Tuning Resource Allocation

For background information on how Spark applications use the YARN cluster manager, see "Running Spark Applications on YARN."

The two main resources that Spark and YARN manage are CPU and memory. Disk and network I/O affect Spark performance as well, but neither Spark nor YARN actively manage them.

Every Spark executor in an application has the same fixed number of cores and same fixed heap size. Specify the number of cores with the --executor-cores command-line flag, or by setting the spark.executor.cores property. Similarly, control the heap size with the --executor-memory flag or the spark.executor.memory property. The cores property controls the number of concurrent tasks an executor can run. For example, set --executor-cores 5 for each executor to run a maximum of five tasks at the same time. The memory property controls the amount of data Spark can cache, as well as the maximum sizes of the shuffle data structures used for grouping, aggregations, and joins.

Dynamic allocation, which adds and removes executors dynamically, is enabled by default. To explicitly control the number of executors, you can override dynamic allocation by setting the --num-executors command-line flag or spark.executor.instances configuration property.

Consider also how the resources requested by Spark fit into resources YARN has available. The relevant YARN properties are:

  • yarn.nodemanager.resource.memory-mb controls the maximum sum of memory used by the containers on each host.
  • yarn.nodemanager.resource.cpu-vcores controls the maximum sum of cores used by the containers on each host.

Requesting five executor cores results in a request to YARN for five cores. The memory requested from YARN is more complex for two reasons:

  • The --executor-memory/spark.executor.memory property controls the executor heap size, but executors can also use some memory off heap, for example, Java NIO direct buffers. The value of the spark.yarn.executor.memoryOverhead property is added to the executor memory to determine the full memory request to YARN for each executor. It defaults to max(384, .1 * spark.executor.memory).
  • YARN may round the requested memory up slightly. The yarn.scheduler.minimum-allocation-mb and yarn.scheduler.increment-allocation-mb properties control the minimum and increment request values, respectively.

The following diagram (not to scale with defaults) shows the hierarchy of memory properties in Spark and YARN:



Keep the following in mind when sizing Spark executors:

  • The ApplicationMaster, which is a non-executor container that can request containers from YARN, requires memory and CPU that must be accounted for. In client deployment mode, they default to 1024 MB and one core. In cluster deployment mode, the ApplicationMaster runs the driver, so consider bolstering its resources with the --driver-memory and --driver-cores flags.
  • Running executors with too much memory often results in excessive garbage-collection delays. For a single executor, use 64 GB as an upper limit.
  • The HDFS client has difficulty processing many concurrent threads. At most, five tasks per executor can achieve full write throughput, so keep the number of cores per executor below that number.
  • Running tiny executors (with a single core and just enough memory needed to run a single task, for example) offsets the benefits of running multiple tasks in a single JVM. For example, broadcast variables must be replicated once on each executor, so many small executors results in many more copies of the data.