Marcelo’s work-around works. So if you are using the itemsimilarity stuff, the
CLI has a way to solve the class not found and I can point out how to do the
equivalent if you are using the library API. Ping me if you care.
On Feb 28, 2015, at 2:27 PM, Erlend Hamnaberg wrote:
Yes. I ran into th
Yes. I ran into this problem with mahout snapshot and spark 1.2.0 not
really trying to figure out why that was a problem, since there were
already too many moving parts in my app. Obviously there is a classpath
issue somewhere.
/Erlend
On 27 Feb 2015 22:30, "Pat Ferrel" wrote:
> @Erlend hah, we
Maybe but any time the work around is to use "spark-submit --conf
spark.executor.extraClassPath=/guava.jar blah” that means that standalone apps
must have hard coded paths that are honored on every worker. And as you know a
lib is pretty much blocked from use of this version of Spark—hence the b
This seems like a job for userClassPathFirst. Or could be. It's
definitely an issue of visibility between where the serializer is and
where the user class is.
At the top you said Pat that you didn't try this, but why not?
On Fri, Feb 27, 2015 at 10:11 PM, Pat Ferrel wrote:
> I’ll try to find a J
I’ll try to find a Jira for it. I hope a fix is in 1.3
On Feb 27, 2015, at 1:59 PM, Pat Ferrel wrote:
Thanks! that worked.
On Feb 27, 2015, at 1:50 PM, Pat Ferrel wrote:
I don’t use spark-submit I have a standalone app.
So I guess you want me to add that key/value to the conf in my code and
Thanks! that worked.
On Feb 27, 2015, at 1:50 PM, Pat Ferrel wrote:
I don’t use spark-submit I have a standalone app.
So I guess you want me to add that key/value to the conf in my code and make
sure it exists on workers.
On Feb 27, 2015, at 1:47 PM, Marcelo Vanzin wrote:
On Fri, Feb 27, 2
I don’t use spark-submit I have a standalone app.
So I guess you want me to add that key/value to the conf in my code and make
sure it exists on workers.
On Feb 27, 2015, at 1:47 PM, Marcelo Vanzin wrote:
On Fri, Feb 27, 2015 at 1:42 PM, Pat Ferrel wrote:
> I changed in the spark master conf
On Fri, Feb 27, 2015 at 1:42 PM, Pat Ferrel wrote:
> I changed in the spark master conf, which is also the only worker. I added a
> path to the jar that has guava in it. Still can’t find the class.
Sorry, I'm still confused about what config you're changing. I'm
suggesting using:
spark-submit -
I changed in the spark master conf, which is also the only worker. I added a
path to the jar that has guava in it. Still can’t find the class.
Trying Erland’s idea next.
On Feb 27, 2015, at 1:35 PM, Marcelo Vanzin wrote:
On Fri, Feb 27, 2015 at 1:30 PM, Pat Ferrel wrote:
> @Marcelo do you mea
On Fri, Feb 27, 2015 at 1:30 PM, Pat Ferrel wrote:
> @Marcelo do you mean by modifying spark.executor.extraClassPath on all
> workers, that didn’t seem to work?
That's an app configuration, not a worker configuration, so if you're
trying to set it on the worker configuration it will definitely no
@Erlend hah, we were trying to merge your PR and ran into this—small world. You
actually compile the JavaSerializer source in your project?
@Marcelo do you mean by modifying spark.executor.extraClassPath on all workers,
that didn’t seem to work?
On Feb 27, 2015, at 1:23 PM, Erlend Hamnaberg wr
Hi.
I have had a simliar issue. I had to pull the JavaSerializer source into my
own project, just so I got the classloading of this class under control.
This must be a class loader issue with spark.
-E
On Fri, Feb 27, 2015 at 8:52 PM, Pat Ferrel wrote:
> I understand that I need to supply Gua
Ah, I see. That makes a lot of sense now.
You might be running into some weird class loader visibility issue.
I've seen some bugs in jira about this in the past, maybe you're
hitting one of them.
Until I have some time to investigate (of if you're curious feel free
to scavenge jira), a workaround
I understand that I need to supply Guava to Spark. The HashBiMap is created in
the client and broadcast to the workers. So it is needed in both. To achieve
this there is a deps.jar with Guava (and Scopt but that is only for the
client). Scopt is found so I know the jar is fine for the client.
Guava is not in Spark. (Well, long version: it's in Spark but it's
relocated to a different package except for some special classes
leaked through the public API.)
If your app needs Guava, it needs to package Guava with it (e.g. by
using maven-shade-plugin, or using "--jars" if only executors use
The root Spark pom has guava set at a certain version number. It’s very hard to
read the shading xml. Someone suggested that I try using userClassPathFirst but
that sounds too heavy handed since I don’t really care which version of guava I
get, not picky.
When I set my project to use the same
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