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178 lines
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178 lines
6.2 KiB
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.. _tutorial_quickstart_digitalocean:
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Tutorial: JupyterHub on Digital Ocean
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========================================
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Goal
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----
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By the end of this tutorial, you should have a JupyterHub with some admin
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users and a user environment with packages you want installed running on
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`DigitalOcean <https://digitalocean.com>`_.
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Pre-requisites
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--------------
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#. A DigitalOcean account with a payment method attached.
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#. Some familiarity with the command line.
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Step 1: Installing The Littlest JupyterHub
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------------------------------------------
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Let's create the server on which we can run JupyterHub.
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#. Log in to `DigitalOcean <https://digitalocean.com>`_. You might need to
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attach a credit card or other payment method to your account before you
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can proceed with the tutorial.
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#. Click the **Create** button on the top right, and select **Droplets** from
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the dropdown menu. DigitalOcean calls servers **droplets**.
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.. image:: images/digitalocean/create-menu.png
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:alt: Dropdown menu on clicking 'create' in top right corner
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This takes you to a page titled **Create Droplets** that lets you configure
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your server.
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#. Under **Choose an image**, select **18.04 x64** under **Ubuntu**.
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.. image:: images/digitalocean/select-image.png
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:alt: Select 18.04 x64 image under Ubuntu
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#. Under **Choose a size**, select the size of the server you want. The default
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(4GB RAM, 2CPUs, 20 USD / month) is not a bad start. You can resize your server
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later if you need.
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#. Scroll down to **Select additional options**, and select **User data**.
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.. image:: images/digitalocean/additional-options.png
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:alt: Turn on User Data in additional options
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This opens up a textbox where you can enter a script that will be run
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when the server is created. We will use this to set up The Littlest JupyterHub
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on this server.
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#. Copy the text below, and paste it into the user data text box. Replace
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``<admin-user-name>`` with the name of the first **admin user** for this
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JupyterHub. This admin user can log in after the JupyterHub is set up, and
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can configure it to their needs. Remember the username!
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.. code-block:: bash
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#!/bin/bash
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curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/yuvipanda/the-littlest-jupyterhub/master/bootstrap/bootstrap.py \
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| sudo python3 - \
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--admin <admin-user-name>
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#. Under the **Finalize and create** section, enter a ``hostname`` that descriptively
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identifies this server for you.
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.. image:: images/digitalocean/hostname.png
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:alt: Select suitable hostname for your server
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#. Click the **Create** button! You will be taken to a different screen,
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where you can see progress of your server being created.
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.. image:: images/digitalocean/server-create-wait.png
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:alt: Server being created
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#. In a few seconds your server will be created, and you can see the **public IP**
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used to access it.
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.. image:: images/digitalocean/server-create-done.png
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:alt: Server finished creating, public IP available
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#. The Littlest JupyterHub is now installing in the background on your new server.
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It takes around 5-10 minutes for this installation to complete.
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#. Check if the installation is complete by copying the **public ip**
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of your server, and trying to access it with a browser. This will fail until
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the installation is complete, so be patient.
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#. When the installation is complete, it should give you a JupyterHub login page.
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.. image:: images/first-login.png
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:alt: JupyterHub log-in page
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#. Login using the **admin user name** you used in step 6, and a password. Use a
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strong password & note it down somewhere, since this will be the password for
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the admin user account from now on.
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#. Congratulations, you have a running working JupyterHub!
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Step 2: Addding more users
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--------------------------
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Most administration & configuration of the JupyterHub can be done from the
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web UI directly. Let's add a few users who can log in!
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#. Open the **Control Panel** by clicking the control panel button on the top
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right of your JupyterHub.
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.. image:: ../images/control-panel-button.png
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:alt: Control panel button in notebook, top right
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#. In the control panel, open the **Admin** link in the top left.
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.. image:: ../images/admin-button.png
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:alt: Admin button in control panel, top left
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This opens up the JupyterHub admin page, where you can add / delete users,
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start / stop peoples' servers and see who is online.
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#. Click the **Add Users** button.
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.. image:: ../images/admin/add-users-button.png
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:alt: Add Users button in the admin page
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A **Add Users** dialog box opens up.
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#. Type the names of users you want to add to this JupyterHub in the dialog box,
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one per line.
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.. image:: ../images/admin/add-users-dialog.png
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:alt: Adding users with add users dialog
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You can tick the **Admin** checkbox if you want to give admin rights to all
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these users too.
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#. Click the **Add Users** button in the dialog box. Your users are now added
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to the JupyterHub! When they log in for the first time, they can set their
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password - and use it to log in again in the future.
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Congratulations, you now have a multi user JupyterHub that you can add arbitrary
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users to!
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Step 3: Install conda / pip packages for all users
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--------------------------------------------------
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The **User Environment** is a conda environment that is shared by all users
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in the JupyterHub. Libraries installed in this environment are immediately
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available to all users. Admin users can install packages in this environment
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with ``sudo -E``.
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#. Log in as an admin user and open a Terminal in your Jupyter Notebook.
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.. image:: ../images/new_terminal_button.png
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:alt: New Terminal button under New menu
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#. Install `gdal <https://anaconda.org/conda-forge/gdal>`_ from `conda-forge <https://conda-forge.org/>`_.
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.. code-block:: bash
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sudo -E conda install -c conda-forge gdal
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The ``sudo -E`` is very important!
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#. Install ``there`` with ``pip``
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.. code-block:: bash
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sudo -E pip install there
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The packages ``gdal`` and ``there`` are now available to all users in JupyterHub.
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If a user already had a python notebook running, they have to restart their notebook's
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kernel to make the new libraries available.
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See :ref:`user_environment` for more information.
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