Hardware Provisioning

A common question received by Spark developers is how to configure hardware for it. While the right hardware will depend on the situation, we make the following recommendations.

Storage Systems

Because most Spark jobs will likely have to read input data from an external storage system (e.g. the Hadoop File System, or HBase), it is important to place it as close to this system as possible. We recommend the following:

Local Disks

While Spark can perform a lot of its computation in memory, it still uses local disks to store data that doesn’t fit in RAM, as well as to preserve intermediate output between stages. We recommend having 4-8 disks per node, configured without RAID (just as separate mount points). In Linux, mount the disks with the noatime option to reduce unnecessary writes. In Spark, configure the spark.local.dir variable to be a comma-separated list of the local disks. If you are running HDFS, it’s fine to use the same disks as HDFS.

Memory

In general, Spark can run well with anywhere from 8 GiB to hundreds of gigabytes of memory per machine. In all cases, we recommend allocating only at most 75% of the memory for Spark; leave the rest for the operating system and buffer cache.

How much memory you will need will depend on your application. To determine how much your application uses for a certain dataset size, load part of your dataset in a Spark RDD and use the Storage tab of Spark’s monitoring UI (http://<driver-node>:4040) to see its size in memory. Note that memory usage is greatly affected by storage level and serialization format – see the tuning guide for tips on how to reduce it.

Finally, note that the Java VM does not always behave well with more than 200 GiB of RAM. If you purchase machines with more RAM than this, you can launch multiple executors in a single node. In Spark’s standalone mode, a worker is responsible for launching multiple executors according to its available memory and cores, and each executor will be launched in a separate Java VM.

Network

In our experience, when the data is in memory, a lot of Spark applications are network-bound. Using a 10 Gigabit or higher network is the best way to make these applications faster. This is especially true for “distributed reduce” applications such as group-bys, reduce-bys, and SQL joins. In any given application, you can see how much data Spark shuffles across the network from the application’s monitoring UI (http://<driver-node>:4040).

CPU Cores

Spark scales well to tens of CPU cores per machine because it performs minimal sharing between threads. You should likely provision at least 8-16 cores per machine. Depending on the CPU cost of your workload, you may also need more: once data is in memory, most applications are either CPU- or network-bound.