Databricks Connect Client
Project description
Databricks Connect
Databricks Connect is a Python library to run PySpark DataFrame queries on a remote Spark cluster. Databricks Connect leverages the power of Spark Connect. An application using Databricks Connect runs locally, and when the results of a DataFrame query need to be evaluated, the query is run on a configured Databricks cluster.
The following is a simple Python code that uses Databricks Connect and prints out a number range. The number range query is executed on the Databricks cluster.
from databricks.connect import DatabricksSession
session = DatabricksSession.builder.getOrCreate()
df = session.range(1, 10)
df.show()
Specifying Connection Parameters
DatabricksSession
offers a few ways to specify the Databricks workspace, cluster and user
credentials, collectively referred to in the rest of this document as connection parameters.
The specified credentials are used to execute the DataFrame queries on the cluster. This user must
have cluster access permissions and appropriate data access permissions.
NOTE: Currently, Databricks Connect only supports credentials based on Personal Access Token. Other authentication mechanisms are coming soon.
When DatabricksSession
is initialized with no additional parameters as below, connection
parameters are picked up from the environment.
session = DatabricksSession.builder.getOrCreate()
First, the SPARK_REMOTE
environment variable is used if it's configured.
If configured, the SPARK_REMOTE
environment variable must contain the spark connect connection
string. Read more about spark connect connection string.
SPARK_REMOTE="sc://<databricks workspace url>:443/;token=<bearer token>;x-databricks-cluster-id=<cluster id>"
If this environment variable is not configured, Databricks Connect will now look for connection parameters using the Databricks SDK.
The Databricks Python SDK reads these values from two locations - first from environment variables
that may be configured. For parameters not configured via environment variables, the 'DEFAULT'
profile, if set up, from the configuration file .databrickscfg
. Databricks Python SDK facilitates
OAuth token refreshing and enables Service Principal client credentials support on AWS and Azure.
The details on the authentication process, environment variables, and other configuration options
can be found in the Databricks SDK.
Similar to the authentication environment variables, the Databricks SDK reads the cluster identifier from the environment variable
DATABRICKS_CLUSTER_ID
or from thecluster_id
entry in the config file.
In case specific profile of config file needs to be used it can be achieved as follows:
from databricks.connect import DatabricksSession
session = DatabricksSession.builder.profile("profile_name").getOrCreate()
Connection parameters can also be specified directly in code.
session = DatabricksSession.builder.remote(
host="<databricks workspace url>",
cluster_id="<databricks cluster id>",
token="<bearer token>"
).getOrCreate()
Alternatively, connection can be initialized based on Config object from Databricks SDK
from databricks.sdk.core import Config
config = Config(...)
DatabricksSession.builder.sdkConfig(config).getOrCreate()
The spark connect connection string can also be specified directly in code.
session = DatabricksSession.builder\
.remote("sc://<databricks workspace url>:443/;token=<bearer token>;x-databricks-cluster-id=<cluster id>")\
.getOrCreate()
In summary, connection parameters are collected in the following order. When all connection parameters are available, evaluation is stopped.
- Specified directly using
remote()
, either as a connection string or as keyword arguments. - Specified via the Databricks SDK using
sdkConfig()
or usingprofile
. - Specified in the
SPARK_REMOTE
environment variable. - Specified via the Databricks SDK's default authentication.
OAuth
The Databricks Connect module, via the Databricks SDK, supports OAuth authentication mechanism.
This can be configured via configuration profiles in the .databrickscfg
file.
See [TBD: link here] on how to set up and use configuration profiles.
The following configuration profile snippet sets up OAuth integration via the Azure CLI, and
should be added to the .databrickscfg
file.
[azure-cli]
host = https://adb-XXX.azuredatabricks.net
auth_type = azure-cli
cluster_id = <databricks cluster id>
Similarly, the following snippet sets up OAuth integration via Azure Active Directory (AAD) service principal.
[azure-aad]
host = https://adb-XXX.azuredatabricks.net
azure_tenant_id = 00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000001
azure_client_id = 00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000002
azure_client_secret = s0M3p@$$wrd
cluster_id = YYY
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