Hi Sourav, A little help with more clarification on your last comment.
In sense of "where" the driver program is executed, then yes the Flink driver program runs in a mode similar to Spark's YARN-client. However, the "role" of the driver program and the work that it is responsible of is quite different between Flink and Spark. In Spark, the driver program is in charge of coordinating Spark workers (executors) and must listen for and accept incoming connections from the workers throughout the job's lifetime. Therefore, in Spark's YARN-client mode, you must keep the driver program process alive otherwise the job will be shutdown. However, in Flink, the coordination of Flink TaskManagers to complete a job is handled by Flink's JobManager once the client at the driver program submits the job to the JobManager. The driver program is solely used for the job submission and can disconnect afterwards. Like what Stephan explained, if the user-defined dataflow defines any intermediate results to be retrieved via collect() or print(), the results are transmitted through the JobManager. Only then does the driver program need to stay connected. Note that this connection still does not need to have any connections with the workers (Flink TaskManagers), only the JobManager. Cheers, Gordon -- View this message in context: http://apache-flink-user-mailing-list-archive.2336050.n4.nabble.com/Flink-with-Yarn-tp4224p4227.html Sent from the Apache Flink User Mailing List archive. mailing list archive at Nabble.com.