Source code for pyspark.sql.pandas.group_ops

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import sys
import warnings

from pyspark.rdd import PythonEvalType
from pyspark.sql.column import Column
from pyspark.sql.dataframe import DataFrame


class PandasGroupedOpsMixin(object):
    """
    Min-in for pandas grouped operations. Currently, only :class:`GroupedData`
    can use this class.
    """

    def apply(self, udf):
        """
        It is an alias of :meth:`pyspark.sql.GroupedData.applyInPandas`; however, it takes a
        :meth:`pyspark.sql.functions.pandas_udf` whereas
        :meth:`pyspark.sql.GroupedData.applyInPandas` takes a Python native function.

        .. versionadded:: 2.3.0

        Parameters
        ----------
        udf : :func:`pyspark.sql.functions.pandas_udf`
            a grouped map user-defined function returned by
            :func:`pyspark.sql.functions.pandas_udf`.

        Notes
        -----
        It is preferred to use :meth:`pyspark.sql.GroupedData.applyInPandas` over this
        API. This API will be deprecated in the future releases.

        Examples
        --------
        >>> 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)  # doctest: +SKIP
        ... def normalize(pdf):
        ...     v = pdf.v
        ...     return pdf.assign(v=(v - v.mean()) / v.std())
        >>> df.groupby("id").apply(normalize).show()  # doctest: +SKIP
        +---+-------------------+
        | id|                  v|
        +---+-------------------+
        |  1|-0.7071067811865475|
        |  1| 0.7071067811865475|
        |  2|-0.8320502943378437|
        |  2|-0.2773500981126146|
        |  2| 1.1094003924504583|
        +---+-------------------+

        See Also
        --------
        pyspark.sql.functions.pandas_udf
        """
        # Columns are special because hasattr always return True
        if isinstance(udf, Column) or not hasattr(udf, 'func') \
                or udf.evalType != PythonEvalType.SQL_GROUPED_MAP_PANDAS_UDF:
            raise ValueError("Invalid udf: the udf argument must be a pandas_udf of type "
                             "GROUPED_MAP.")

        warnings.warn(
            "It is preferred to use 'applyInPandas' over this "
            "API. This API will be deprecated in the future releases. See SPARK-28264 for "
            "more details.", UserWarning)

        return self.applyInPandas(udf.func, schema=udf.returnType)

    def applyInPandas(self, func, schema):
        """
        Maps each group of the current :class:`DataFrame` using a pandas udf and returns the result
        as a `DataFrame`.

        The function should take a `pandas.DataFrame` and return another
        `pandas.DataFrame`. For each group, all columns are passed together as a `pandas.DataFrame`
        to the user-function and the returned `pandas.DataFrame` are combined as a
        :class:`DataFrame`.

        The `schema` should be a :class:`StructType` describing the schema of the returned
        `pandas.DataFrame`. The column labels of the returned `pandas.DataFrame` must either match
        the field names in the defined schema if specified as strings, or match the
        field data types by position if not strings, e.g. integer indices.
        The length of the returned `pandas.DataFrame` can be arbitrary.

        .. versionadded:: 3.0.0

        Parameters
        ----------
        func : function
            a Python native function that takes a `pandas.DataFrame`, and outputs a
            `pandas.DataFrame`.
        schema : :class:`pyspark.sql.types.DataType` or str
            the return type of the `func` in PySpark. The value can be either a
            :class:`pyspark.sql.types.DataType` object or a DDL-formatted type string.

        Examples
        --------
        >>> import pandas as pd  # doctest: +SKIP
        >>> from pyspark.sql.functions import pandas_udf, ceil
        >>> df = spark.createDataFrame(
        ...     [(1, 1.0), (1, 2.0), (2, 3.0), (2, 5.0), (2, 10.0)],
        ...     ("id", "v"))  # doctest: +SKIP
        >>> def normalize(pdf):
        ...     v = pdf.v
        ...     return pdf.assign(v=(v - v.mean()) / v.std())
        >>> df.groupby("id").applyInPandas(
        ...     normalize, schema="id long, v double").show()  # doctest: +SKIP
        +---+-------------------+
        | id|                  v|
        +---+-------------------+
        |  1|-0.7071067811865475|
        |  1| 0.7071067811865475|
        |  2|-0.8320502943378437|
        |  2|-0.2773500981126146|
        |  2| 1.1094003924504583|
        +---+-------------------+

        Alternatively, the user can pass a function that takes two arguments.
        In this case, the grouping key(s) will be passed as the first argument and the data will
        be passed as the second argument. The grouping key(s) will be passed as a tuple of numpy
        data types, e.g., `numpy.int32` and `numpy.float64`. The data will still be passed in
        as a `pandas.DataFrame` containing all columns from the original Spark DataFrame.
        This is useful when the user does not want to hardcode grouping key(s) in the function.

        >>> df = spark.createDataFrame(
        ...     [(1, 1.0), (1, 2.0), (2, 3.0), (2, 5.0), (2, 10.0)],
        ...     ("id", "v"))  # doctest: +SKIP
        >>> def mean_func(key, pdf):
        ...     # key is a tuple of one numpy.int64, which is the value
        ...     # of 'id' for the current group
        ...     return pd.DataFrame([key + (pdf.v.mean(),)])
        >>> df.groupby('id').applyInPandas(
        ...     mean_func, schema="id long, v double").show()  # doctest: +SKIP
        +---+---+
        | id|  v|
        +---+---+
        |  1|1.5|
        |  2|6.0|
        +---+---+

        >>> def sum_func(key, pdf):
        ...     # key is a tuple of two numpy.int64s, which is the values
        ...     # of 'id' and 'ceil(df.v / 2)' for the current group
        ...     return pd.DataFrame([key + (pdf.v.sum(),)])
        >>> df.groupby(df.id, ceil(df.v / 2)).applyInPandas(
        ...     sum_func, schema="id long, `ceil(v / 2)` long, v double").show()  # doctest: +SKIP
        +---+-----------+----+
        | id|ceil(v / 2)|   v|
        +---+-----------+----+
        |  2|          5|10.0|
        |  1|          1| 3.0|
        |  2|          3| 5.0|
        |  2|          2| 3.0|
        +---+-----------+----+

        Notes
        -----
        This function requires a full shuffle. All the data of a group will be loaded
        into memory, so the user should be aware of the potential OOM risk if data is skewed
        and certain groups are too large to fit in memory.

        If returning a new `pandas.DataFrame` constructed with a dictionary, it is
        recommended to explicitly index the columns by name to ensure the positions are correct,
        or alternatively use an `OrderedDict`.
        For example, `pd.DataFrame({'id': ids, 'a': data}, columns=['id', 'a'])` or
        `pd.DataFrame(OrderedDict([('id', ids), ('a', data)]))`.

        This API is experimental.

        See Also
        --------
        pyspark.sql.functions.pandas_udf
        """
        from pyspark.sql import GroupedData
        from pyspark.sql.functions import pandas_udf, PandasUDFType

        assert isinstance(self, GroupedData)

        udf = pandas_udf(
            func, returnType=schema, functionType=PandasUDFType.GROUPED_MAP)
        df = self._df
        udf_column = udf(*[df[col] for col in df.columns])
        jdf = self._jgd.flatMapGroupsInPandas(udf_column._jc.expr())
        return DataFrame(jdf, self.sql_ctx)

    def cogroup(self, other):
        """
        Cogroups this group with another group so that we can run cogrouped operations.

        .. versionadded:: 3.0.0

        See :class:`PandasCogroupedOps` for the operations that can be run.
        """
        from pyspark.sql import GroupedData

        assert isinstance(self, GroupedData)

        return PandasCogroupedOps(self, other)


[docs]class PandasCogroupedOps(object): """ A logical grouping of two :class:`GroupedData`, created by :func:`GroupedData.cogroup`. .. versionadded:: 3.0.0 Notes ----- This API is experimental. """ def __init__(self, gd1, gd2): self._gd1 = gd1 self._gd2 = gd2 self.sql_ctx = gd1.sql_ctx
[docs] def applyInPandas(self, func, schema): """ Applies a function to each cogroup using pandas and returns the result as a `DataFrame`. The function should take two `pandas.DataFrame`\\s and return another `pandas.DataFrame`. For each side of the cogroup, all columns are passed together as a `pandas.DataFrame` to the user-function and the returned `pandas.DataFrame` are combined as a :class:`DataFrame`. The `schema` should be a :class:`StructType` describing the schema of the returned `pandas.DataFrame`. The column labels of the returned `pandas.DataFrame` must either match the field names in the defined schema if specified as strings, or match the field data types by position if not strings, e.g. integer indices. The length of the returned `pandas.DataFrame` can be arbitrary. .. versionadded:: 3.0.0 Parameters ---------- func : function a Python native function that takes two `pandas.DataFrame`\\s, and outputs a `pandas.DataFrame`, or that takes one tuple (grouping keys) and two pandas ``DataFrame``\\s, and outputs a pandas ``DataFrame``. schema : :class:`pyspark.sql.types.DataType` or str the return type of the `func` in PySpark. The value can be either a :class:`pyspark.sql.types.DataType` object or a DDL-formatted type string. Examples -------- >>> from pyspark.sql.functions import pandas_udf >>> df1 = spark.createDataFrame( ... [(20000101, 1, 1.0), (20000101, 2, 2.0), (20000102, 1, 3.0), (20000102, 2, 4.0)], ... ("time", "id", "v1")) >>> df2 = spark.createDataFrame( ... [(20000101, 1, "x"), (20000101, 2, "y")], ... ("time", "id", "v2")) >>> def asof_join(l, r): ... return pd.merge_asof(l, r, on="time", by="id") >>> df1.groupby("id").cogroup(df2.groupby("id")).applyInPandas( ... asof_join, schema="time int, id int, v1 double, v2 string" ... ).show() # doctest: +SKIP +--------+---+---+---+ | time| id| v1| v2| +--------+---+---+---+ |20000101| 1|1.0| x| |20000102| 1|3.0| x| |20000101| 2|2.0| y| |20000102| 2|4.0| y| +--------+---+---+---+ Alternatively, the user can define a function that takes three arguments. In this case, the grouping key(s) will be passed as the first argument and the data will be passed as the second and third arguments. The grouping key(s) will be passed as a tuple of numpy data types, e.g., `numpy.int32` and `numpy.float64`. The data will still be passed in as two `pandas.DataFrame` containing all columns from the original Spark DataFrames. >>> def asof_join(k, l, r): ... if k == (1,): ... return pd.merge_asof(l, r, on="time", by="id") ... else: ... return pd.DataFrame(columns=['time', 'id', 'v1', 'v2']) >>> df1.groupby("id").cogroup(df2.groupby("id")).applyInPandas( ... asof_join, "time int, id int, v1 double, v2 string").show() # doctest: +SKIP +--------+---+---+---+ | time| id| v1| v2| +--------+---+---+---+ |20000101| 1|1.0| x| |20000102| 1|3.0| x| +--------+---+---+---+ Notes ----- This function requires a full shuffle. All the data of a cogroup will be loaded into memory, so the user should be aware of the potential OOM risk if data is skewed and certain groups are too large to fit in memory. If returning a new `pandas.DataFrame` constructed with a dictionary, it is recommended to explicitly index the columns by name to ensure the positions are correct, or alternatively use an `OrderedDict`. For example, `pd.DataFrame({'id': ids, 'a': data}, columns=['id', 'a'])` or `pd.DataFrame(OrderedDict([('id', ids), ('a', data)]))`. This API is experimental. See Also -------- pyspark.sql.functions.pandas_udf """ from pyspark.sql.pandas.functions import pandas_udf udf = pandas_udf( func, returnType=schema, functionType=PythonEvalType.SQL_COGROUPED_MAP_PANDAS_UDF) all_cols = self._extract_cols(self._gd1) + self._extract_cols(self._gd2) udf_column = udf(*all_cols) jdf = self._gd1._jgd.flatMapCoGroupsInPandas(self._gd2._jgd, udf_column._jc.expr()) return DataFrame(jdf, self.sql_ctx)
@staticmethod def _extract_cols(gd): df = gd._df return [df[col] for col in df.columns]
def _test(): import doctest from pyspark.sql import SparkSession import pyspark.sql.pandas.group_ops globs = pyspark.sql.pandas.group_ops.__dict__.copy() spark = SparkSession.builder\ .master("local[4]")\ .appName("sql.pandas.group tests")\ .getOrCreate() globs['spark'] = spark (failure_count, test_count) = doctest.testmod( pyspark.sql.pandas.group_ops, globs=globs, optionflags=doctest.ELLIPSIS | doctest.NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE | doctest.REPORT_NDIFF) spark.stop() if failure_count: sys.exit(-1) if __name__ == "__main__": _test()