14

Without doing in parallel programming I can merger left and right dataframe on key column using below code, but it will be too slow since both are very large. is there any way I can do it in parallelize efficiently ?

I have 64 cores, and so practically I can use 63 of them to merge these two dataframe.

left = pd.DataFrame({'key': ['K0', 'K1', 'K2', 'K3'],
                      'A': ['A0', 'A1', 'A2', 'A3'],
                     'B': ['B0', 'B1', 'B2', 'B3']})


right = pd.DataFrame({'key': ['K0', 'K1', 'K2', 'K3'],
                      'C': ['C0', 'C1', 'C2', 'C3'],
                      'D': ['D0', 'D1', 'D2', 'D3']})


result = pd.merge(left, right, on='key')

output will be :

left:
    A   B key
0  A0  B0  K0
1  A1  B1  K1
2  A2  B2  K2
3  A3  B3  K3

right:
    C   D key
0  C0  D0  K0
1  C1  D1  K1
2  C2  D2  K2
3  C3  D3  K3

result:
    A   B key   C   D
0  A0  B0  K0  C0  D0
1  A1  B1  K1  C1  D1
2  A2  B2  K2  C2  D2
3  A3  B3  K3  C3  D3

I want to do this in parallel so I can do it at speed.

2
  • Even if a "multithreading" solution is possible, you'd have to break down your dataframes into chunks, merge them in parallel (probably using the threading module) and then putting back the chunks together. All that would only improve your speed by a factor of >4 (given you have 4 cores)... Mar 3, 2016 at 23:40
  • I have 64 cores, and so practically I can use 63 of them to merge these two dataframe.
    – Lav Patel
    Mar 4, 2016 at 5:57

2 Answers 2

14

I believe you can use dask. and function merge.

Docs say:

What definitely works?

Cleverly parallelizable operations (also fast):

Join on index: dd.merge(df1, df2, left_index=True, right_index=True)

Or:

Operations requiring a shuffle (slow-ish, unless on index)

Set index: df.set_index(df.x)

Join not on the index: pd.merge(df1, df2, on='name')

You can also check how Create Dask DataFrames.

Example

import pandas as pd

left = pd.DataFrame({'key': ['K0', 'K1', 'K2', 'K3'],
                      'A': ['A0', 'A1', 'A2', 'A3'],
                     'B': ['B0', 'B1', 'B2', 'B3']})


right = pd.DataFrame({'key': ['K0', 'K1', 'K2', 'K3'],
                      'C': ['C0', 'C1', 'C2', 'C3'],
                      'D': ['D0', 'D1', 'D2', 'D3']})


result = pd.merge(left, right, on='key')
print result
    A   B key   C   D
0  A0  B0  K0  C0  D0
1  A1  B1  K1  C1  D1
2  A2  B2  K2  C2  D2
3  A3  B3  K3  C3  D3

import dask.dataframe as dd

#Construct a dask objects from a pandas objects
left1 = dd.from_pandas(left, npartitions=3)
right1 = dd.from_pandas(right, npartitions=3)

#merge on key
print dd.merge(left1, right1, on='key').compute()
    A   B key   C   D
0  A3  B3  K3  C3  D3
1  A1  B1  K1  C1  D1
0  A2  B2  K2  C2  D2
1  A0  B0  K0  C0  D0
#first set indexes and then merge by them
print dd.merge(left1.set_index('key').compute(), 
               right1.set_index('key').compute(), 
               left_index=True, 
               right_index=True)
      A   B   C   D
key                
K0   A0  B0  C0  D0
K1   A1  B1  C1  D1
K2   A2  B2  C2  D2
K3   A3  B3  C3  D3
6

You can improve the speed (by a factor of about 3 on the given example) of your merge by making the key column the index of your dataframes and using join instead.

left2 = left.set_index('key')
right2 = right.set_index('key')

In [46]: %timeit result2 = left2.join(right2)
1000 loops, best of 3: 361 µs per loop

In [47]: %timeit result = pd.merge(left, right, on='key')
1000 loops, best of 3: 1.01 ms per loop
1
  • 1
    this is nice, but what about doing merge on several keys... is still possible with a join? ie: pd.merge(left, right, on=['key1','key2'] Apr 16, 2020 at 22:43

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