Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
69 lines (48 loc) · 2.12 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

69 lines (48 loc) · 2.12 KB

heroku-jupyter

Use this application to deploy Jupyter Notebook to heroku or CloudFoundry. If a postgres database is available, pgcontents is used as notebook storage.

2017-05-09: Due to changes in the ContentsManager interface, the notebook store does not work properly. Saving documents is broken.

Quick start

Jupyter will not start, if the environment variable JUPYTER_NOTEBOOK_PASSWORD was not set.

If you want to customize your app, easiest is to fork this repository.

Installation instructions

heroku - automatic deployment

Deploy

If you forked this repository, you can link it to your heroku app afterwards.

heroku - manual deployment

Push this repository to your app or fork this repository on github and link your repository to your heroku app.

Use the heroku-buildpack-conda:

$ heroku buildpacks:set https://github.com/pl31/heroku-buildpack-conda.git -a <your_app>

Jupyter notebook will not start until the environment variable JUPYTER_NOTEBOOK_PASSWORD is set. Use a good password:

$ heroku config:set JUPYTER_NOTEBOOK_PASSWORD=<your_passwd> -a <your_app>

If you are really sure, that you do not want a password protected notebook server, you can set JUPYTER_NOTEBOOK_PASSWORD_DISABLED to DangerZone!.

CloudFoundry

  • Clone this repository
  • Create a postgres database service with name jupyter-db
  • Deploy using cf push
  • Set JUPYTER_NOTEBOOK_PASSWORD using cf set-env. Do not forget to restart application.

Environment variables

  • JUPYTER_NOTEBOOK_PASSWORD: Set password for notebooks
  • JUPYTER_NOTEBOOK_PASSWORD_DISABLED: Set to DangerZone! to disable password protection
  • JUPYTER_NOTEBOOK_ARGS: Additional command line args passed to jupyter notebook; e.g. get a more verbose logging using --debug

Python version

If you want to use a special python version, you should set it in your environment.yml:

name: root
dependencies:
  - python=2.7
  - ...