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Magellan: Geospatial Analytics Using Spark

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Magellan is a distributed execution engine for geospatial analytics on big data. It is implemented on top of Apache Spark and deeply leverages modern database techniques like efficient data layout, code generation and query optimization in order to optimize geospatial queries.

The application developer writes standard sql or data frame queries to evaluate geometric expressions while the execution engine takes care of efficiently laying data out in memory during query processing, picking the right query plan, optimizing the query execution with cheap and efficient spatial indices while presenting a declarative abstraction to the developer.

Magellan is the first library to extend Spark SQL to provide a relational abstraction for geospatial analytics. I see it as an evolution of geospatial analytics engines into the emerging world of big data by providing abstractions that are developer friendly, can be leveraged by anyone who understands or uses Apache Spark while simultaneously showcasing an execution engine that is state of the art for geospatial analytics on big data.

Version Release Notes

You can find notes on the various released versions here

Linking

You can link against the latest release using the following coordinates:

groupId: harsha2010
artifactId: magellan
version: 1.0.5-s_2.11

Requirements

v1.0.5 requires Spark 2.1+ and Scala 2.11

Capabilities

The library currently supports reading the following formats:

We aim to support the full suite of OpenGIS Simple Features for SQL spatial predicate functions and operators together with additional topological functions.

The following geometries are currently supported:

Geometries:

  • Point
  • LineString
  • Polygon
  • MultiPoint
  • MultiPolygon (treated as a collection of Polygons and read in as a row per polygon by the GeoJSON reader)

The following predicates are currently supported:

  • Intersects
  • Contains
  • Within

The following languages are currently supported:

  • Scala

Reading Data

You can read Shapefile formatted data as follows:

val df = sqlCtx.read.
  format("magellan").
  load(path)
  
df.show()

+-----+--------+--------------------+--------------------+-----+
|point|polyline|             polygon|            metadata|valid|
+-----+--------+--------------------+--------------------+-----+
| null|    null|Polygon(5, Vector...|Map(neighborho ->...| true|
| null|    null|Polygon(5, Vector...|Map(neighborho ->...| true|
| null|    null|Polygon(5, Vector...|Map(neighborho ->...| true|
| null|    null|Polygon(5, Vector...|Map(neighborho ->...| true|
+-----+--------+--------------------+--------------------+-----+

df.select(df.metadata['neighborho']).show()

+--------------------+
|metadata[neighborho]|
+--------------------+
|Twin Peaks       ...|
|Pacific Heights  ...|
|Visitacion Valley...|
|Potrero Hill     ...|
+--------------------+

To read GeoJSON format pass in the type as geojson during load as follows:

val df = sqlCtx.read.
  format("magellan").
  option("type", "geojson").
  load(path)

Scala API

Magellan is hosted on Spark Packages

When launching the Spark Shell, Magellan can be included like any other spark package using the --packages option:

> $SPARK_HOME/bin/spark-shell --packages harsha2010:magellan:1.0.4-s_2.11

A few common packages you might want to import within Magellan

import magellan.{Point, Polygon}
import org.apache.spark.sql.magellan.dsl.expressions._
import org.apache.spark.sql.types._

Data Structures

Point

val points = sc.parallelize(Seq((-1.0, -1.0), (-1.0, 1.0), (1.0, -1.0))).toDF("x", "y").select(point($"x", $"y").as("point"))

points.show()

+-----------------+
|            point|
+-----------------+
|Point(-1.0, -1.0)|
| Point(-1.0, 1.0)|
| Point(1.0, -1.0)|
+-----------------+

Polygon

case class PolygonRecord(polygon: Polygon)

val ring = Array(Point(1.0, 1.0), Point(1.0, -1.0),
 Point(-1.0, -1.0), Point(-1.0, 1.0),
 Point(1.0, 1.0))
val polygons = sc.parallelize(Seq(
    PolygonRecord(Polygon(Array(0), ring))
  )).toDF()
  
polygons.show()

+--------------------+
|             polygon|
+--------------------+
|Polygon(5, Vector...|
+--------------------+

Predicates

within

points.join(polygons).where($"point" within $"polygon").show()

intersects

points.join(polygons).where($"point" intersects $"polygon").show()

+-----------------+--------------------+
|            point|             polygon|
+-----------------+--------------------+
|Point(-1.0, -1.0)|Polygon(5, Vector...|
| Point(-1.0, 1.0)|Polygon(5, Vector...|
| Point(1.0, -1.0)|Polygon(5, Vector...|
+-----------------+--------------------+

contains

Since contains is an overloaded expression (contains is used for checking String containment by Spark SQL), Magellan uses the Binary Expression >? for checking shape containment.

points.join(polygons).where($"polygon" >? $"polygon").show()

A Databricks notebook with similar examples is published here for convenience.

Spatial indexes

Starting v1.0.5, Magellan support spatial indexes. Spatial indexes supported the so called ZOrderCurves.

Given a column of shapes, one can index the shapes to a given precision using a geohash indexer by doing the following:

df.withColumn("index", $"polygon" index 30)

This produces a new column called index which is a list of ZOrder Curves of precision 30 that taken together cover the polygon.

Creating Indexes while loading data

The Spatial Relations (GeoJSON, Shapefile, OSM-XML) all have the ability to automatically index the geometries while loading them.

To turn this feature on, pass in the parameter magellan.index = true and optionally a value for magellan.index.precision (default = 30) while loading the data as follows:

spark.read.format("magellan")
  .option("magellan.index", "true")
  .option("magellan.index.precision", "25")
  .load(s"$path")

This creates an additional column called index which holds the list of ZOrder Curves of the given precision that cover each geometry in the dataset.

Spatial Joins

Magellan leverages Spark SQL and has support for joins by default. However, these joins are by default not aware that the columns are geometric so a join of the form

  points.join(polygons).where($"point" within $"polygon")

will be treated as a Cartesian Join followed by a predicate. In some cases (especially when the polygon dataset is small (O(100-10000) polygons) this is fast enough. However, when the number of polygons is much larger than that, you will need spatial joins to allow you to scale this computation

To enable spatial joins in Magellan, add a spatial join rule to Spark by injecting the following code before the join:

  magellan.Utils.injectRules(spark)

Furthermore, during the join, you will need to provide Magellan a hint of the precision at which to create indices for the join

You can do this by annotating either of the dataframes involved in the join by providing a Spatial Join Hint as follows:

var df = df.index(30) //after load or
val df =spark.read.format(...).load(..).index(30) //during load

Then a join of the form

  points.join(polygons).where($"point" within $"polygon") // or
  
  points.join(polygons index 30).where($"point" within $"polygon")

automatically uses indexes to speed up the join

Developer Channel

Please visit Gitter to discuss Magellan, obtain help from developers or report issues.

Magellan Blog

For more details on Magellan and thoughts around Geospatial Analytics and the optimizations chosen for this project, please visit my blog