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---
layout: global
displayTitle: Apache Spark Overview
title: Overview
description: Apache Spark SPARK_VERSION_SHORT documentation homepage
license: |
Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file distributed with
this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership.
The ASF licenses this file to You under the Apache License, Version 2.0
(the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with
the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.
---
# Downloading
Get Spark from the [downloads page](https://spark.apache.org/downloads.html) of the project website. This documentation is for Spark version {{site.SPARK_VERSION}}. Spark uses Hadoop's client libraries for HDFS and YARN. Downloads are pre-packaged for a handful of popular Hadoop versions.
Users can also download a "Hadoop free" binary and run Spark with any Hadoop version
[by augmenting Spark's classpath](hadoop-provided.html).
Scala and Java users can include Spark in their projects using its Maven coordinates and Python users can install Spark from PyPI.
If you'd like to build Spark from
source, visit [Building Spark](building-spark.html).
Spark runs on both Windows and UNIX-like systems (e.g. Linux, Mac OS), and it should run on any platform that runs a supported version of Java. This should include JVMs on x86_64 and ARM64. It's easy to run locally on one machine --- all you need is to have `java` installed on your system `PATH`, or the `JAVA_HOME` environment variable pointing to a Java installation.
Spark runs on Java 17/21, Scala 2.13, Python 3.8+, and R 3.5+.
When using the Scala API, it is necessary for applications to use the same version of Scala that Spark was compiled for.
For example, when using Scala 2.13, use Spark compiled for 2.13, and compile code/applications for Scala 2.13 as well.
# Running the Examples and Shell
Spark comes with several sample programs. Python, Scala, Java, and R examples are in the
`examples/src/main` directory.
To run Spark interactively in a Python interpreter, use
`bin/pyspark`:
./bin/pyspark --master "local[2]"
Sample applications are provided in Python. For example:
./bin/spark-submit examples/src/main/python/pi.py 10
To run one of the Scala or Java sample programs, use
`bin/run-example <class> [params]` in the top-level Spark directory. (Behind the scenes, this
invokes the more general
[`spark-submit` script](submitting-applications.html) for
launching applications). For example,
./bin/run-example SparkPi 10
You can also run Spark interactively through a modified version of the Scala shell. This is a
great way to learn the framework.
./bin/spark-shell --master "local[2]"
The `--master` option specifies the
[master URL for a distributed cluster](submitting-applications.html#master-urls), or `local` to run
locally with one thread, or `local[N]` to run locally with N threads. You should start by using
`local` for testing. For a full list of options, run the Spark shell with the `--help` option.
Since version 1.4, Spark has provided an [R API](sparkr.html) (only the DataFrame APIs are included).
To run Spark interactively in an R interpreter, use `bin/sparkR`:
./bin/sparkR --master "local[2]"
Example applications are also provided in R. For example:
./bin/spark-submit examples/src/main/r/dataframe.R
## Running Spark Client Applications Anywhere with Spark Connect
Spark Connect is a new client-server architecture introduced in Spark 3.4 that decouples Spark
client applications and allows remote connectivity to Spark clusters. The separation between
client and server allows Spark and its open ecosystem to be leveraged from anywhere, embedded
in any application. In Spark 3.4, Spark Connect provides DataFrame API coverage for PySpark and
DataFrame/Dataset API support in Scala.
To learn more about Spark Connect and how to use it, see [Spark Connect Overview](spark-connect-overview.html).
# Launching on a Cluster
The Spark [cluster mode overview](cluster-overview.html) explains the key concepts in running on a cluster.
Spark can run both by itself, or over several existing cluster managers. It currently provides several
options for deployment:
* [Standalone Deploy Mode](spark-standalone.html): simplest way to deploy Spark on a private cluster
* [Hadoop YARN](running-on-yarn.html)
* [Kubernetes](running-on-kubernetes.html)
# Where to Go from Here
**Programming Guides:**
* [Quick Start](quick-start.html): a quick introduction to the Spark API; start here!
* [RDD Programming Guide](rdd-programming-guide.html): overview of Spark basics - RDDs (core but old API), accumulators, and broadcast variables
* [Spark SQL, Datasets, and DataFrames](sql-programming-guide.html): processing structured data with relational queries (newer API than RDDs)
* [Structured Streaming](structured-streaming-programming-guide.html): processing structured data streams with relation queries (using Datasets and DataFrames, newer API than DStreams)
* [Spark Streaming](streaming-programming-guide.html): processing data streams using DStreams (old API)
* [MLlib](ml-guide.html): applying machine learning algorithms
* [GraphX](graphx-programming-guide.html): processing graphs
* [SparkR](sparkr.html): processing data with Spark in R
* [PySpark](api/python/getting_started/index.html): processing data with Spark in Python
* [Spark SQL CLI](sql-distributed-sql-engine-spark-sql-cli.html): processing data with SQL on the command line
**API Docs:**
* [Spark Python API (Sphinx)](api/python/index.html)
* [Spark Scala API (Scaladoc)](api/scala/org/apache/spark/index.html)
* [Spark Java API (Javadoc)](api/java/index.html)
* [Spark R API (Roxygen2)](api/R/index.html)
* [Spark SQL, Built-in Functions (MkDocs)](api/sql/index.html)
**Deployment Guides:**
* [Cluster Overview](cluster-overview.html): overview of concepts and components when running on a cluster
* [Submitting Applications](submitting-applications.html): packaging and deploying applications
* Deployment modes:
* [Amazon EC2](https://github.com/amplab/spark-ec2): scripts that let you launch a cluster on EC2 in about 5 minutes
* [Standalone Deploy Mode](spark-standalone.html): launch a standalone cluster quickly without a third-party cluster manager
* [YARN](running-on-yarn.html): deploy Spark on top of Hadoop NextGen (YARN)
* [Kubernetes](running-on-kubernetes.html): deploy Spark on top of Kubernetes
**Other Documents:**
* [Configuration](configuration.html): customize Spark via its configuration system
* [Monitoring](monitoring.html): track the behavior of your applications
* [Web UI](web-ui.html): view useful information about your applications
* [Tuning Guide](tuning.html): best practices to optimize performance and memory use
* [Job Scheduling](job-scheduling.html): scheduling resources across and within Spark applications
* [Security](security.html): Spark security support
* [Hardware Provisioning](hardware-provisioning.html): recommendations for cluster hardware
* Integration with other storage systems:
* [Cloud Infrastructures](cloud-integration.html)
* [OpenStack Swift](storage-openstack-swift.html)
* [Migration Guide](migration-guide.html): migration guides for Spark components
* [Building Spark](building-spark.html): build Spark using the Maven system
* [Contributing to Spark](https://spark.apache.org/contributing.html)
* [Third Party Projects](https://spark.apache.org/third-party-projects.html): related third party Spark projects
**External Resources:**
* [Spark Homepage](https://spark.apache.org)
* [Spark Community](https://spark.apache.org/community.html) resources, including local meetups
* [StackOverflow tag `apache-spark`](http://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/apache-spark)
* [Mailing Lists](https://spark.apache.org/mailing-lists.html): ask questions about Spark here
* AMP Camps: a series of training camps at UC Berkeley that featured talks and
exercises about Spark, Spark Streaming, Mesos, and more. [Videos](https://www.youtube.com/user/BerkeleyAMPLab/search?query=amp%20camp),
are available online for free.
* [Code Examples](https://spark.apache.org/examples.html): more are also available in the `examples` subfolder of Spark ([Python]({{site.SPARK_GITHUB_URL}}/tree/master/examples/src/main/python),
[Scala]({{site.SPARK_GITHUB_URL}}/tree/master/examples/src/main/scala/org/apache/spark/examples),
[Java]({{site.SPARK_GITHUB_URL}}/tree/master/examples/src/main/java/org/apache/spark/examples),
[R]({{site.SPARK_GITHUB_URL}}/tree/master/examples/src/main/r))