159
votes

I installed Spark using the AWS EC2 guide and I can launch the program fine using the bin/pyspark script to get to the spark prompt and can also do the Quick Start quide successfully.

However, I cannot for the life of me figure out how to stop all of the verbose INFO logging after each command.

I have tried nearly every possible scenario in the below code (commenting out, setting to OFF) within my log4j.properties file in the conf folder in where I launch the application from as well as on each node and nothing is doing anything. I still get the logging INFO statements printing after executing each statement.

I am very confused with how this is supposed to work.

#Set everything to be logged to the console log4j.rootCategory=INFO, console                                                                        
log4j.appender.console=org.apache.log4j.ConsoleAppender 
log4j.appender.console.target=System.err     
log4j.appender.console.layout=org.apache.log4j.PatternLayout 
log4j.appender.console.layout.ConversionPattern=%d{yy/MM/dd HH:mm:ss} %p %c{1}: %m%n

# Settings to quiet third party logs that are too verbose
log4j.logger.org.eclipse.jetty=WARN
log4j.logger.org.apache.spark.repl.SparkIMain$exprTyper=INFO
log4j.logger.org.apache.spark.repl.SparkILoop$SparkILoopInterpreter=INFO

Here is my full classpath when I use SPARK_PRINT_LAUNCH_COMMAND:

Spark Command: /Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/jdk1.8.0_05.jdk/Contents/Home/bin/java -cp :/root/spark-1.0.1-bin-hadoop2/conf:/root/spark-1.0.1-bin-hadoop2/conf:/root/spark-1.0.1-bin-hadoop2/lib/spark-assembly-1.0.1-hadoop2.2.0.jar:/root/spark-1.0.1-bin-hadoop2/lib/datanucleus-api-jdo-3.2.1.jar:/root/spark-1.0.1-bin-hadoop2/lib/datanucleus-core-3.2.2.jar:/root/spark-1.0.1-bin-hadoop2/lib/datanucleus-rdbms-3.2.1.jar -XX:MaxPermSize=128m -Djava.library.path= -Xms512m -Xmx512m org.apache.spark.deploy.SparkSubmit spark-shell --class org.apache.spark.repl.Main

contents of spark-env.sh:

#!/usr/bin/env bash

# This file is sourced when running various Spark programs.
# Copy it as spark-env.sh and edit that to configure Spark for your site.

# Options read when launching programs locally with 
# ./bin/run-example or ./bin/spark-submit
# - HADOOP_CONF_DIR, to point Spark towards Hadoop configuration files
# - SPARK_LOCAL_IP, to set the IP address Spark binds to on this node
# - SPARK_PUBLIC_DNS, to set the public dns name of the driver program
# - SPARK_CLASSPATH=/root/spark-1.0.1-bin-hadoop2/conf/

# Options read by executors and drivers running inside the cluster
# - SPARK_LOCAL_IP, to set the IP address Spark binds to on this node
# - SPARK_PUBLIC_DNS, to set the public DNS name of the driver program
# - SPARK_CLASSPATH, default classpath entries to append
# - SPARK_LOCAL_DIRS, storage directories to use on this node for shuffle and RDD data
# - MESOS_NATIVE_LIBRARY, to point to your libmesos.so if you use Mesos

# Options read in YARN client mode
# - HADOOP_CONF_DIR, to point Spark towards Hadoop configuration files
# - SPARK_EXECUTOR_INSTANCES, Number of workers to start (Default: 2)
# - SPARK_EXECUTOR_CORES, Number of cores for the workers (Default: 1).
# - SPARK_EXECUTOR_MEMORY, Memory per Worker (e.g. 1000M, 2G) (Default: 1G)
# - SPARK_DRIVER_MEMORY, Memory for Master (e.g. 1000M, 2G) (Default: 512 Mb)
# - SPARK_YARN_APP_NAME, The name of your application (Default: Spark)
# - SPARK_YARN_QUEUE, The hadoop queue to use for allocation requests (Default: ‘default’)
# - SPARK_YARN_DIST_FILES, Comma separated list of files to be distributed with the job.
# - SPARK_YARN_DIST_ARCHIVES, Comma separated list of archives to be distributed with the job.

# Options for the daemons used in the standalone deploy mode:
# - SPARK_MASTER_IP, to bind the master to a different IP address or hostname
# - SPARK_MASTER_PORT / SPARK_MASTER_WEBUI_PORT, to use non-default ports for the master
# - SPARK_MASTER_OPTS, to set config properties only for the master (e.g. "-Dx=y")
# - SPARK_WORKER_CORES, to set the number of cores to use on this machine
# - SPARK_WORKER_MEMORY, to set how much total memory workers have to give executors (e.g. 1000m, 2g)
# - SPARK_WORKER_PORT / SPARK_WORKER_WEBUI_PORT, to use non-default ports for the worker
# - SPARK_WORKER_INSTANCES, to set the number of worker processes per node
# - SPARK_WORKER_DIR, to set the working directory of worker processes
# - SPARK_WORKER_OPTS, to set config properties only for the worker (e.g. "-Dx=y")
# - SPARK_HISTORY_OPTS, to set config properties only for the history server (e.g. "-Dx=y")
# - SPARK_DAEMON_JAVA_OPTS, to set config properties for all daemons (e.g. "-Dx=y")
# - SPARK_PUBLIC_DNS, to set the public dns name of the master or workers

export SPARK_SUBMIT_CLASSPATH="$FWDIR/conf"
16
In Spark program after creating session you can set Log level as given below for Java SparkSession spark= SparkSession.builder().master("local").getOrCreate(); spark.sparkContext().setLogLevel("INFO");iKing

16 Answers

169
votes

Just execute this command in the spark directory:

cp conf/log4j.properties.template conf/log4j.properties

Edit log4j.properties:

# Set everything to be logged to the console
log4j.rootCategory=INFO, console
log4j.appender.console=org.apache.log4j.ConsoleAppender
log4j.appender.console.target=System.err
log4j.appender.console.layout=org.apache.log4j.PatternLayout
log4j.appender.console.layout.ConversionPattern=%d{yy/MM/dd HH:mm:ss} %p %c{1}: %m%n

# Settings to quiet third party logs that are too verbose
log4j.logger.org.eclipse.jetty=WARN
log4j.logger.org.eclipse.jetty.util.component.AbstractLifeCycle=ERROR
log4j.logger.org.apache.spark.repl.SparkIMain$exprTyper=INFO
log4j.logger.org.apache.spark.repl.SparkILoop$SparkILoopInterpreter=INFO

Replace at the first line:

log4j.rootCategory=INFO, console

by:

log4j.rootCategory=WARN, console

Save and restart your shell. It works for me for Spark 1.1.0 and Spark 1.5.1 on OS X.

56
votes

Inspired by the pyspark/tests.py I did

def quiet_logs(sc):
    logger = sc._jvm.org.apache.log4j
    logger.LogManager.getLogger("org"). setLevel( logger.Level.ERROR )
    logger.LogManager.getLogger("akka").setLevel( logger.Level.ERROR )

Calling this just after creating SparkContext reduced stderr lines logged for my test from 2647 to 163. However creating the SparkContext itself logs 163, up to

15/08/25 10:14:16 INFO SparkDeploySchedulerBackend: SchedulerBackend is ready for scheduling beginning after reached minRegisteredResourcesRatio: 0.0

and it's not clear to me how to adjust those programmatically.

51
votes

In Spark 2.0 you can also configure it dynamically for your application using setLogLevel:

    from pyspark.sql import SparkSession
    spark = SparkSession.builder.\
        master('local').\
        appName('foo').\
        getOrCreate()
    spark.sparkContext.setLogLevel('WARN')

In the pyspark console, a default spark session will already be available.

36
votes

Edit your conf/log4j.properties file and Change the following line:

   log4j.rootCategory=INFO, console

to

    log4j.rootCategory=ERROR, console

Another approach would be to :

Fireup spark-shell and type in the following:

import org.apache.log4j.Logger
import org.apache.log4j.Level

Logger.getLogger("org").setLevel(Level.OFF)
Logger.getLogger("akka").setLevel(Level.OFF)

You won't see any logs after that.

32
votes
>>> log4j = sc._jvm.org.apache.log4j
>>> log4j.LogManager.getRootLogger().setLevel(log4j.Level.ERROR)
31
votes

For PySpark, you can also set the log level in your scripts with sc.setLogLevel("FATAL"). From the docs:

Control our logLevel. This overrides any user-defined log settings. Valid log levels include: ALL, DEBUG, ERROR, FATAL, INFO, OFF, TRACE, WARN

16
votes

You can use setLogLevel

val spark = SparkSession
      .builder()
      .config("spark.master", "local[1]")
      .appName("TestLog")
      .getOrCreate()

spark.sparkContext.setLogLevel("WARN")
14
votes

This may be due to how Spark computes its classpath. My hunch is that Hadoop's log4j.properties file is appearing ahead of Spark's on the classpath, preventing your changes from taking effect.

If you run

SPARK_PRINT_LAUNCH_COMMAND=1 bin/spark-shell

then Spark will print the full classpath used to launch the shell; in my case, I see

Spark Command: /usr/lib/jvm/java/bin/java -cp :::/root/ephemeral-hdfs/conf:/root/spark/conf:/root/spark/lib/spark-assembly-1.0.0-hadoop1.0.4.jar:/root/spark/lib/datanucleus-api-jdo-3.2.1.jar:/root/spark/lib/datanucleus-core-3.2.2.jar:/root/spark/lib/datanucleus-rdbms-3.2.1.jar -XX:MaxPermSize=128m -Djava.library.path=:/root/ephemeral-hdfs/lib/native/ -Xms512m -Xmx512m org.apache.spark.deploy.SparkSubmit spark-shell --class org.apache.spark.repl.Main

where /root/ephemeral-hdfs/conf is at the head of the classpath.

I've opened an issue [SPARK-2913] to fix this in the next release (I should have a patch out soon).

In the meantime, here's a couple of workarounds:

  • Add export SPARK_SUBMIT_CLASSPATH="$FWDIR/conf" to spark-env.sh.
  • Delete (or rename) /root/ephemeral-hdfs/conf/log4j.properties.
9
votes

Spark 1.6.2:

log4j = sc._jvm.org.apache.log4j
log4j.LogManager.getRootLogger().setLevel(log4j.Level.ERROR)

Spark 2.x:

spark.sparkContext.setLogLevel('WARN')

(spark being the SparkSession)

Alternatively the old methods,

Rename conf/log4j.properties.template to conf/log4j.properties in Spark Dir.

In the log4j.properties, change log4j.rootCategory=INFO, console to log4j.rootCategory=WARN, console

Different log levels available:

  • OFF (most specific, no logging)
  • FATAL (most specific, little data)
  • ERROR - Log only in case of Errors
  • WARN - Log only in case of Warnings or Errors
  • INFO (Default)
  • DEBUG - Log details steps (and all logs stated above)
  • TRACE (least specific, a lot of data)
  • ALL (least specific, all data)
9
votes

Programmatic way

spark.sparkContext.setLogLevel("WARN")

Available Options

ERROR
WARN 
INFO 
8
votes

Simply add below param to your spark-submit command

--conf "spark.driver.extraJavaOptions=-Dlog4jspark.root.logger=WARN,console"

This overrides system value temporarily only for that job. Check exact property name (log4jspark.root.logger here) from log4j.properties file.

Hope this helps, cheers!

5
votes

I used this with Amazon EC2 with 1 master and 2 slaves and Spark 1.2.1.

# Step 1. Change config file on the master node
nano /root/ephemeral-hdfs/conf/log4j.properties

# Before
hadoop.root.logger=INFO,console
# After
hadoop.root.logger=WARN,console

# Step 2. Replicate this change to slaves
~/spark-ec2/copy-dir /root/ephemeral-hdfs/conf/
2
votes

This below code snippet for scala users :

Option 1 :

Below snippet you can add at the file level

import org.apache.log4j.{Level, Logger}
Logger.getLogger("org").setLevel(Level.WARN)

Option 2 :

Note : which will be applicable for all the application which is using spark session.

import org.apache.spark.sql.SparkSession

  private[this] implicit val spark = SparkSession.builder().master("local[*]").getOrCreate()

spark.sparkContext.setLogLevel("WARN")

Option 3 :

Note : This configuration should be added to your log4j.properties.. (could be like /etc/spark/conf/log4j.properties (where the spark installation is there) or your project folder level log4j.properties) since you are changing at module level. This will be applicable for all the application.

log4j.rootCategory=ERROR, console

IMHO, Option 1 is wise way since it can be switched off at file level.

1
votes

The way I do it is:

in the location I run the spark-submit script do

$ cp /etc/spark/conf/log4j.properties .
$ nano log4j.properties

change INFO to what ever level of logging you want and then run your spark-submit

0
votes

I you want to keep using the logging (Logging facility for Python) you can try splitting configurations for your application and for Spark:

LoggerManager()
logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)
loggerSpark = logging.getLogger('py4j')
loggerSpark.setLevel('WARNING')
0
votes

You can also set it like this programmatically, At the beginning of your program.

Logger.getLogger("org").setLevel(Level.WARN)