Running RSparkling on Databricks Azure Cluster¶
Sparkling Water, PySparkling and RSparkling can be used on top of Databricks Azure Cluster. This tutorial is the RSparkling.
For Scala Sparkling Water, please visit Sparkling Water on Databricks Azure Cluster and for PySparkling, please visit PySparkling on Databricks Azure Cluster.
To start Sparkling Water H2OContext
on Databricks Azure, the steps are:
Login into Microsoft Azure Portal
Create Databricks Azure Environment
In order to connect to Databricks from Azure, please make sure you have created user inside Azure Active Directory and using that user for the Databricks Login.
Upload Sparkling Water assembly JAR as a library Even though we are using RSparkling, we need to explicitly upload the Sparkling Water assembly Jar as it is a required dependency. In order to create the library in Databricks, go to Libraries, select Upload Java/Scala JAR and upload the downloaded assembly jar. If you download the official distribution, the assembly jar is located in
assembly/build/libs
directory. The assembly Jar can be downloaded from our official Download page.You can configure each cluster manually and select which libraries should be attached or you can configure the library to be attached to all future clusters. It is advised to restart the cluster in case you attached the library to already running cluster to ensure the clean environment.
Create the cluster
- Make sure the assembly JAR is attached to the cluster
- For Sparkling Water 2.2.24 select Spark 2.2.2
It is advised to always use the latest Sparkling Water and Spark version for the given Spark major version.
Create Scala notebook and attach it to the created cluster. To start
H2OContext
, the init part of the notebook should be:# Install R packages install.packages("sparklyr") install.packages("rsparkling") # Now we download, install, and initialize the H2O package for R. # Make sure to install H2O with the same version as its bundled inside Sparkling Water. The version table can be seen # at https://github.com/h2oai/rsparkling#install-h2o. In This case, we are using Sparkling Water 2.2.24 which is using # H2O 3.20.0.7 (wright) install.packages("h2o", type = "source", repos = "http://h2o-release.s3.amazonaws.com/h2o/rel-wright/7/R") # Connect to Spark on Databricks library(rsparkling) library(sparklyr) sc <- spark_connect(method = "databricks") # Start H2O context h2o_context(sc)
And voila, we should have
H2OContext
runningPlease note that accessing H2O Flow is not currently supported on Azure Databricks.