Scaling to large datasets

Pandas provides data structures for in-memory analytics, which makes using pandas to analyze datasets that are larger than memory datasets somewhat tricky. Even datasets that are a sizable fraction of memory become unwieldy, as some pandas operations need to make intermediate copies.

This document provides a few recommendations for scaling your analysis to larger datasets. It’s a complement to Enhancing performance, which focuses on speeding up analysis for datasets that fit in memory.

But first, it’s worth considering not using pandas. Pandas isn’t the right tool for all situations. If you’re working with very large datasets and a tool like PostgreSQL fits your needs, then you should probably be using that. Assuming you want or need the expressiveness and power of pandas, let’s carry on.

In [1]: import pandas as pd

In [2]: import numpy as np

Load less data

Suppose our raw dataset on disk has many columns:

                     id_0    name_0       x_0       y_0  id_1   name_1       x_1  ...  name_8       x_8       y_8  id_9   name_9       x_9       y_9
timestamp                                                                         ...
2000-01-01 00:00:00  1015   Michael -0.399453  0.095427   994    Frank -0.176842  ...     Dan -0.315310  0.713892  1025   Victor -0.135779  0.346801
2000-01-01 00:01:00   969  Patricia  0.650773 -0.874275  1003    Laura  0.459153  ...  Ursula  0.913244 -0.630308  1047    Wendy -0.886285  0.035852
2000-01-01 00:02:00  1016    Victor -0.721465 -0.584710  1046  Michael  0.524994  ...     Ray -0.656593  0.692568  1064   Yvonne  0.070426  0.432047
2000-01-01 00:03:00   939     Alice -0.746004 -0.908008   996   Ingrid -0.414523  ...   Jerry -0.958994  0.608210   978    Wendy  0.855949 -0.648988
2000-01-01 00:04:00  1017       Dan  0.919451 -0.803504  1048    Jerry -0.569235  ...   Frank -0.577022 -0.409088   994      Bob -0.270132  0.335176
...                   ...       ...       ...       ...   ...      ...       ...  ...     ...       ...       ...   ...      ...       ...       ...
2000-12-30 23:56:00   999       Tim  0.162578  0.512817   973    Kevin -0.403352  ...     Tim -0.380415  0.008097  1041  Charlie  0.191477 -0.599519
2000-12-30 23:57:00   970     Laura -0.433586 -0.600289   958   Oliver -0.966577  ...   Zelda  0.971274  0.402032  1038   Ursula  0.574016 -0.930992
2000-12-30 23:58:00  1065     Edith  0.232211 -0.454540   971      Tim  0.158484  ...   Alice -0.222079 -0.919274  1022      Dan  0.031345 -0.657755
2000-12-30 23:59:00  1019    Ingrid  0.322208 -0.615974   981   Hannah  0.607517  ...   Sarah -0.424440 -0.117274   990   George -0.375530  0.563312
2000-12-31 00:00:00   937    Ursula -0.906523  0.943178  1018    Alice -0.564513  ...   Jerry  0.236837  0.807650   985   Oliver  0.777642  0.783392

[525601 rows x 40 columns]

To load the columns we want, we have two options. Option 1 loads in all the data and then filters to what we need.

In [3]: columns = ['id_0', 'name_0', 'x_0', 'y_0']

In [4]: pd.read_parquet("timeseries_wide.parquet")[columns]
Out[4]: 
                     id_0    name_0       x_0       y_0
timestamp                                              
2000-01-01 00:00:00  1015   Michael -0.399453  0.095427
2000-01-01 00:01:00   969  Patricia  0.650773 -0.874275
2000-01-01 00:02:00  1016    Victor -0.721465 -0.584710
2000-01-01 00:03:00   939     Alice -0.746004 -0.908008
2000-01-01 00:04:00  1017       Dan  0.919451 -0.803504
...                   ...       ...       ...       ...
2000-12-30 23:56:00   999       Tim  0.162578  0.512817
2000-12-30 23:57:00   970     Laura -0.433586 -0.600289
2000-12-30 23:58:00  1065     Edith  0.232211 -0.454540
2000-12-30 23:59:00  1019    Ingrid  0.322208 -0.615974
2000-12-31 00:00:00   937    Ursula -0.906523  0.943178

[525601 rows x 4 columns]

Option 2 only loads the columns we request.

In [5]: pd.read_parquet("timeseries_wide.parquet", columns=columns)
Out[5]: 
                     id_0    name_0       x_0       y_0
timestamp                                              
2000-01-01 00:00:00  1015   Michael -0.399453  0.095427
2000-01-01 00:01:00   969  Patricia  0.650773 -0.874275
2000-01-01 00:02:00  1016    Victor -0.721465 -0.584710
2000-01-01 00:03:00   939     Alice -0.746004 -0.908008
2000-01-01 00:04:00  1017       Dan  0.919451 -0.803504
...                   ...       ...       ...       ...
2000-12-30 23:56:00   999       Tim  0.162578  0.512817
2000-12-30 23:57:00   970     Laura -0.433586 -0.600289
2000-12-30 23:58:00  1065     Edith  0.232211 -0.454540
2000-12-30 23:59:00  1019    Ingrid  0.322208 -0.615974
2000-12-31 00:00:00   937    Ursula -0.906523  0.943178

[525601 rows x 4 columns]

If we were to measure the memory usage of the two calls, we’d see that specifying columns uses about 1/10th the memory in this case.

With pandas.read_csv(), you can specify usecols to limit the columns read into memory. Not all file formats that can be read by pandas provide an option to read a subset of columns.

Use efficient datatypes

The default pandas data types are not the most memory efficient. This is especially true for text data columns with relatively few unique values (commonly referred to as “low-cardinality” data). By using more efficient data types, you can store larger datasets in memory.

In [6]: ts = pd.read_parquet("timeseries.parquet")

In [7]: ts
Out[7]: 
                       id      name         x         y
timestamp                                              
2000-01-01 00:00:00  1029   Michael  0.278837  0.247932
2000-01-01 00:00:30  1010  Patricia  0.077144  0.490260
2000-01-01 00:01:00  1001    Victor  0.214525  0.258635
2000-01-01 00:01:30  1018     Alice -0.646866  0.822104
2000-01-01 00:02:00   991       Dan  0.902389  0.466665
...                   ...       ...       ...       ...
2000-12-30 23:58:00   992     Sarah  0.721155  0.944118
2000-12-30 23:58:30  1007    Ursula  0.409277  0.133227
2000-12-30 23:59:00  1009    Hannah -0.452802  0.184318
2000-12-30 23:59:30   978     Kevin -0.904728 -0.179146
2000-12-31 00:00:00   973    Ingrid -0.370763 -0.794667

[1051201 rows x 4 columns]

Now, let’s inspect the data types and memory usage to see where we should focus our attention.

In [8]: ts.dtypes
Out[8]: 
id        int64
name     object
x       float64
y       float64
dtype: object
In [9]: ts.memory_usage(deep=True)  # memory usage in bytes
Out[9]: 
Index     8409608
id        8409608
name     65537768
x         8409608
y         8409608
dtype: int64

The name column is taking up much more memory than any other. It has just a few unique values, so it’s a good candidate for converting to a Categorical. With a Categorical, we store each unique name once and use space-efficient integers to know which specific name is used in each row.

In [10]: ts2 = ts.copy()

In [11]: ts2['name'] = ts2['name'].astype('category')

In [12]: ts2.memory_usage(deep=True)
Out[12]: 
Index    8409608
id       8409608
name     1054102
x        8409608
y        8409608
dtype: int64

We can go a bit further and downcast the numeric columns to their smallest types using pandas.to_numeric().

In [13]: ts2['id'] = pd.to_numeric(ts2['id'], downcast='unsigned')

In [14]: ts2[['x', 'y']] = ts2[['x', 'y']].apply(pd.to_numeric, downcast='float')

In [15]: ts2.dtypes
Out[15]: 
id        uint16
name    category
x        float32
y        float32
dtype: object
In [16]: ts2.memory_usage(deep=True)
Out[16]: 
Index    8409608
id       2102402
name     1054102
x        4204804
y        4204804
dtype: int64
In [17]: reduction = (ts2.memory_usage(deep=True).sum()
   ....:              / ts.memory_usage(deep=True).sum())
   ....: 

In [18]: print(f"{reduction:0.2f}")
0.20

In all, we’ve reduced the in-memory footprint of this dataset to 1/5 of its original size.

See Categorical data for more on Categorical and dtypes for an overview of all of pandas’ dtypes.

Use chunking

Some workloads can be achieved with chunking: splitting a large problem like “convert this directory of CSVs to parquet” into a bunch of small problems (“convert this individual CSV file into a Parquet file. Now repeat that for each file in this directory.”). As long as each chunk fits in memory, you can work with datasets that are much larger than memory.

Note

Chunking works well when the operation you’re performing requires zero or minimal coordination between chunks. For more complicated workflows, you’re better off using another library.

Suppose we have an even larger “logical dataset” on disk that’s a directory of parquet files. Each file in the directory represents a different year of the entire dataset.

data
└── timeseries
    ├── ts-00.parquet
    ├── ts-01.parquet
    ├── ts-02.parquet
    ├── ts-03.parquet
    ├── ts-04.parquet
    ├── ts-05.parquet
    ├── ts-06.parquet
    ├── ts-07.parquet
    ├── ts-08.parquet
    ├── ts-09.parquet
    ├── ts-10.parquet
    └── ts-11.parquet

Now we’ll implement an out-of-core value_counts. The peak memory usage of this workflow is the single largest chunk, plus a small series storing the unique value counts up to this point. As long as each individual file fits in memory, this will work for arbitrary-sized datasets.

In [19]: %%time
   ....: files = pathlib.Path("data/timeseries/").glob("ts*.parquet")
   ....: counts = pd.Series(dtype=int)
   ....: for path in files:
   ....:     df = pd.read_parquet(path)
   ....:     counts = counts.add(df['name'].value_counts(), fill_value=0)
   ....: counts.astype(int)
   ....: 
CPU times: user 1.9 s, sys: 202 ms, total: 2.1 s
Wall time: 1.65 s
Out[19]: 
Alice      229802
Bob        229211
Charlie    229303
Dan        230621
Edith      230349
            ...  
Victor     230502
Wendy      230038
Xavier     229553
Yvonne     228766
Zelda      229909
Length: 26, dtype: int64

Some readers, like pandas.read_csv(), offer parameters to control the chunksize when reading a single file.

Manually chunking is an OK option for workflows that don’t require too sophisticated of operations. Some operations, like groupby, are much harder to do chunkwise. In these cases, you may be better switching to a different library that implements these out-of-core algorithms for you.

Use other libraries

Pandas is just one library offering a DataFrame API. Because of its popularity, pandas’ API has become something of a standard that other libraries implement. The pandas documentation maintains a list of libraries implementing a DataFrame API in our ecosystem page.

For example, Dask, a parallel computing library, has dask.dataframe, a pandas-like API for working with larger than memory datasets in parallel. Dask can use multiple threads or processes on a single machine, or a cluster of machines to process data in parallel.

We’ll import dask.dataframe and notice that the API feels similar to pandas. We can use Dask’s read_parquet function, but provide a globstring of files to read in.

In [20]: import dask.dataframe as dd

In [21]: ddf = dd.read_parquet("data/timeseries/ts*.parquet", engine="pyarrow")

In [22]: ddf
Out[22]: 
Dask DataFrame Structure:
                   id    name        x        y
npartitions=12                                 
                int64  object  float64  float64
                  ...     ...      ...      ...
...               ...     ...      ...      ...
                  ...     ...      ...      ...
                  ...     ...      ...      ...
Dask Name: read-parquet, 12 tasks

Inspecting the ddf object, we see a few things

  • There are familiar attributes like .columns and .dtypes

  • There are familiar methods like .groupby, .sum, etc.

  • There are new attributes like .npartitions and .divisions

The partitions and divisions are how Dask parallizes computation. A Dask DataFrame is made up of many Pandas DataFrames. A single method call on a Dask DataFrame ends up making many pandas method calls, and Dask knows how to coordinate everything to get the result.

In [23]: ddf.columns
Out[23]: Index(['id', 'name', 'x', 'y'], dtype='object')

In [24]: ddf.dtypes
Out[24]: 
id        int64
name     object
x       float64
y       float64
dtype: object

In [25]: ddf.npartitions
Out[25]: 12

One major difference: the dask.dataframe API is lazy. If you look at the repr above, you’ll notice that the values aren’t actually printed out; just the column names and dtypes. That’s because Dask hasn’t actually read the data yet. Rather than executing immediately, doing operations build up a task graph.

In [26]: ddf
Out[26]: 
Dask DataFrame Structure:
                   id    name        x        y
npartitions=12                                 
                int64  object  float64  float64
                  ...     ...      ...      ...
...               ...     ...      ...      ...
                  ...     ...      ...      ...
                  ...     ...      ...      ...
Dask Name: read-parquet, 12 tasks

In [27]: ddf['name']
Out[27]: 
Dask Series Structure:
npartitions=12
    object
       ...
     ...  
       ...
       ...
Name: name, dtype: object
Dask Name: getitem, 24 tasks

In [28]: ddf['name'].value_counts()
Out[28]: 
Dask Series Structure:
npartitions=1
    int64
      ...
Name: name, dtype: int64
Dask Name: value-counts-agg, 39 tasks

Each of these calls is instant because the result isn’t being computed yet. We’re just building up a list of computation to do when someone needs the result. Dask knows that the return type of a pandas.Series.value_counts is a pandas Series with a certain dtype and a certain name. So the Dask version returns a Dask Series with the same dtype and the same name.

To get the actual result you can call .compute().

In [29]: %time ddf['name'].value_counts().compute()
CPU times: user 2.7 s, sys: 214 ms, total: 2.91 s
Wall time: 2.25 s
Out[29]: 
Laura      230906
Ingrid     230838
Kevin      230698
Dan        230621
Frank      230595
            ...  
Ray        229603
Xavier     229553
Charlie    229303
Bob        229211
Yvonne     228766
Name: name, Length: 26, dtype: int64

At that point, you get back the same thing you’d get with pandas, in this case a concrete pandas Series with the count of each name.

Calling .compute causes the full task graph to be executed. This includes reading the data, selecting the columns, and doing the value_counts. The execution is done in parallel where possible, and Dask tries to keep the overall memory footprint small. You can work with datasets that are much larger than memory, as long as each partition (a regular pandas DataFrame) fits in memory.

By default, dask.dataframe operations use a threadpool to do operations in parallel. We can also connect to a cluster to distribute the work on many machines. In this case we’ll connect to a local “cluster” made up of several processes on this single machine.

>>> from dask.distributed import Client, LocalCluster

>>> cluster = LocalCluster()
>>> client = Client(cluster)
>>> client
<Client: 'tcp://127.0.0.1:53349' processes=4 threads=8, memory=17.18 GB>

Once this client is created, all of Dask’s computation will take place on the cluster (which is just processes in this case).

Dask implements the most used parts of the pandas API. For example, we can do a familiar groupby aggregation.

In [30]: %time ddf.groupby('name')[['x', 'y']].mean().compute().head()
CPU times: user 3.42 s, sys: 959 ms, total: 4.38 s
Wall time: 1.96 s
Out[30]: 
                x         y
name                       
Alice    0.000086 -0.001170
Bob     -0.000843 -0.000799
Charlie  0.000564 -0.000038
Dan      0.000584  0.000818
Edith   -0.000116 -0.000044

The grouping and aggregation is done out-of-core and in parallel.

When Dask knows the divisions of a dataset, certain optimizations are possible. When reading parquet datasets written by dask, the divisions will be known automatically. In this case, since we created the parquet files manually, we need to supply the divisions manually.

In [31]: N = 12

In [32]: starts = [f'20{i:>02d}-01-01' for i in range(N)]

In [33]: ends = [f'20{i:>02d}-12-13' for i in range(N)]

In [34]: divisions = tuple(pd.to_datetime(starts)) + (pd.Timestamp(ends[-1]),)

In [35]: ddf.divisions = divisions

In [36]: ddf
Out[36]: 
Dask DataFrame Structure:
                   id    name        x        y
npartitions=12                                 
2000-01-01      int64  object  float64  float64
2001-01-01        ...     ...      ...      ...
...               ...     ...      ...      ...
2011-01-01        ...     ...      ...      ...
2011-12-13        ...     ...      ...      ...
Dask Name: read-parquet, 12 tasks

Now we can do things like fast random access with .loc.

In [37]: ddf.loc['2002-01-01 12:01':'2002-01-01 12:05'].compute()
Out[37]: 
                       id    name         x         y
timestamp                                            
2002-01-01 12:01:00   983   Laura  0.243985 -0.079392
2002-01-01 12:02:00  1001   Laura -0.523119 -0.226026
2002-01-01 12:03:00  1059  Oliver  0.612886  0.405680
2002-01-01 12:04:00   993   Kevin  0.451977  0.332947
2002-01-01 12:05:00  1014  Yvonne -0.948681  0.361748

Dask knows to just look in the 3rd partition for selecting values in 2002. It doesn’t need to look at any other data.

Many workflows involve a large amount of data and processing it in a way that reduces the size to something that fits in memory. In this case, we’ll resample to daily frequency and take the mean. Once we’ve taken the mean, we know the results will fit in memory, so we can safely call compute without running out of memory. At that point it’s just a regular pandas object.

In [38]: ddf[['x', 'y']].resample("1D").mean().cumsum().compute().plot()
Out[38]: <matplotlib.axes._subplots.AxesSubplot at 0x7f03739c20d0>
../_images/dask_resample.png

These Dask examples have all be done using multiple processes on a single machine. Dask can be deployed on a cluster to scale up to even larger datasets.

You see more dask examples at https://examples.dask.org.