Zingg
  • Welcome To Zingg
  • Step-By-Step Guide
    • Installation
      • Docker
        • Sharing Custom Data And Config Files
        • Shared Locations
        • File Read/Write Permissions
        • Copying Files To And From The Container
      • Installing From Release
        • Single Machine Setup
        • Spark Cluster Checklist
        • Installing Zingg
        • Verifying The Installation
      • Enterprise Installation for Snowflake
        • Setting up Zingg
        • Snowflake Properties
        • Match Configuration
        • Running Asynchronously
        • Verifying The Installation
      • Compiling From Source
    • Hardware Sizing
    • Zingg Runtime Properties
    • Zingg Command Line
    • Configuration
      • Configuring Through Environment Variables
      • Data Input And Output
        • Input Data
        • Output
      • Field Definitions
      • User Defined Mapping Match Types
      • Deterministic Matching
      • Pass Thru Data
      • Model Location
      • Tuning Label, Match And Link Jobs
      • Telemetry
    • Working With Training Data
      • Finding Records For Training Set Creation
      • Labeling Records
      • Find And Label
      • Using Pre-existing Training Data
      • Updating Labeled Pairs
      • Exporting Labeled Data
    • Verification of Blocking Model
    • Building And Saving The Model
    • Finding The Matches
    • Adding Incremental Data
    • Linking Across Datasets
    • Explanation of Models
    • Approval of Clusters
    • Combining Different Match Models
    • Model Difference
    • Persistent ZINGG ID
  • Data Sources and Sinks
    • Zingg Pipes
    • Databricks
    • Snowflake
    • JDBC
      • Postgres
      • MySQL
    • AWS S3
    • Cassandra
    • MongoDB
    • Neo4j
    • Parquet
    • BigQuery
    • Exasol
  • Working With Python
    • Python API
  • Running Zingg On Cloud
    • Running On AWS
    • Running On Azure
    • Running On Databricks
    • Running on Fabric
  • Zingg Models
    • Pre-Trained Models
  • Improving Accuracy
    • Ignoring Commonly Occuring Words While Matching
    • Defining Domain Specific Blocking And Similarity Functions
  • Documenting The Model
  • Interpreting Output Scores
  • Reporting Bugs And Contributing
    • Setting Up Zingg Development Environment
  • Community
  • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Reading Material
  • Security And Privacy
Powered by GitBook

@2021 Zingg Labs, Inc.

On this page

Was this helpful?

Edit on GitHub
  1. Step-By-Step Guide
  2. Installation
  3. Installing From Release

Single Machine Setup

For standalone local Spark without a cluster

Zingg can be easily run on a single machine to process up to a few million records.

To prepare your machine, please do the following steps:

A) Install the specified JDK version

B) Apache Spark - Download the specified version from spark.apache.org and unzip it in a folder under home

Please add the following entries to ~/.bash_aliases

export JAVA_HOME=path to jdk

export SPARK_HOME=path to location of Apache Spark

export SPARK_MASTER=local[*]

C) Correct entry of host under /etc/hosts

Run ifconfig to find the IP of the machine and make sure it is added to the /etc/hosts for localhost.

PreviousInstalling From ReleaseNextSpark Cluster Checklist

Last updated 5 months ago

Was this helpful?