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enchannel-notebook-backend
Advanced tools
Enchannel backend for connecting to a Jupyter/notebook server
:notebook: An enchannel backend that lets you connect to a Jupyter notebook server.
npm install enchannel-notebook-backend
Enchannel-notebook-backend provides an API for spawning, disconnecting, and shutting down remote kernels in addition to implementing the enchannel spec. A typical use would be to spawn a kernel, connect to the kernel and communicate using enchannel and Jupyter message specs, disconnect from the kernel, and optionally shut it down.
The act of connecting and disconnecting is deliberately separate to the act of spawning and shutting down a kernel. This allows one to spawn a kernel, start some compute on it, disconnect and reconnect at a later time, and shutdown the kernel when appropriate.
To use the enchannel-notebook-backend, you must have access to a running Jupyter notebook server. This library requires the Jupyter notebook server to be launched with an explicit origin. If you want to listen to all connections, launch the notebook server like so:
python -m notebook --NotebookApp.allow_origin="*"
The connectionOptions object is used in almost every method described below.
It's analogous to the endpoint
used in
enchannel-socketio-backend.
A connectionOptions object looks like the following:
const connectionOptions = {
baseUrl: 'http://localhost:8888',
wsUrl: 'ws://localhost:8888',
};
Where baseUrl
is the base URL of the notebook server
and wsUrl
is the websocket URL of the notebook server.
Spawns a remote kernel by name. Takes two arguments:
Returns a promise with the kernel id, string.
spawn(connectionOptions, kernelName)
Usage example
const enchannelBackend = require('enchannel-notebook-backend');
enchannelBackend.spawn(connectionOptions, 'python3').then(id => {
console.log('spawned', id);
}).catch(err => {
console.error('Could not spawn the kernel', err);
});
Connects to a remote kernel by id. Accepts two arguments:
Returns a promise for an enchannel spec channels object
connect(connectionOptions, kernelId)
Usage example
enchannelBackend.connect(connectionOptions, id).then(channels => {
console.log('connected', channels);
}).catch(err => {
console.error('Could not connect to the kernel', err);
});
For API usage of the enchannel channels
object, refer to the enchannel spec README.
Shuts down a remote kernel by id. Accepts two arguments:
Returns a promise which resolves when the shutdown is complete.
shutdown(connectionOptions, kernelId)
Usage example
enchannelBackend.shutdown(connectionOptions, id).then(() => {
console.log('shutdown');
}).catch(err => {
console.error('Could not shutdown the kernel', err);
});
Disconnects from a kernel by closing the channels. Accepts one argument, the enchannel channels object.
Returns promise which resolves on success.
disconnect(channels)
Usage example
enchannelBackend.disconnect(channels).then(() => {
console.log('disconnected');
}).catch(err => {
console.error('Could not close the channels', err);
});
To develop against enchannel-notebook-backend, first clone the repo then from within the cloned folder run:
npm install
npm link
Before opening a pull request, please run the unit tests locally:
npm test
You can also verify that the code works by hand by opening the test.html
file
in your web browser and following the promps.
FAQs
Enchannel backend for connecting to a Jupyter/notebook server
The npm package enchannel-notebook-backend receives a total of 0 weekly downloads. As such, enchannel-notebook-backend popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that enchannel-notebook-backend demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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