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doc: address reviewers comments
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@@ -344,11 +344,11 @@ which is the place to put configuration that you want to affect all of your user
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## External services
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JupyterHub has a REST API that can be used to run external services like the
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JupyterHub has a REST API that can be used by external services like the
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[cull_idle_servers](https://github.com/jupyterhub/jupyterhub/blob/master/examples/cull-idle/cull_idle_servers.py)
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script which monitors and kills idle single-user servers periodically. In order to run such an
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external service, you need to provide it an API token that - for the above example - is passed
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through an environment variable called `JPY_API_TOKEN`.
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external service, you need to provide it an API token. In the case of `cull_idle_servers`, it is passed
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as the environment variable called `JPY_API_TOKEN`.
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Currently there are two ways of registering that token with JupyterHub. The first on is to use
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the `jupyterhub` command to generate a token for a specific hub user:
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@@ -370,7 +370,7 @@ and then write it to your JupyterHub configuration file (note that the **key** i
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c.JupyterHub.api_tokens = {'token' : 'username'}
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```
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Upon restarting the daemon, you should see a message like below in the logs:
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Upon restarting JupyterHub, you should see a message like below in the logs:
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```
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Adding API token for <username>
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