Opinionated stacks of ready-to-run Jupyter applications in Docker.
If you're familiar with Docker, have it configured, and know exactly what you'd like to run, this one-liner should work in most cases:
docker run -d -P jupyter/<your desired stack>
If this is your first time using Docker or any of the Jupyter projects, do the following to get started.
- Install Docker on your host of choice.
- Open the README in one of the folders in this git repository.
- Follow the README for that stack.
Here's a diagram of the FROM
relationships between all of the images defined in this project:
Starting with git commit SHA 9bd33dcc8688:
- Nearly every folder here on GitHub has an equivalent
jupyter/<stack name>
on Docker Hub (e.g., all-spark-notebook → jupyter/all-spark-notebook). - The
latest
tag in each Docker Hub repository tracks themaster
branchHEAD
reference on GitHub. - Any 12-character image tag on Docker Hub refers to a git commit SHA here on GitHub. See the Docker build history wiki page for a table of build details.
- Stack contents (e.g., new library versions) will be updated upon request via PRs against this project.
- Users looking to remain on older builds should refer to specific git SHA tagged images in their work, not
latest
. - For legacy reasons, there are two additional tags named
3.2
and4.0
on Docker Hub which point to images prior to our versioning scheme switch.
tini -- start-notebook.sh
is the default Docker entrypoint-plus-command in every notebook stack. If you plan to modify it in any way, be sure to check the Notebook Options section of your stack's README to understand the consequences.- Every notebook stack is compatible with JupyterHub 0.5 or higher. When running with JupyterHub, you must override the Docker run command to point to the start-singleuser.sh script, which starts a single-user instance of the Notebook server. See each stack's README for instructions on running with JupyterHub.
- Check the Docker recipes wiki page attached to this project for information about extending and deploying the Docker images defined here. Add to the wiki if you have relevant information.
- All stacks that derive from minimal-notebook have the conda jpeg package pinned to version 8 until jupyter#210 is resolved upstream.
For PRs that impact the definition of one or more stacks, do the following:
- Make sure Travis is green.
- Merge the PR.
ssh -i ~/.ssh/your-github-key [email protected]
- Run these commands on that VM.
# join the shared tmux session
tmux a
cd docker-stacks
# make sure we're always on clean master from github
git fetch origin
git reset --hard origin/master
# retry on failure up to 10 times with a (60 * iteration)
# second delay in-between
make retry/release-all
When make retry/release-all
successfully pushes the last of its images to Docker Hub (currently jupyter/all-spark-notebook
), Docker Hub invokes the webhook which updates the Docker build history wiki page.
When there's a security fix in the Debian base image, do the following in place of the last command:
Update the debian:jessie
SHA in the most-base images (e.g., base-notebook). Submit it as a regular PR and go through the build process.
This will take time as the entire set of stacks will rebuild.
When there's a new stack, do the following before trying to make retry/release-all
:
- Create a new repo in the
jupyter
org on Docker Hub named after the stack folder in the git repo. - Grant the
stacks
team permission to write to the repo. - Copy/paste the short and long descriptions from one of the other docker-stacks repos on Docker Hub. Modify the appropriate values.
When there's a new maintainer, do the following:
- Add the GitHub user to the Jupyter org, Docker image maintainers team.
- Get the GitHub user's public key from https://github.com/.keys.
ssh -i ~/.ssh/your-github-key [email protected]
- Add the user's public key to
~/.ssh/authorized_keys
with his/her GitHub username as the comment after the key.