Experiment for support of Starboard cells that are backed by a Jupyter kernel.
pip install jupyter_kernel_gateway
# For some reason we need
KG_ALLOW_METHODS="*" \
jupyter kernelgateway \
--KernelGatewayApp.allow_origin="https://gz.starboard.host" \
--KernelGatewayApp.allow_headers="authorization,content-type,x-xsrftoken" \
--KernelGatewayApp.max_age=3600 \\
--JupyterWebsocketPersonality.list_kernels=True
# or for a specific localhost port
KG_ALLOW_METHODS="*" \
jupyter kernelgateway \
--KernelGatewayApp.allow_origin="http://localhost:9001" \
--KernelGatewayApp.allow_headers="authorization,content-type,x-xsrftoken" \
--KernelGatewayApp.max_age=3600 \
--JupyterWebsocketPersonality.list_kernels=True
(change the origin to be the origin where you are hosting your notebook sandbox)
Note 1: right now auth with a token doesn't work for the websocket connection. The token simply doesn't get passed from the client, so for now there is no auth other than the origin check (and the fact that you can stay entirely within localhost). When that is fixed you should add
--KernelGatewayApp.auth_token="my-super-strong-secret-example"
Note 2: For some reason
--KernelGateWayApp.allow_methods="POST,GET,OPTIONS,DELETE"
does not work, so we use theKG_ALLOW_METHODS
env variable.
Note 3: It also works with a plain Jupyter Notebook or JupyterLab, but you will need to allow the origins and set the auth token with another method.
You can use this notebook (or without Starboard's interface around it here) to try it out.
// Or wherever you are hosting it, could be from some CDN.
import "http://localhost:8080/dist/starboard-jupyter.js";
registerJupyterPlugin({
serverSettings: {
baseUrl: "http://localhost:8888",
token: "my-super-strong-secret-example",
}
})
Who even needs Jupyter's interface anymore? ;)