9.9 KiB
Starting servers with the JupyterHub API
JupyterHub's REST API allows launching servers on behalf of users without ever interacting with the JupyterHub UI. This allows you to build services launching Jupyter-based services for users without relying on the JupyterHub UI at all, enabling a variety of user/launch/lifecycle patterns not natively supported by JupyterHub, without needing to develop all the server management features of JupyterHub Spawners and/or Authenticators. BinderHub is an example of such an application.
This document provides an example of working with the JupyterHub API to manage servers for users. In particular, we will cover how to:
- check status of servers
- start servers
- wait for servers to be ready
- communicate with servers
- stop servers
(checking)=
Checking server status
Requesting information about a user includes a servers
field,
which is a dictionary.
GET /hub/api/users/:username
Required scope: read:servers
{
"admin": false,
"groups": [],
"pending": null,
"server": null,
"name": "test-1",
"kind": "user",
"last_activity": "2021-08-03T18:12:46.026411Z",
"created": "2021-08-03T18:09:59.767600Z",
"roles": ["user"],
"servers": {}
}
If the servers
dict is empty, the user has no running servers.
The keys of the servers
dict are server names as strings.
Many JupyterHub deployments only use the 'default' server,
which has the empty string ''
for a name.
In this case, the servers dict will always have either zero or one elements.
This is the servers dict when the user's default server is fully running and ready:
"servers": {
"": {
"name": "",
"last_activity": "2021-08-03T18:48:35.934000Z",
"started": "2021-08-03T18:48:29.093885Z",
"pending": null,
"ready": true,
"url": "/user/test-1/",
"user_options": {},
"progress_url": "/hub/api/users/test-1/server/progress"
}
}
Key properties of a server:
- name
- the server's name. Always the same as the key in
servers
- ready
- boolean. If true, the server can be expected to respond to requests at
url
. - pending
null
or a string indicating a transitional state (such asstart
orstop
). Will always benull
ifready
is true, and will always be a string ifready
is false.- url
- The server's url (just the path, e.g.
/users/:name/:servername/
) where the server can be accessed ifready
is true. - progress_url
- The API url path (starting with
/hub/api
) where the progress API can be used to wait for the server to be ready. See below for more details on the progress API. - last_activity
- ISO8601 timestamp indicating when activity was last observed on the server
- started
- ISO801 timestamp indicating when the server was last started
We've seen the servers
model with no servers and with one ready
server.
Here is what it looks like immediately after requesting a server launch,
while the server is not ready yet:
"servers": {
"": {
"name": "",
"last_activity": "2021-08-03T18:48:29.093885Z",
"started": "2021-08-03T18:48:29.093885Z",
"pending": "spawn",
"ready": false,
"url": "/user/test-1/",
"user_options": {},
"progress_url": "/hub/api/users/test-1/server/progress"
}
}
Note that ready
is false and pending
is spawn
.
This means that the server is not ready
(attempting to access it may not work)
because it isn't finished spawning yet.
We'll get more into that below in waiting for a server.
(starting)=
Starting servers
To start a server, make the request
POST /hub/api/users/:username/servers/[:servername]
Required scope: servers
(omit servername for the default server)
Assuming the request was valid, there are two possible responses:
- 201 Created
- This status code means the launch completed and the server is ready. It should be available at the server's URL immediately.
- 202 Accepted
- This is the more likely response,
and means that the server has begun launching,
but isn't immediately ready.
The server has
pending: 'spawn'
at this point.
Aside: how quickly JupyterHub responds with 202 Accepted
is governed by the slow_spawn_timeout
tornado setting.
(waiting)=
Waiting for a server
If you are starting a server via the API, there's a good change you want to know when it's ready. There are two ways to do with:
- {ref}
Polling the server model <polling>
- the {ref}
progress API <progress>
(polling)=
Polling the server model
The simplest way to check if a server is ready is to request the user model.
If:
- the server name is in the user's
servers
model, and servers['servername']['ready']
is true
A Python example, checking if a server is ready:
def server_ready(hub_url, user, server_name="", token):
r = requests.get(
f"{hub_url}/hub/api/users/{user}/servers/{server_name}",
headers={"Authorization": f"token {token}"},
)
r.raise_for_status()
user_model = r.json()
servers = user_model.get("servers", {})
if server_name not in servers:
return False
server = servers[server_name]
if server['ready']:
print(f"Server {user}/{server_name} ready at {server['url']}")
return True
else:
print(f"Server {user}/{server_name} not ready, pending {server['pending']}")
return False
You can keep making this check until ready
is true.
(progress)=
Progress API
The most efficient way to wait for a server to start is the progress API.
The progress URL is available in the server model under progress_url
,
and has the form /hub/api/users/:user/servers/:servername/progress
.
the default server progress can be accessed at :user/servers//progress
or :user/server/progress
GET /hub/api/users/:user/servers/:servername/progress
Required scope: read:servers
This is an EventStream API. In an event stream, messages are streamed and delivered on lines of the form:
data: {"progress": 10, "message": "...", ...}
where the line after data:
contains a JSON-serialized dictionary.
Lines that do not start with data:
should be ignored.
progress events have the form:
{
"progress": 0-100,
"message": "",
"ready": True, # or False
}
- progress
- integer, 0-100
- message
- string message describing progress stages
- ready
- present and true only for the last event when the server is ready
- url
- only present if
ready
is true; will be the server's url
the progress API can be used even with fully ready servers. If the server is ready, there will only be one event that looks like:
{
"progress": 100,
"ready": true,
"message": "Server ready at /user/test-1/",
"html_message": "Server ready at <a href=\"/user/test-1/\">/user/test-1/</a>",
"url": "/user/test-1/"
}
where ready
and url
are the same as in the server model (ready
will always be true).
A typical complete stream from the event-stream API:
data: {"progress": 0, "message": "Server requested"}
data: {"progress": 50, "message": "Spawning server..."}
data: {"progress": 100, "ready": true, "message": "Server ready at /user/test-user/", "html_message": "Server ready at <a href=\"/user/test-user/\">/user/test-user/</a>", "url": "/user/test-user/"}
Here is a Python example for consuming an event stream:
:language: python
:pyobject: event_stream
(stopping)=
Stopping servers
Servers can be stopped with a DELETE request:
DELETE /hub/api/users/:user/servers/[:servername]
Required scope: servers
Like start, delete may not complete immediately. The DELETE request has two possible response codes:
- 204 Deleted
- This status code means the delete completed and the server is fully stopped.
It will now be absent from the user
servers
model. - 202 Accepted
- Like start,
202
means your request was accepted, but is not yet complete. The server haspending: 'stop'
at this point.
Unlike start, there is no progress API for stop.
To wait for stop to finish, you must poll the user model
and wait for the server to disappear from the user servers
model.
:language: python
:pyobject: stop_server
(communicating)=
Communicating with servers
JupyterHub tokens with the the access:servers
scope
can be used to communicate with servers themselves.
This can be the same token you used to launch your service.
Access scopes are new in JupyterHub 2.0.
To access servers in JupyterHub 1.x,
a token must be owned by the same user as the server,
*or* be an admin token if admin_access is enabled.
The URL returned from a server model is the url path suffix,
e.g. /user/:name/
to append to the jupyterhub base URL.
For instance, {hub_url}{server_url}
,
where hub_url
would be e.g. http://127.0.0.1:8000
by default,
and server_url
/user/myname
,
for a full url of http://127.0.0.1:8000/user/myname
.
Python example
The JupyterHub repo includes a complete example in {file}examples/server-api
tying all this together.
To summarize the steps:
- get user info from
/user/:name
- the server model includes a
ready
state to tell you if it's ready - if it's not ready, you can follow up with
progress_url
to wait for it - if it is ready, you can use the
url
field to link directly to the running server
The example demonstrates starting and stopping servers via the JupyterHub API, including waiting for them to start via the progress API, as well as waiting for them to stop via polling the user model.
:language: python
:start-at: def event_stream
:end-before: def main