47

I want to do something really basic, simply fire up a Spark cluster through the EMR console and run a Spark script that depends on a Python package (for example, Arrow). What is the most straightforward way of doing this?

5 Answers 5

56

The most straightforward way would be to create a bash script containing your installation commands, copy it to S3, and set a bootstrap action from the console to point to your script.

Here's an example I'm using in production:

s3://mybucket/bootstrap/install_python_modules.sh

#!/bin/bash -xe

# Non-standard and non-Amazon Machine Image Python modules:
sudo pip install -U \
  awscli            \
  boto              \
  ciso8601          \
  ujson             \
  workalendar

sudo yum install -y python-psycopg2
7
  • 1
    this will install the packages on one of the nodes in the EMR cluster. How can I make sure the package gets installed on all nodes?
    – Aliza
    Mar 23, 2017 at 16:14
  • 11
    This installs the packages on all of the nodes
    – noli
    Mar 25, 2017 at 23:02
  • 4
    This is not working for Python3. I'm trying to install Pandas. Any new suggestions?
    – Evan Zamir
    Apr 3, 2018 at 19:11
  • @EvanZamir check my answer, you need to use pip-3.4 in the script instead stackoverflow.com/a/51210608/3424322 Jul 6, 2018 at 12:35
  • 4
    This does not follow typical conventions of using a requirements.txt for containing requirements. In order to allow for local and remote execution, you should use aws s3 cp to copy a requirements.txt to a local folder, then install using pip install -y requirements.txt after you have copied the requirements file from s3. Apr 1, 2019 at 14:03
11

In short, there are two ways to install packages with pip, depending on the platform. First, you install whatever you need and then you can run your Spark step. The easiest is to use emr-4.0.0 and 'command-runner.jar':

from boto.emr.step import JarStep
>>> pip_step=JarStep(name="Command Runner",
...             jar="command-runner.jar",
...             action_on_failure="CONTINUE",
...             step_args=['sudo','pip','install','arrow']
... )
>>> spark_step=JarStep(name="Spark with Command Runner",
...                    jar="command-runner.jar",
...                    step_args=["spark-submit","/usr/lib/spark/examples/src/main/python/pi.py"]
...                    action_on_failure="CONTINUE"
)
>>> step_list=conn.add_jobflow_steps(emr.jobflowid, [pip_step,spark_step])

On 2.x and 3.x, you use script-runner.jar in a similar fashion except that you have to specify the full URI for scriptrunner.

EDIT: Sorry, I didn't see that you wanted to do this through console. You can add the same steps in the console as well. The first step would be a Customer JAR with the same args as above. The second step is a spark step. Hope this helps!

2
  • 2
    where does conn come from Feb 9, 2018 at 15:13
  • I wonder why they removed the JarStep from boto3, It looks so much cleaner than having a dictionary with the same arguments...
    – ciurlaro
    Nov 7, 2022 at 8:21
9

Depending if you are using Python 2 (default in EMR) or Python 3, the pip install command should be different. As recommended in noli's answer, you should create a shell script, upload it to a bucket in S3, and use it as a Bootstrap action.

For Python 2 (in Jupyter: used as default for pyspark kernel):

#!/bin/bash -xe
sudo pip install your_package

For Python 3 (in Jupyter: used as default for Python 3 and pyspark3 kernel):

#!/bin/bash -xe
sudo pip-3.4 install your_package
4
  • 6
    This works fine if you are using a specific EMR that uses python 3.4. This needs to be examined separately for each EMR version. For instance, emr-5.21.0 uses python-3.6, thus you need to adjust pip to pip-3.6, so this is not a one-size-fits-all solution. Apr 1, 2019 at 13:56
  • Another note is that if you are wanting to get rid of the entire stderr log when using both versions of pip to install, the following will help in your bootstrap action shell script: sudo sed -i -e 's/$OLD_PIP_VERSION/$PIP_VERSION/g' /usr/bin/pip-3.6, based upon the version specified Apr 1, 2019 at 14:01
  • 2
    Would sudo pip3 install.. circumvent the version tagging issue? Jun 7, 2019 at 8:28
  • 1
    #! /bin/bash -xe ; sudo pip-3.6 install boto3 worked for me
    – ohailolcat
    Jul 2, 2019 at 22:45
3

This post got me started down the right path but ultimately I ended on a different solution.

boostrap.sh

#!/bin/bash

sudo python3 -m pip install \
    botocore \
    boto3 \
    ujson \
    warcio \
    beautifulsoup4  \
    lxml

create_emr_cluster.sh

#!/bin/bash

pem_file="~/.ssh/<your pem file>.pem"
bootstrap_path="s3://<path without filename>/"
subnet_id="subnet-<uniuqe subnet id>"
logs_path="s3://<log directory (optional)>/elasticmapreduce/"

aws s3 cp ./bootstrap.sh $bootstrap_path

ID=$(aws emr create-cluster \
--name spark-data-processing \
--use-default-roles \
--release-label emr-5.30.1 \
--instance-count 2 \
--application Name=Spark Name=Hive Name=Ganglia Name=Zeppelin \
--ec2-attributes KeyName=<your pem file>,SubnetId=$subnet_id \
--instance-type m4.large \
--bootstrap-actions Path=${bootstrap_path}bootstrap.sh \
--query ClusterId \
--output text \
--log-uri ${logs_path})

credit to for his help

2

For Python 3 - create a bash script:

#!/bin/bash -xe
sudo pip3 install your_package

Copy it to S3, and set a bootstrap action from the console to point to your script.

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