.. _kernel_install: Installing the IPython kernel ============================= .. seealso:: :ref:`Installing Jupyter ` The IPython kernel is the Python execution backend for Jupyter. The Jupyter Notebook and other frontends automatically ensure that the IPython kernel is available. However, if you want to use a kernel with a different version of Python, or in a virtualenv or conda environment, you'll need to install that manually. Kernels for Python 2 and 3 -------------------------- If you're running Jupyter on Python 3, you can set up a Python 2 kernel like this:: python2 -m pip install ipykernel python2 -m ipykernel install --user Or using conda, create a Python 2 environment:: conda create -n ipykernel_py2 python=2 ipykernel source activate ipykernel_py2 # On Windows, remove the word 'source' python -m ipykernel install --user If you're running Jupyter on Python 2 and want to set up a Python 3 kernel, follow the same steps, replacing ``2`` with ``3``. The last command installs a :ref:`kernel spec ` file for the current python installation. Kernel spec files are JSON files, which can be viewed and changed with a normal text editor. .. _multiple_kernel_install: Kernels for different environments ---------------------------------- If you want to have multiple IPython kernels for different virtualenvs or conda environments, you will need to specify unique names for the kernelspecs. For example, using conda environments: .. sourcecode:: bash source activate myenv python -m ipykernel install --user --name myenv --display-name "Python (myenv)" source activate other-env python -m ipykernel install --user --name other-env --display-name "Python (other-env)" The ``--name`` value is used by Jupyter internally. These commands will overwrite any existing kernel with the same name. ``--display-name`` is what you see in the notebook menus.