60
votes

I'm trying to convert Pandas DF into Spark one. DF head:

10000001,1,0,1,12:35,OK,10002,1,0,9,f,NA,24,24,0,3,9,0,0,1,1,0,0,4,543
10000001,2,0,1,12:36,OK,10002,1,0,9,f,NA,24,24,0,3,9,2,1,1,3,1,3,2,611
10000002,1,0,4,12:19,PA,10003,1,1,7,f,NA,74,74,0,2,15,2,0,2,3,1,2,2,691

Code:

dataset = pd.read_csv("data/AS/test_v2.csv")
sc = SparkContext(conf=conf)
sqlCtx = SQLContext(sc)
sdf = sqlCtx.createDataFrame(dataset)

And I got an error:

TypeError: Can not merge type <class 'pyspark.sql.types.StringType'> and <class 'pyspark.sql.types.DoubleType'>
6
My first assumption is that the file contains both numbers and strings in one column and Spark confuses over it. However, it should be handled by Pandas when importing. - Иван Судос
does your DF have column names? - MaxU
Yes it has. Should I disable them? - Иван Судос
no, but it would be helpful if you would put it to your DF head output. Try to skip the 11-nth column (with NA's) and rerun your code - MaxU
Why don't you use spark-csv? - Alberto Bonsanto

6 Answers

40
votes

You need to make sure your pandas dataframe columns are appropriate for the type spark is inferring. If your pandas dataframe lists something like:

pd.info()
<class 'pandas.core.frame.DataFrame'>
RangeIndex: 5062 entries, 0 to 5061
Data columns (total 51 columns):
SomeCol                    5062 non-null object
Col2                       5062 non-null object

And you're getting that error try:

df[['SomeCol', 'Col2']] = df[['SomeCol', 'Col2']].astype(str)

Now, make sure .astype(str) is actually the type you want those columns to be. Basically, when the underlying Java code tries to infer the type from an object in python it uses some observations and makes a guess, if that guess doesn't apply to all the data in the column(s) it's trying to convert from pandas to spark it will fail.

55
votes

I made this script, It worked for my 10 pandas Data frames

from pyspark.sql.types import *

# Auxiliar functions
def equivalent_type(f):
    if f == 'datetime64[ns]': return TimestampType()
    elif f == 'int64': return LongType()
    elif f == 'int32': return IntegerType()
    elif f == 'float64': return FloatType()
    else: return StringType()

def define_structure(string, format_type):
    try: typo = equivalent_type(format_type)
    except: typo = StringType()
    return StructField(string, typo)

# Given pandas dataframe, it will return a spark's dataframe.
def pandas_to_spark(pandas_df):
    columns = list(pandas_df.columns)
    types = list(pandas_df.dtypes)
    struct_list = []
    for column, typo in zip(columns, types): 
      struct_list.append(define_structure(column, typo))
    p_schema = StructType(struct_list)
    return sqlContext.createDataFrame(pandas_df, p_schema)

You can see it also in this gist

With this you just have to call spark_df = pandas_to_spark(pandas_df)

42
votes

Type related errors can be avoided by imposing a schema as follows:

note: a text file was created (test.csv) with the original data (as above) and hypothetical column names were inserted ("col1","col2",...,"col25").

import pyspark
from pyspark.sql import SparkSession
import pandas as pd

spark = SparkSession.builder.appName('pandasToSparkDF').getOrCreate()

pdDF = pd.read_csv("test.csv")

contents of the pandas data frame:

       col1     col2    col3    col4    col5    col6    col7    col8   ... 
0      10000001 1       0       1       12:35   OK      10002   1      ...
1      10000001 2       0       1       12:36   OK      10002   1      ...
2      10000002 1       0       4       12:19   PA      10003   1      ...

Next, create the schema:

from pyspark.sql.types import *

mySchema = StructType([ StructField("col1", LongType(), True)\
                       ,StructField("col2", IntegerType(), True)\
                       ,StructField("col3", IntegerType(), True)\
                       ,StructField("col4", IntegerType(), True)\
                       ,StructField("col5", StringType(), True)\
                       ,StructField("col6", StringType(), True)\
                       ,StructField("col7", IntegerType(), True)\
                       ,StructField("col8", IntegerType(), True)\
                       ,StructField("col9", IntegerType(), True)\
                       ,StructField("col10", IntegerType(), True)\
                       ,StructField("col11", StringType(), True)\
                       ,StructField("col12", StringType(), True)\
                       ,StructField("col13", IntegerType(), True)\
                       ,StructField("col14", IntegerType(), True)\
                       ,StructField("col15", IntegerType(), True)\
                       ,StructField("col16", IntegerType(), True)\
                       ,StructField("col17", IntegerType(), True)\
                       ,StructField("col18", IntegerType(), True)\
                       ,StructField("col19", IntegerType(), True)\
                       ,StructField("col20", IntegerType(), True)\
                       ,StructField("col21", IntegerType(), True)\
                       ,StructField("col22", IntegerType(), True)\
                       ,StructField("col23", IntegerType(), True)\
                       ,StructField("col24", IntegerType(), True)\
                       ,StructField("col25", IntegerType(), True)])

Note: True (implies nullable allowed)

create the pyspark dataframe:

df = spark.createDataFrame(pdDF,schema=mySchema)

confirm the pandas data frame is now a pyspark data frame:

type(df)

output:

pyspark.sql.dataframe.DataFrame

Aside:

To address Kate's comment below - to impose a general (String) schema you can do the following:

df=spark.createDataFrame(pdDF.astype(str)) 
13
votes

In spark version >= 3 you can convert pandas dataframes to pyspark dataframe in one line

use spark.createDataFrame(pandasDF)

dataset = pd.read_csv("data/AS/test_v2.csv")

sparkDf = spark.createDataFrame(dataset);

if you are confused about spark session variable, spark session is as follows

sc = SparkContext.getOrCreate(SparkConf().setMaster("local[*]"))

spark = SparkSession \
    .builder \
    .getOrCreate()
11
votes

I have tried this with your data and it is working :

%pyspark
import pandas as pd
from pyspark.sql import SQLContext
print sc
df = pd.read_csv("test.csv")
print type(df)
print df
sqlCtx = SQLContext(sc)
sqlCtx.createDataFrame(df).show()
0
votes

I received a similar error message once, in my case it was because my pandas dataframe contained NULLs. I will recommend to try & handle this in pandas before converting to spark (this resolved the issue in my case).