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jupyterhub/docs/source/config-basics.md
2017-07-18 16:47:11 -07:00

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Configuration Basics

The getting started document contains general information about configuring a JupyterHub deployment and the configuration reference provides more comprehensive detail.

JupyterHub configuration

Configuration parameters may be set by:

  • a configuration file jupyterhub_config.py, or
  • as options from the command line.

Generate a default config file

On startup, JupyterHub will look by default for a configuration file named jupyterhub_config.py in the current working directory.

To generate a default config file jupyterhub_config.py:

jupyterhub --generate-config

This default jupyterhub_config.py file contains comments and guidance for all configuration variables and their default values.

Configure using command line options

To display all command line options that are available for configuration:

jupyterhub --help-all

Configuration using the command line options is done when launching JupyterHub. For example, to start JupyterHub on 10.0.1.2:443 with https, you would enter:

jupyterhub --ip 10.0.1.2 --port 443 --ssl-key my_ssl.key --ssl-cert my_ssl.cert

All configurable options are technically configurable on the command-line, even if some are really inconvenient to type. Just replace the desired option, c.Class.trait, with --Class.trait. For example, to configure the c.Spawner.notebook_dir trait from the command-line, use the --Spawner.notebook_dir option:

jupyterhub --Spawner.notebook_dir='~/assignments'

Load a specific config file

You can load a specific config file with:

jupyterhub -f /path/to/jupyterhub_config.py

See also: general docs on the config system Jupyter uses.

Configuration for different deployment environments

The default authentication and process spawning mechanisms can be replaced, which allows plugging into a variety of authentication methods or process control and deployment environments. Some examples, meant as illustration and testing of this concept, are: