How to check the number of partitions of a Spark DataFrame without incurring the cost of .rdd

There is no inherent cost of rdd component in rdd.getNumPartitions, because returned RDD is never evaluated.

While you can easily determine this empirically, using debugger (I'll leave this as an exercise for the reader), or establishing that no jobs are triggered in the base case scenario

Spark session available as 'spark'.
Welcome to
      ____              __
     / __/__  ___ _____/ /__
    _\ \/ _ \/ _ `/ __/  '_/
   /___/ .__/\_,_/_/ /_/\_\   version 2.4.0
      /_/

Using Scala version 2.11.12 (OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM, Java 1.8.0_181)
Type in expressions to have them evaluated.
Type :help for more information.
scala> val ds = spark.read.text("README.md")
ds: org.apache.spark.sql.DataFrame = [value: string]

scala> ds.rdd.getNumPartitions
res0: Int = 1

scala> spark.sparkContext.statusTracker.getJobIdsForGroup(null).isEmpty // Check if there are any known jobs
res1: Boolean = true

it might be not enough to convince you. So let's approach this in a more systematic way:

  • rdd returns a MapPartitionRDD (ds as defined above):

    scala> ds.rdd.getClass
    res2: Class[_ <: org.apache.spark.rdd.RDD[org.apache.spark.sql.Row]] = class org.apache.spark.rdd.MapPartitionsRDD
    
  • RDD.getNumPartitions invokes RDD.partitions.

  • In non-checkpointed scenario RDD.partitions invokes getPartitions (feel free to trace the checkpoint path as well).
  • RDD.getPartitions is abstract.
  • So the actual implementation used in this case is MapPartitionsRDD.getPartitions, which simply delegates the call to the parent.
  • There are only MapPartitionsRDD between rdd and the source.

    scala> ds.rdd.toDebugString
    res3: String =
    (1) MapPartitionsRDD[3] at rdd at <console>:26 []
     |  MapPartitionsRDD[2] at rdd at <console>:26 []
     |  MapPartitionsRDD[1] at rdd at <console>:26 []
     |  FileScanRDD[0] at rdd at <console>:26 []
    

    Similarly if Dataset contained an exchange we would follow the parents to the nearest shuffle:

    scala> ds.orderBy("value").rdd.toDebugString
    res4: String =
    (67) MapPartitionsRDD[13] at rdd at <console>:26 []
     |   MapPartitionsRDD[12] at rdd at <console>:26 []
     |   MapPartitionsRDD[11] at rdd at <console>:26 []
     |   ShuffledRowRDD[10] at rdd at <console>:26 []
     +-(1) MapPartitionsRDD[9] at rdd at <console>:26 []
        |  MapPartitionsRDD[5] at rdd at <console>:26 []
        |  FileScanRDD[4] at rdd at <console>:26 []
    

    Note that this case is particularly interesting, because we actually triggered a job:

    scala> spark.sparkContext.statusTracker.getJobIdsForGroup(null).isEmpty
    res5: Boolean = false
    
    scala> spark.sparkContext.statusTracker.getJobIdsForGroup(null)
    res6: Array[Int] = Array(0)
    

    That's because we've encountered as scenario where the partitions cannot be determined statically (see Number of dataframe partitions after sorting? and Why does sortBy transformation trigger a Spark job?).

    In such scenario getNumPartitions will also trigger a job:

    scala> ds.orderBy("value").rdd.getNumPartitions
    res7: Int = 67
    
    scala> spark.sparkContext.statusTracker.getJobIdsForGroup(null)  // Note new job id
    res8: Array[Int] = Array(1, 0)
    

    however it doesn't mean that the observed cost is somehow related to .rdd call. Instead it is an intrinsic cost of finding partitions in case, where there is no static formula (some Hadoop input formats for example, where full scan of the data is required).

Please note that the points made here shouldn't be extrapolated to other applications of Dataset.rdd. For example ds.rdd.count would be indeed expensive and wasteful.


In my experience df.rdd.getNumPartitions is very fast, I never encountered taking this more than a second or so.

Alternatively, you could also try

val numPartitions: Long = df
      .select(org.apache.spark.sql.functions.spark_partition_id()).distinct().count()

which would avoid using .rdd