Configure Project UDFs Cache Settings
This page outlines the configuration for setting up project UDFs, which allow users to set their current project in Immuta through Spark. For details about the specific functions available and how to use them, see the Use Project UDFs (Databricks) page.
Use project UDFs in Databricks
Currently, caches are not all invalidated outside of Databricks because Immuta caches information pertaining to a user's current project. Consequently, this feature should only be used in Databricks.
Web Service and On-Cluster Caches
Immuta caches a mapping of user accounts and users' current projects in the Immuta Web Service and on-cluster. When users change their project with UDFs instead of the Immuta UI, Immuta invalidates all the caches on-cluster (so that everything changes immediately) and the cluster submits a request to change the project context to a web worker. Immediately after that request, another call is made to a web worker to refresh the current project.
To allow use of project UDFs in Spark jobs, raise the caching on-cluster and lower the cache timeouts for the Immuta Web Service. Otherwise, caching could cause dissonance among the requests and calls to multiple web workers when users try to change their project contexts.
Recommended Configuration
1 - Lower Web Service Cache Timeout
Click the App Settings icon in the left sidebar and scroll to the HDFS Cache Settings section.
Lower the Cache TTL of HDFS user names (ms) to 0.
Click Save.
2 - Raise Cache Timeout On-Cluster
In the Spark environment variables section, set the IMMUTA_CURRENT_PROJECT_CACHE_TIMEOUT_SECONDS
and IMMUTA_PROJECT_CACHE_TIMEOUT_SECONDS
to high values (like 10000
).
Note: These caches will be invalidated on cluster when a user calls immuta.set_current_project
, so they can effectively be cached permanently on cluster to avoid periodically reaching out to the web service.
Blocking UDFs
If your compliance requirements restrict users from changing projects within a session, you can block the use of Immuta's project UDFs on a Databricks Spark cluster. To do so, configure the immuta.spark.databricks.disabled.udfs
option as described on the Databricks environment variables page.
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