Add an example binder

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Peter Parente
2018-12-29 16:21:56 -05:00
parent 17aba6048f
commit c07df9e69d
3 changed files with 17 additions and 13 deletions

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[![Google Group](https://img.shields.io/badge/-Google%20Group-lightgrey.svg)](https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/jupyter) [![Google Group badge](https://img.shields.io/badge/-Google%20Group-lightgrey.svg)](https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/jupyter)
![Read the Docs](https://img.shields.io/readthedocs/jupyter-docker-stacks.svg) [![Read the Docs badge](https://img.shields.io/readthedocs/jupyter-docker-stacks.svg)](https://jupyter-docker-stacks.readthedocs.io/en/latest/ "Documentation build status")
[![](https://images.microbadger.com/badges/version/jupyter/base-notebook.svg)](https://microbadger.com/images/jupyter/base-notebook "Get your own version badge on microbadger.com") [![DockerHub badge](https://images.microbadger.com/badges/version/jupyter/base-notebook.svg)](https://microbadger.com/images/jupyter/base-notebook "Recent tag/version of jupyter/base-notebook")
[![Binder badget](https://mybinder.org/badge_logo.svg)](https://mybinder.org/v2/gh/jupyter/docker-stacks/master "Launch a jupyter/base-notebook container on mybinder.org")
# Jupyter Docker Stacks # Jupyter Docker Stacks
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## Quick Start ## Quick Start
The two examples below may help you get started if you [have Docker installed](https://docs.docker.com/install/) know [which Docker image](http://jupyter-docker-stacks.readthedocs.io/en/latest/using/selecting.html) you want to use, and want to launch a single Jupyter Notebook server in a container. You can try a [recent build of the jupyter/base-notebook image on mybinder.org](https://mybinder.org/v2/gh/jupyter/docker-stacks/master) by simple clicking the preceding link. Otherwise, the two examples below may help you get started if you [have Docker installed](https://docs.docker.com/install/) know [which Docker image](http://jupyter-docker-stacks.readthedocs.io/en/latest/using/selecting.html) you want to use, and want to launch a single Jupyter Notebook server in a container.
The [User Guide on ReadTheDocs](http://jupyter-docker-stacks.readthedocs.io/) describes additional uses and features in detail. The [User Guide on ReadTheDocs](http://jupyter-docker-stacks.readthedocs.io/) describes additional uses and features in detail.
**Example 1:** This command pulls the `jupyter/scipy-notebook` image tagged `2c80cf3537ca` from Docker Hub if it is not already present on the local host. It then starts a container running a Jupyter Notebook server and exposes the server on host port 8888. The server logs appear in the terminal. Visiting `http://<hostname>:8888/?token=<token>` in a browser loads the Jupyter Notebook dashboard page, where `hostname` is the name of the computer running docker and `token` is the secret token printed in the console. The container remains intact for restart after the notebook server exits. **Example 1:** This command pulls the `jupyter/scipy-notebook` image tagged `17aba6048f44` from Docker Hub if it is not already present on the local host. It then starts a container running a Jupyter Notebook server and exposes the server on host port 8888. The server logs appear in the terminal. Visiting `http://<hostname>:8888/?token=<token>` in a browser loads the Jupyter Notebook dashboard page, where `hostname` is the name of the computer running docker and `token` is the secret token printed in the console. The container remains intact for restart after the notebook server exits.
docker run -p 8888:8888 jupyter/scipy-notebook:2c80cf3537ca docker run -p 8888:8888 jupyter/scipy-notebook:17aba6048f44
**Example 2:** This command pulls the `jupyter/datascience-notebook` image tagged `3772fffc4aa4` from Docker Hub if it is not already present on the local host. It then starts an *ephemeral* container running a Jupyter Notebook server and exposes the server on host port 10000. The command mounts the current working directory on the host as `/home/jovyan/work` in the container. The server logs appear in the terminal. Visiting `http://<hostname>:10000/?token=<token>` in a browser loads JupyterLab, where `hostname` is the name of the computer running docker and `token` is the secret token printed in the console. Docker destroys the container after notebook server exit, but any files written to `~/work` in the container remain intact on the host. **Example 2:** This command pulls the `jupyter/datascience-notebook` image tagged `9b06df75e445` from Docker Hub if it is not already present on the local host. It then starts an *ephemeral* container running a Jupyter Notebook server and exposes the server on host port 10000. The command mounts the current working directory on the host as `/home/jovyan/work` in the container. The server logs appear in the terminal. Visiting `http://<hostname>:10000/?token=<token>` in a browser loads JupyterLab, where `hostname` is the name of the computer running docker and `token` is the secret token printed in the console. Docker destroys the container after notebook server exit, but any files written to `~/work` in the container remain intact on the host.
docker run --rm -p 10000:8888 -e JUPYTER_ENABLE_LAB=yes -v "$PWD":/home/jovyan/work jupyter/datascience-notebook:3772fffc4aa4 docker run --rm -p 10000:8888 -e JUPYTER_ENABLE_LAB=yes -v "$PWD":/home/jovyan/work jupyter/datascience-notebook:9b06df75e445
## Contributing ## Contributing

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FROM jupyter/base-notebook:17aba6048f44

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Quick Start Quick Start
----------- -----------
The two examples below may help you get started if you `have Docker installed <https://docs.docker.com/install/>`_, know :doc:`which Docker image <using/selecting>` you want to use, and want to launch a single Jupyter Notebook server in a container. The other pages in this documentation describe additional uses and features in detail. You can try a `recent build of the jupyter/base-notebook image on mybinder.org <https://mybinder.org/v2/gh/jupyter/docker-stacks/master>`_ by simply clicking the preceding link. Otherwise, the two examples below may help you get started if you `have Docker installed <https://docs.docker.com/install/>`_, know :doc:`which Docker image <using/selecting>` you want to use, and want to launch a single Jupyter Notebook server in a container.
**Example 1:** This command pulls the ``jupyter/scipy-notebook`` image tagged ``2c80cf3537ca`` from Docker Hub if it is not already present on the local host. It then starts a container running a Jupyter Notebook server and exposes the server on host port 8888. The server logs appear in the terminal. Visiting ``http://<hostname>:8888/?token=<token>`` in a browser loads the Jupyter Notebook dashboard page, where ``hostname`` is the name of the computer running docker and ``token`` is the secret token printed in the console. The container remains intact for restart after the notebook server exits.:: The other pages in this documentation describe additional uses and features in detail.
docker run -p 8888:8888 jupyter/scipy-notebook:2c80cf3537ca **Example 1:** This command pulls the ``jupyter/scipy-notebook`` image tagged ``17aba6048f44`` from Docker Hub if it is not already present on the local host. It then starts a container running a Jupyter Notebook server and exposes the server on host port 8888. The server logs appear in the terminal. Visiting ``http://<hostname>:8888/?token=<token>`` in a browser loads the Jupyter Notebook dashboard page, where ``hostname`` is the name of the computer running docker and ``token`` is the secret token printed in the console. The container remains intact for restart after the notebook server exits.::
**Example 2:** This command pulls the ``jupyter/datascience-notebook`` image tagged ``e5c5a7d3e52d`` from Docker Hub if it is not already present on the local host. It then starts an *ephemeral* container running a Jupyter Notebook server and exposes the server on host port 10000. The command mounts the current working directory on the host as ``/home/jovyan/work`` in the container. The server logs appear in the terminal. Visiting ``http://<hostname>:10000/?token=<token>`` in a browser loads JupyterLab, where ``hostname`` is the name of the computer running docker and ``token`` is the secret token printed in the console. Docker destroys the container after notebook server exit, but any files written to ``~/work`` in the container remain intact on the host.:: docker run -p 8888:8888 jupyter/scipy-notebook:17aba6048f44
docker run --rm -p 10000:8888 -e JUPYTER_ENABLE_LAB=yes -v "$PWD":/home/jovyan/work jupyter/datascience-notebook:e5c5a7d3e52d **Example 2:** This command pulls the ``jupyter/datascience-notebook`` image tagged ``9b06df75e445`` from Docker Hub if it is not already present on the local host. It then starts an *ephemeral* container running a Jupyter Notebook server and exposes the server on host port 10000. The command mounts the current working directory on the host as ``/home/jovyan/work`` in the container. The server logs appear in the terminal. Visiting ``http://<hostname>:10000/?token=<token>`` in a browser loads JupyterLab, where ``hostname`` is the name of the computer running docker and ``token`` is the secret token printed in the console. Docker destroys the container after notebook server exit, but any files written to ``~/work`` in the container remain intact on the host.::
docker run --rm -p 10000:8888 -e JUPYTER_ENABLE_LAB=yes -v "$PWD":/home/jovyan/work jupyter/datascience-notebook:9b06df75e445
Table of Contents Table of Contents
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