The Jupyter Server provides the backend for Jupyter web applications such as the Jupyter notebook and JupyterLab.
jupyter_server is an early developer preview, and is not suitable for general usage yet. Features and implementation are subject to change. Please use the stable notebook server for production usecases.
Read more on the Jupyter Server roadmap.
You can find the installation documentation for the Jupyter platform, on ReadTheDocs. The documentation for advanced usage of Jupyter notebook can be found here.
To install the latest release locally, make sure you have pip installed and run:
$ pip install jupyter_server
If Jupyter Server is a dependency of your project/application, it is important that you pin it to a version that works for your application. Currently, Jupyter Server only has minor and patch versions. Different minor versions likely include API-changes while patch versions do not change API.
When a new minor version in released on PyPI, a branch for that version will be created in this repository, and the version of the master branch will be bumped to the next minor version number. That way, the master branch always reflects the latest un-released version.
To see the changes between releases, checkout the CHANGELOG.
To install the latest patch of a given version:
$ pip install jupyter_server>=0.2
Launch with:
$ jupyter server
You need some configuration before starting Jupyter server remotely. See Running a Jupyter server.
See CONTRIBUTING.rst
for how to set up a local development installation.
If you are interested in contributing to the project, see CONTRIBUTING.rst
.
We have videoconference meetings every week where we discuss what we have been working on and get feedback from one another.
Anyone is welcome to attend, if they would like to discuss a topic or just to listen in.
When: Thursdays 8:00am, Pacific time Where: calpoly/jupyter Zoom What: Meeting notes