related to the creation of a driver program on spark-submit in cluster and client mode
Spark-Submit
Let's say I am on my machine and I do a spark-submit with the Yarn resource manager and deploy mode is cluster
Now, when a driver is created? Is it before the execution of the main program? or is when Spark Session is being created?
My understanding:
The spark-submit bash script interacts with the resource manager and asks for a container for running the main program.
Once the container is initiated the spark-submit script runs the main program on the cluster container.
Once the main program is executed then spark context interacts with
the resource manager to create containers for executors.
Now, if this is a correct understanding then what happens when we simply run a python script on a local machine with cluster mode?
See https://blog.knoldus.com/understanding-the-working-of-spark-driver-and-executor/
I can't explain it any better than this. See also https://spark.apache.org/docs/latest/submitting-applications.html
This answers more than your question. An excellent read.
Let’s say a user submits a job using “spark-submit”.
“spark-submit” will in-turn launch the Driver which will execute the main() method of our code.
Driver contacts the cluster manager and requests for resources to launch the -Executors.
The cluster manager launches the Executors on behalf of the Driver.
Once the Executors are launched, they establish a direct connection with the Driver.
The driver determines the total number of Tasks by checking the Lineage.
The driver creates the Logical and Physical Plan.
Once the Physical Plan is generated, Spark allocates the Tasks to the Executors.
Task runs on Executor and each Task upon completion returns the result to the Driver.
Finally, when all Task is completed, the main() method running in the Driver exits, i.e. main() method invokes sparkContext.stop().
Finally, Spark releases all the resources from the Cluster Manager.
Spark has two deploy modes: client and cluster.
client mode is the mode where the computer you submitted Spark jobs is the driver. That could be your local computer, or usually, it could be a so-called "edge node". With this mode, the driver shares its resources with many other software, and most of the time it's not optimal and reliable (think about the case when you submit a job while running something super heavy in your computer at the same time)
cluster mode is the mode where YARN is the one who picks a node among the cluster's available nodes and makes it the driver. So it will try to pick the best one and you don't have to worry about its resources anymore.
what happens when we simply run a python script on a local machine with cluster mode?
You now probably have some sense about the answer to this question: if you simply run a python script on a local machine, it would be client mode, spark job will use that local computer resources as part of Spark computation. On the other hand, with cluster mode, another computer will run as driver, not your local machine.

What is the difference between Driver and Application manager in spark

I couldn't figure out what is the difference between Spark driver and application master. Basically the responsibilities in running an application, who does what?
In client mode, client machine has the driver and app master runs in one of the cluster nodes. In cluster mode, client doesn't have any, driver and app master runs in same node (one of the cluster nodes).
What exactly are the operations that driver do and app master do?
References:
Spark Driver memory and Application Master memory
Spark yarn cluster vs client - how to choose which one to use?
As per the spark documentation
Spark Driver :
The Driver(aka driver program) is responsible for converting a user
application to smaller execution units called tasks and then schedules
them to run with a cluster manager on executors. The driver is also
responsible for executing the Spark application and returning the
status/results to the user.
Spark Driver contains various components – DAGScheduler,
TaskScheduler, BackendScheduler and BlockManager. They are responsible
for the translation of user code into actual Spark jobs executed on
the cluster.
Where in Application Master is
The Application Master is responsible for the execution of a single
application. It asks for containers from the Resource Scheduler
(Resource Manager) and executes specific programs on the obtained containers.
Application Master is just a broker that negotiates resources with the Resource Manager and then after getting some container it make sure to launch tasks(which are picked from scheduler queue) on containers.
In a nutshell Driver program will translate your custom logic into stages, job and task.. and your application master will make sure to get enough resources from RM And also make sure to check the status of your tasks running in a container.
as it is already said in your provided references the only different between client and cluster mode is
In client, mode driver will run on the machine where we have executed/run spark application/job and AM runs in one of the cluster nodes.
(AND)
In cluster mode driver run inside application master, it means the application has much more responsibility.
References :
https://luminousmen.com/post/spark-anatomy-of-spark-application#:~:text=The%20Driver(aka%20driver%20program,status%2Fresults%20to%20the%20user.
https://www.edureka.co/community/1043/difference-between-application-master-application-manager#:~:text=The%20Application%20Master%20is%20responsible,class)%20on%20the%20obtained%20containers.

Understanding Spark Submit Yarn Client vs Cluster mode [duplicate]

TL;DR: In a Spark Standalone cluster, what are the differences between client and cluster deploy modes? How do I set which mode my application is going to run on?
We have a Spark Standalone cluster with three machines, all of them with Spark 1.6.1:
A master machine, which also is where our application is run using spark-submit
2 identical worker machines
From the Spark Documentation, I read:
(...) For standalone clusters, Spark currently supports two deploy modes. In client mode, the driver is launched in the same process as the client that submits the application. In cluster mode, however, the driver is launched from one of the Worker processes inside the cluster, and the client process exits as soon as it fulfills its responsibility of submitting the application without waiting for the application to finish.
However, I don't really understand the practical differences by reading this, and I don't get what are the advantages and disadvantages of the different deploy modes.
Additionally, when I start my application using start-submit, even if I set the property spark.submit.deployMode to "cluster", the Spark UI for my context shows the following entry:
So I am not able to test both modes to see the practical differences. That being said, my questions are:
1) What are the practical differences between Spark Standalone client deploy mode and cluster deploy mode? What are the pro's and con's of using each one?
2) How to I choose which one my application is going to be running on, using spark-submit?
What are the practical differences between Spark Standalone client
deploy mode and cluster deploy mode? What are the pro's and con's of
using each one?
Let's try to look at the differences between client and cluster mode.
Client:
Driver runs on a dedicated server (Master node) inside a dedicated process. This means it has all available resources at it's disposal to execute work.
Driver opens up a dedicated Netty HTTP server and distributes the JAR files specified to all Worker nodes (big advantage).
Because the Master node has dedicated resources of it's own, you don't need to "spend" worker resources for the Driver program.
If the driver process dies, you need an external monitoring system to reset it's execution.
Cluster:
Driver runs on one of the cluster's Worker nodes. The worker is chosen by the Master leader
Driver runs as a dedicated, standalone process inside the Worker.
Driver programs takes up at least 1 core and a dedicated amount of memory from one of the workers (this can be configured).
Driver program can be monitored from the Master node using the --supervise flag and be reset in case it dies.
When working in Cluster mode, all JARs related to the execution of your application need to be publicly available to all the workers. This means you can either manually place them in a shared place or in a folder for each of the workers.
Which one is better? Not sure, that's actually for you to experiment and decide. This is no better decision here, you gain things from the former and latter, it's up to you to see which one works better for your use-case.
How to I choose which one my application is going to be running on,
using spark-submit
The way to choose which mode to run in is by using the --deploy-mode flag. From the Spark Configuration page:
/bin/spark-submit \
--class <main-class>
--master <master-url> \
--deploy-mode <deploy-mode> \
--conf <key>=<value> \
... # other options
<application-jar> \
[application-arguments]
Let's say you are going to perform a spark submit in EMR by doing SSH to the master node.
If you are providing the option --deploy-mode cluster, then following things will happen.
You won't be able to see the detailed logs in the terminal.
Since driver is not created in the Master itself, you won't be able to terminate the job from the terminal.
But in case of --deploy-mode client:
You will be able to see the detailed logs in the terminal.
You will be able to terminate the job from the terminal itself.
These are the basic things that I have noticed till now.
I'm also having the same scenario, here master node use a standalone ec2 cluster. In this setup client mode is appropriate. In this driver is launched directly with in the spark-submit process which acts as a client to the cluster. The Input & output of the application is attached to the console.Thus, this mode is especially suitable for applications that involve REPL.
Else if your application is submitted from a machine far from the worker machines then it is quite common to use cluster mode to minimize the network latency b/w driver & executor.

can someone let me know how to decide --executor memory and --num-of-executors in spark submit job . What is the concept of -number-of-cores

How to decide the --executor memory and --num-of-executors in spark submit job . What is the concept of -number-of-cores.
Also the clear difference between cluster and client deploy mode. How to choose the deploy mode
The first part of your question where you ask about --executor-memory, --num-executors and --num-executor-cores usually depends on the variety of task your Spark application is going to perform.
Executor Memory indicates the amount of physical memory you want to allocate to the JVM that runs the executor. The value will depend on your requirement. For example, if you're just going to parse a large text file you'll require much less memory than what you need for, say, Image Processing.
The number of executors variable is the number of Executor JVMs you want to spawn on your cluster. Again, it depends on a lot of factors like your cluster size, type of machines in the cluster etc.
Each executor splits the code and performs the instructions in tasks. These tasks are performed in executor cores (or processors). This helps you to achieve parallelism within a certain executor but make sure you don't allocate all the cores of a machine to its executor because some are needed for normal functioning of it.
On to your second part of the question, we have two --deploy-mode in Spark that you have already named i.e. cluster and client.
client mode is when you connect an external machine to a cluster and you run a spark job from that external machine. Like when you connect your laptop to a cluster and run spark-shell from it. The driver JVM is invoked in your laptop and the session is killed as soon as you disconnect your laptop. Similar is the case for a spark-submit job, if you run a job with --deploy-mode client, your laptop acts like the master but the job is killed as soon as it is disconnected (not sure about this one).
cluster mode: When you specify --deploy-mode cluster in your job then even if you run it using your laptop or any other machine, the job (JAR) is taken care of by the ResourceManager and ApplicationMaster, just like any other application in YARN. You won't be able to see the output on your screen but anyway most complex Spark jobs write to a FS so that's taken care of that way.

Spark Driver in Apache spark

I already have a cluster of 3 machines (ubuntu1,ubuntu2,ubuntu3 by VM virtualbox) running Hadoop 1.0.0. I installed spark on each of these machines. ub1 is my master node and the other nodes are working as slave. My question is what exactly a spark driver is? and should we set a IP and port to spark driver by spark.driver.host and where it will be executed and located? (master or slave)
The spark driver is the program that declares the transformations and actions on RDDs of data and submits such requests to the master.
In practical terms, the driver is the program that creates the SparkContext, connecting to a given Spark Master. In the case of a local cluster, like is your case, the master_url=spark://<host>:<port>
Its location is independent of the master/slaves. You could co-located with the master or run it from another node. The only requirement is that it must be in a network addressable from the Spark Workers.
This is how the configuration of your driver looks like:
val conf = new SparkConf()
.setMaster("master_url") // this is where the master is specified
.setAppName("SparkExamplesMinimal")
.set("spark.local.ip","xx.xx.xx.xx") // helps when multiple network interfaces are present. The driver must be in the same network as the master and slaves
.set("spark.driver.host","xx.xx.xx.xx") // same as above. This duality might disappear in a future version
val sc = new spark.SparkContext(conf)
// etc...
To explain a bit more on the different roles:
The driver prepares the context and declares the operations on the data using RDD transformations and actions.
The driver submits the serialized RDD graph to the master. The master creates tasks out of it and submits them to the workers for execution. It coordinates the different job stages.
The workers is where the tasks are actually executed. They should have the resources and network connectivity required to execute the operations requested on the RDDs.
You question is related to spark deploy on yarn, see 1: http://spark.apache.org/docs/latest/running-on-yarn.html "Running Spark on YARN"
Assume you start from a spark-submit --master yarn cmd :
The cmd will request yarn Resource Manager (RM) to start a ApplicationMaster (AM)process on one of your cluster machines (those have yarn node manager installled on it).
Once the AM started, it will call your driver program's main method. So the driver is actually where you define your spark context, your rdd, and your jobs. The driver contains the entry main method which start the spark computation.
The spark context will prepare RPC endpoint for the executor to talk back, and a lot of other things(memory store, disk block manager, jetty server...)
The AM will request RM for containers to run your spark executors, with the driver RPC url (something like spark://CoarseGrainedScheduler#ip:37444) specified on the executor's start cmd.
The Yellow box "Spark context" is the Driver.
A Spark driver is the process that creates and owns an instance of SparkContext. It is your
Spark application that launches the main method in which the instance of SparkContext is
created. It is the cockpit of jobs and tasks execution (using DAGScheduler and Task
Scheduler). It hosts Web UI for the environment
It splits a Spark application into tasks and schedules them to run on executors.
A driver is where the task scheduler lives and spawns tasks across workers.
A driver coordinates workers and overall execution of tasks.
In simple term, Spark driver is a program which contains the main method (main method is the starting point of your program). So, in Java, driver will be the Class which will contain public static void main(String args[]).
In a cluster, you can run this program in either one of the ways:
1) In any remote host machine. Here you'll have to provide the remote host machine details while submitting the driver program on to the remote host. The driver runs in the JVM process created in remote machine and only comes back with final result.
2) Locally from your client machine(Your laptop). Here the driver program runs in JVM process created in your machine locally. From here it sends the task to remote hosts and wait for the result from each tasks.
If you set config "spark.deploy.mode = cluster", then your driver will be launched at your worker hosts(ubuntu2 or ubuntu3).
If spark.deploy.mode=driver, which is the default value, then the driver will run on the machine your submit your application.
And finally, you can see your application on web UI: http://driverhost:driver_ui_port, where the driver_ui_port is default 4040, and you can change the port by set config "spark.ui.port"
Spark driver is node that allows application to create SparkContext, sparkcontext is connection to compute resource.
Now driver can run the box it is submitted or it can run on one of node of cluster when using some resource manager like YARN.
Both options of client/cluster has some tradeoff like
Access to CPU/Memory of once of the node on cluster, some time this is good because cluster node will be big in terms memory.
Driver logs are on cluster node vs local box from where job was submitted.
You should have history server for cluster mode other wise driver side logs are lost.
Some time it is hard to install dependency(i.e some native dependency) executor and running spark application in client mode comes to rescue.
If you want to read more on Spark Job anatomy then http://ashkrit.blogspot.com/2018/09/anatomy-of-apache-spark-job.html post could be useful
Spark applications run as independent sets of processes on a cluster, coordinated by the SparkContext object in your main program (called the driver program).
Specifically, to run on a cluster, the SparkContext can connect to several types of cluster managers (either Spark’s own standalone cluster manager, Mesos or YARN), which allocate resources across applications. Once connected, Spark acquires executors on nodes in the cluster, which are processes that run computations and store data for your application. Next, it sends your application code (defined by JAR or Python files passed to SparkContext) to the executors. Finally, SparkContext sends tasks to the executors to run.
Spark cluster components
There are several useful things to note about this architecture:
Each application gets its own executor processes, which stay up for the duration of the whole application and run tasks in multiple threads. This has the benefit of isolating applications from each other, on both the scheduling side (each driver schedules its own tasks) and executor side (tasks from different applications run in different JVMs). However, it also means that data cannot be shared across different Spark applications (instances of SparkContext) without writing it to an external storage system.
Spark is agnostic to the underlying cluster manager. As long as it can acquire executor processes, and these communicate with each other, it is relatively easy to run it even on a cluster manager that also supports other applications (e.g. Mesos/YARN).
The driver program must listen for and accept incoming connections from its executors throughout its lifetime (e.g., see spark.driver.port in the network config section). As such, the driver program must be network addressable from the worker nodes.
Because the driver schedules tasks on the cluster, it should be run close to the worker nodes, preferably on the same local area network. If you’d like to send requests to the cluster remotely, it’s better to open an RPC to the driver and have it submit operations from nearby than to run a driver far away from the worker nodes.

Resources