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1 | ========================== | |
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2 | Making kernels for IPython | |
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3 | ========================== | |
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4 | ||
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5 | A 'kernel' is a program that runs and introspects the user's code. IPython | |
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6 | includes a kernel for Python code, and people have written kernels for | |
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7 | `several other languages <https://github.com/ipython/ipython/wiki/Projects-using-IPython#list-of-some-ipython-compatible-kernels>`_. | |
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8 | ||
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9 | When IPython starts a kernel, it passes it a connection file. This specifies | |
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10 | how to set up communications with the frontend. | |
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11 | ||
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12 | There are two options for writing a kernel: | |
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13 | ||
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14 | 1. You can reuse the IPython kernel machinery to handle the communications, and | |
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15 | just describe how to execute your code. This is much simpler if the target | |
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16 | language can be driven from Python. See :doc:`wrapperkernels` for details. | |
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17 | 2. You can implement the kernel machinery in your target language. This is more | |
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18 | work initially, but the people using your kernel might be more likely to | |
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19 | contribute to it if it's in the language they know. | |
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20 | ||
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21 | Connection files | |
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22 | ================ | |
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23 | ||
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24 | Your kernel will be given the path to a connection file when it starts (see | |
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25 | :ref:`kernelspecs` for how to specify the command line arguments for your kernel). | |
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26 | This file, which is accessible only to the current user, will contain a JSON | |
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27 | dictionary looking something like this:: | |
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28 | ||
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29 | { | |
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30 | "control_port": 50160, | |
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31 | "shell_port": 57503, | |
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32 | "transport": "tcp", | |
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33 | "signature_scheme": "hmac-sha256", | |
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34 | "stdin_port": 52597, | |
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35 | "hb_port": 42540, | |
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36 | "ip": "127.0.0.1", | |
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37 | "iopub_port": 40885, | |
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38 | "key": "a0436f6c-1916-498b-8eb9-e81ab9368e84" | |
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39 | } | |
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40 | ||
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41 | The ``transport``, ``ip`` and five ``_port`` fields specify five ports which the | |
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42 | kernel should bind to using `ZeroMQ <http://zeromq.org/>`_. For instance, the | |
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43 | address of the shell socket in the example above would be:: | |
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44 | ||
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45 | tcp://127.0.0.1:57503 | |
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46 | ||
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47 | New ports are chosen at random for each kernel started. | |
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48 | ||
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49 | ``signature_scheme`` and ``key`` are used to cryptographically sign messages, so | |
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50 | that other users on the system can't send code to run in this kernel. See | |
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51 | :ref:`wire_protocol` for the details of how this signature is calculated. | |
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52 | ||
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53 | Handling messages | |
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54 | ================= | |
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55 | ||
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56 | After reading the connection file and binding to the necessary sockets, the | |
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57 | kernel should go into an event loop, listening on the hb (heartbeat), control | |
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58 | and shell sockets. | |
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59 | ||
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60 | :ref:`Heartbeat <kernel_heartbeat>` messages should be echoed back immediately | |
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61 | on the same socket - the frontend uses this to check that the kernel is still | |
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62 | alive. | |
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63 | ||
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64 | Messages on the control and shell sockets should be parsed, and their signature | |
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65 | validated. See :ref:`wire_protocol` for how to do this. | |
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66 | ||
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67 | The kernel will send messages on the iopub socket to display output, and on the | |
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68 | stdin socket to prompt the user for textual input. | |
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69 | ||
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70 | .. seealso:: | |
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71 | ||
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72 | :doc:`messaging` | |
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73 | Details of the different sockets and the messages that come over them. | |
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74 | ||
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75 | ||
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76 | .. _kernelspecs: | |
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77 | ||
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78 | Kernel specs | |
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79 | ============ | |
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80 | ||
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81 | A kernel identifies itself to IPython by creating a directory, the name of which | |
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82 | is used as an identifier for the kernel. These may be created in a number of | |
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83 | locations: | |
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84 | ||
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85 | +--------+--------------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | |
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86 | | | Unix | Windows | | |
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87 | +========+======================================+===================================+ | |
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88 | | System | ``/usr/share/ipython/kernels`` | ``%PROGRAMDATA%\ipython\kernels`` | | |
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89 | | | | | | |
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90 | | | ``/usr/local/share/ipython/kernels`` | | | |
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91 | +--------+--------------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | |
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92 | | User | ``~/.ipython/kernels`` | | |
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93 | +--------+--------------------------------------+-----------------------------------+ | |
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94 | ||
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95 | The user location takes priority over the system locations, and the case of the | |
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96 | names is ignored, so selecting kernels works the same way whether or not the | |
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97 | filesystem is case sensitive. | |
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98 | ||
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99 | Inside the directory, the most important file is *kernel.json*. This should be a | |
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100 | JSON serialised dictionary containing the following keys and values: | |
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101 | ||
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102 | - **argv**: A list of command line arguments used to start the kernel. The text | |
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103 | ``{connection_file}`` in any argument will be replaced with the path to the | |
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104 | connection file. | |
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105 | - **display_name**: The kernel's name as it should be displayed in the UI. | |
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106 | Unlike the kernel name used in the API, this can contain arbitrary unicode | |
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107 | characters. | |
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108 | - **language**: The programming language which this kernel runs. This will be | |
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109 | stored in notebook metadata. This may be used by syntax highlighters to guess | |
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110 | how to parse code in a notebook, and frontends may eventually use it to | |
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111 | identify alternative kernels that can run some code. | |
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112 | - **codemirror_mode** (optional): The `codemirror mode <http://codemirror.net/mode/index.html>`_ | |
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113 | to use for code in this language. This can be a string or a dictionary, as | |
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114 | passed to codemirror config. The string from *language* will be used if this is | |
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115 | not provided. | |
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116 | - **env** (optional): A dictionary of environment variables to set for the kernel. | |
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117 | These will be added to the current environment variables before the kernel is | |
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118 | started. | |
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119 | - **help_links** (optional): A list of dictionaries, each with keys 'text' and | |
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120 | 'url'. These will be displayed in the help menu in the notebook UI. | |
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121 | ||
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122 | For example, the kernel.json file for IPython looks like this:: | |
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123 | ||
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124 | { | |
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125 | "argv": ["python3", "-c", "from IPython.kernel.zmq.kernelapp import main; main()", | |
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126 | "-f", "{connection_file}"], | |
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127 | "codemirror_mode": { | |
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128 | "version": 3, | |
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129 | "name": "ipython" | |
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130 | }, | |
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131 | "display_name": "IPython (Python 3)", | |
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132 | "language": "python" | |
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133 | } | |
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134 | ||
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135 | To see the available kernel specs, run:: | |
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136 | ||
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137 | ipython kernelspec list | |
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138 | ||
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139 | To start the terminal console or the Qt console with a specific kernel:: | |
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140 | ||
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141 | ipython console --kernel bash | |
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142 | ipython qtconsole --kernel bash | |
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143 | ||
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144 | To use different kernels in the notebook, select a different kernel from the | |
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145 | dropdown menu in the top-right of the UI. |
@@ -26,7 +26,7 b' within and between hosts.' | |||
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26 | 26 | IPython messaging protocol, and all developers are strongly encouraged to |
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27 | 27 | keep it updated as the implementation evolves, so that we have a single |
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28 | 28 | common reference for all protocol details. |
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29 | ||
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29 | ||
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30 | 30 | The basic design is explained in the following diagram: |
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31 | 31 | |
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32 | 32 | .. image:: figs/frontend-kernel.png |
@@ -126,6 +126,8 b' A message is defined by the following four-dictionary structure::' | |||
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126 | 126 | |
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127 | 127 | ``version`` key added to the header. |
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128 | 128 | |
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129 | .. _wire_protocol: | |
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130 | ||
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129 | 131 | The Wire Protocol |
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130 | 132 | ================= |
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131 | 133 | |
@@ -971,6 +973,7 b' When ``password`` is True, the frontend should not echo the input as it is enter' | |||
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971 | 973 | transported over the zmq connection), raw ``stdin`` isn't expected to be |
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972 | 974 | available. |
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973 | 975 | |
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976 | .. _kernel_heartbeat: | |
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974 | 977 | |
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975 | 978 | Heartbeat for kernels |
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976 | 979 | ===================== |
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