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rx_exec_by

Usage

revoscalepy.rx_exec_by(input_data: typing.Union[revoscalepy.datasource.RxDataSource.RxDataSource,
    pandas.core.frame.DataFrame, str], keys: typing.List[str] = None,
    function: typing.Callable = None,
    function_parameters: dict = None,
    filter_function: typing.Callable = None,
    compute_context: revoscalepy.computecontext.RxComputeContext.RxComputeContext = None,
    **kwargs) -> revoscalepy.functions.RxExecBy.RxExecByResults

Description

Partition input data source by keys and apply a user-defined function on individual partitions. If the input data source is already partitioned, apply a user-defined function directly on the partitions. Currently supported in local, localpar, RxInSqlServer and RxSpark compute contexts.

Arguments

input_data

A data source object supported in currently active compute context, e.g. ‘RxSqlServerData’ for ‘RxInSqlServer’. In ‘RxLocalSeq’ and ‘RxLocalParallel’, a character string specifying a ‘.xdf’ file, or a data frame object can be also used. If a Spark compute context is being used, this argument may also be an RxHiveData, RxOrcData, RxParquetData or RxSparkDataFrame object or a Spark data frame object from pyspark.sql.DataFrame.

keys

List of strings of variable names to be used for partitioning the input data set.

function

The user function to be executed. The user function takes ‘keys’ and ‘data’ as two required input arguments where ‘keys’ determines the partitioning values and ‘data’ is a data source object of the corresponding partition. ‘data’ can be a RxXdfData object or a RxODBCData object, which can be transformed to a pandas data frame by using rx_data_step. ‘keys’ is a dict where keys of the dict are variable names and values are variable values of the partition. The nodes or cores on which it is running are determined by the currently active compute context.

function_parameters

A dict which defines a list of additional arguments for the user function func.

filter_function

An user function that takes a Panda data frame of keys/values as an input argument, applies filter to the keys/values and returns a data frame containing rows whose keys/values satisfy the filter conditions. The input data frame has similar format to the results returned by rx_partition which comprises of partitioning variables and an additional variable of partition data source. This filter_function allows user to control what data partitions to be applied by the user function ‘function’. ‘filter_function’ currently is not supported in RxHadoopMR and RxSpark compute contexts.

compute_context

A RxComputeContext object.

kwargs

Additional arguments.

Returns

A RxExecByResults object inherited from dataframe with each row to be the result of each partition. The indexes of dataframe are keys, columns are ‘result’ and ‘status’. ‘result’: the object returned from the user function from each partition. ‘status’: ‘OK’, if the user function on each partition runs success, otherwise, the exception object.

See also

rx_partition. RxXdfData.

Example

###
# Run rx_exec_by in local compute context
###
import os
from revoscalepy import RxLocalParallel, rx_set_compute_context, rx_exec_by, RxOptions, RxXdfData
data_path = RxOptions.get_option("sampleDataDir")

input_file = os.path.join(data_path, "claims.xdf")
input_ds = RxXdfData(input_file)

# count number of rows
def count(data, keys):
    from revoscalepy import rx_data_step
    df = rx_data_step(data)
    return len(df)

rx_set_compute_context(RxLocalParallel())
local_cc_results = rx_exec_by(input_data = input_ds, keys = ["car.age", "type"], function = count)
print(local_cc_results)

###
# Run rx_exec_by in SQL Server compute context with data table specified
###
from revoscalepy import RxInSqlServer, rx_set_compute_context, rx_exec_by, RxOptions, RxSqlServerData
connection_string = 'Driver=SQL Server;Server=.;Database=RevoTestDb;Trusted_Connection=True;'
ds = RxSqlServerData(table = "AirlineDemoSmall", connection_string=connection_string)

def count(keys, data):
    from revoscalepy import rx_import
    df = rx_import(data)
    return len(df)

# filter function
def filter_weekend(partitioned_df):
    return (partitioned_df.loc[(partitioned_df.DayOfWeek == "Saturday") | (partitioned_df.DayOfWeek == "Sunday")])

sql_cc = RxInSqlServer(connection_string = connection_string, num_tasks = 4)
rx_set_compute_context(sql_cc)
sql_cc_results = rx_exec_by(ds, keys = ["DayOfWeek"], function = count, filter_function = filter_weekend)
print(sql_cc_results)

###
# Run rx_exec_by in RxSpark compute context
###
from revoscalepy import *

# start Spark app
spark_cc = rx_spark_connect()

# define function to compute average delay
def average_delay(keys, data):
    df = rx_data_step(data)
    return df['ArrDelay'].mean(skipna=True)

# define colInfo
col_info = {
    'ArrDelay': {'type': "numeric"},
    'CRSDepTime': {'type': "numeric"},
    'DayOfWeek': {'type': "string"}
}

# create text data source with airline data
text_data = RxTextData(
    file = "/share/sample_data/AirlineDemoSmall.csv",
    first_row_is_column_names = True,
    column_info = col_info,
    file_system = RxHdfsFileSystem())

# group text_data by day of week and get average delay on each day
result = rx_exec_by(text_data, keys = ["DayOfWeek"], function = average_delay)

# get result in pandas dataframe format and sort multiindex
result_dataframe = result.to_dataframe()
result_dataframe.sort_index()
print(result_dataframe)

# stop Spark app
rx_spark_disconnect(spark_cc)