RxInSqlServer

revoscalepy.RxInSqlServer(connection_string: str, num_tasks: int = 1,
    auto_cleanup: bool = True, console_output: bool = None,
    execution_timeout_seconds: int = None, wait: bool = True,
    packages_to_load: list = None)

Description

Creates a compute context for running revoscalepy analyses inside Microsoft SQL Server. Currently only supported in Windows.

Arguments

connection_string

An ODBC connection string used to connect to the Microsoft SQL Server database.

num_tasks

Number of tasks (processes) to run for each computation. This is the maximum number of tasks that will be used; SQL Server may start fewer processes if there is not enough data, if too many resources are already being used by other jobs, or if num_tasks exceeds the MAXDOP (maximum degree of parallelism) configuration option in SQL Server. Each of the tasks is given data in parallel, and does computations in parallel, and so computation time may decrease as num_tasks increases. However, that may not always be the case, and computation time may even increase if too many tasks are competing for machine resources. Note that RxOptions.set_option(“NumCoresToUse”, n) controls how many cores (actually, threads) are used in parallel within each process, and there is a trade-off between NumCoresToUse and NumTasks that depends upon the specific algorithm, the type of data, the hardware, and the other jobs that are running.

wait

Bool value, if True, the job will be blocking and will not return until it has completed or has failed. If False, the job will be non-blocking and return immediately, allowing you to continue running other Python code. The client connection with SQL Server must be maintained while the job is running, even in non-blocking mode.

console_output

Bool value, if True, causes the standard output of the Python process started by SQL Server to be printed to the user console. This value may be overwritten by passing a non-None bool value to the consoleOutput argument provided in rx_exec and rx_get_job_results.

auto_cleanup

Bool value, if True, the default behavior is to clean up the temporary computational artifacts and delete the result objects upon retrieval. If False, then the computational results are not deleted, and the results may be acquired using rx_get_job_results, and the output via rx_get_job_output until the rx_cleanup_jobs is used to delete the results and other artifacts. Leaving this flag set to False can result in accumulation of compute artifacts which you may eventually need to delete before they fill up your hard drive.

execution_timeout_seconds

Integer value, defaults to 0 which means infinite wait.

packages_to_load

Optional list of strings specifying additional packages to be loaded on the nodes when jobs are run in this compute context.

See also

RxComputeContext, RxLocalSeq, rx_get_compute_context, rx_set_compute_context.

Example

## Not run:
from revoscalepy import RxSqlServerData, RxInSqlServer, rx_lin_mod

connection_string="Driver=SQL Server;Server=.;Database=RevoTestDB;Trusted_Connection=True"

cc = RxInSqlServer(
    connection_string = connection_string,
    num_tasks = 1,
    auto_cleanup = False,
    console_output = True,
    execution_timeout_seconds = 0,
    wait = True
    )

query="select top 100 [ArrDelay],[CRSDepTime],[DayOfWeek] FROM airlinedemosmall"
data_source = RxSqlServerData(
    sql_query = "select top 100 * from airlinedemosmall",
    connection_string = connection_string,
    column_info = {
        "ArrDelay" : { "type" : "integer" },
        "DayOfWeek" : {
            "type" : "factor",
            "levels" : [ "Monday", "Tuesday", "Wednesday", "Thursday", "Friday", "Saturday", "Sunday" ]
        }
    })

formula = "ArrDelay ~ CRSDepTime + DayOfWeek"
lin_mod = rx_lin_mod(formula, data = data_source, compute_context = cc)
print(lin_mod)
## End(Not run)