Execution Mode

Execution Mode #

The Python API supports different runtime execution modes from which you can choose depending on the requirements of your use case and the characteristics of your job. The Python runtime execution mode defines how the Python user-defined functions will be executed.

Prior to release-1.15, there is the only execution mode called PROCESS execution mode. The PROCESS mode means that the Python user-defined functions will be executed in separate Python processes.

In release-1.15, it has introduced a new execution mode called THREAD execution mode. The THREAD mode means that the Python user-defined functions will be executed in JVM.

NOTE: Multiple Python user-defined functions running in the same JVM are still affected by GIL.

When can/should I use THREAD execution mode? #

The purpose of the introduction of THREAD mode is to overcome the overhead of serialization/deserialization and network communication introduced of inter-process communication in the PROCESS mode. So if performance is not your concern, or the computing logic of your Python user-defined functions is the performance bottleneck of the job, PROCESS mode will be the best choice as PROCESS mode provides the best isolation compared to THREAD mode.

Configuring Python execution mode #

The execution mode can be configured via the python.execution-mode setting. There are two possible values:

  • PROCESS: The Python user-defined functions will be executed in separate Python process. (default)
  • THREAD: The Python user-defined functions will be executed in JVM.

You could specify the execution mode in Python Table API or Python DataStream API jobs as following:

## Python Table API
# Specify `PROCESS` mode
table_env.get_config().set("python.execution-mode", "process")

# Specify `THREAD` mode
table_env.get_config().set("python.execution-mode", "thread")


## Python DataStream API

config = Configuration()

# Specify `PROCESS` mode
config.set_string("python.execution-mode", "process")

# Specify `THREAD` mode
config.set_string("python.execution-mode", "thread")

# Create the corresponding StreamExecutionEnvironment
env = StreamExecutionEnvironment.get_execution_environment(config)

Supported Cases #

Python Table API #

The following table shows where the THREAD execution mode is supported in Python Table API.

UDFs PROCESS THREAD
Python UDF Yes Yes
Python UDTF Yes Yes
Python UDAF Yes No
Pandas UDF & Pandas UDAF Yes No

Python DataStream API #

The following table shows where the PROCESS execution mode and the THREAD execution mode are supported in Python DataStream API.

Operators PROCESS THREAD
Map Yes Yes
FlatMap Yes Yes
Filter Yes Yes
Reduce Yes Yes
Union Yes Yes
Connect Yes Yes
CoMap Yes Yes
CoFlatMap Yes Yes
Process Function Yes Yes
Window Apply Yes Yes
Window Aggregate Yes Yes
Window Reduce Yes Yes
Window Process Yes Yes
Side Output Yes Yes
State Yes Yes
Iterate No No
Window CoGroup No No
Window Join No No
Interval Join No No
Async I/O No No

Currently, it still doesn’t support to execute Python UDFs in THREAD execution mode in all places. It will fall back to PROCESS execution mode in these cases. So it may happen that you configure a job to execute in THREAD execution mode, however, it’s actually executed in PROCESS execution mode.
THREAD execution mode is only supported in Python 3.7+.

Execution Behavior #

This section provides an overview of the execution behavior of THREAD execution mode and contrasts they with PROCESS execution mode. For more details, please refer to the FLIP that introduced this feature: FLIP-206.

PROCESS Execution Mode #

In PROCESS execution mode, the Python user-defined functions will be executed in separate Python Worker process. The Java operator process communicates with the Python worker process using various Grpc services.

Process Execution Mode

THREAD Execution Mode #

In THREAD execution mode, the Python user-defined functions will be executed in the same process as Java operators. PyFlink takes use of third part library PEMJA to embed Python in Java Application.

Embedded Execution Mode