On Thu, May 3, 2018 at 9:28 PM, William Stein wrote:
> On Thu, May 3, 2018 at 6:24 PM, kcrisman wrote:
> >
> >> The standard solution is Jupyterhub. That's a non-trivial undertaking to
> >> set up, though. The processes for the users run in dedicated docker
> >> containers. sagenb was a lot easi
On Thu, May 3, 2018 at 6:24 PM, kcrisman wrote:
>
>> The standard solution is Jupyterhub. That's a non-trivial undertaking to
>> set up, though. The processes for the users run in dedicated docker
>> containers. sagenb was a lot easier for this, but never properly secure. I
>> wouldn't dare asking
> The standard solution is Jupyterhub. That's a non-trivial undertaking to
> set up, though. The processes for the users run in dedicated docker
> containers. sagenb was a lot easier for this, but never properly secure. I
> wouldn't dare asking a sysadmin to deploy a sagenb server. Jupyterhub
Nope -- or at least, not for me. "jupyter notebook list" works fine, but
"jupyter notebook stop " returns an error indicating that the file stop
can not be found... Perhaps this feature has been dropped? This approach
also appears to be slow, presumably due to overhead when starting jupyt
On Thursday, May 3, 2018 at 2:32:22 PM UTC-7, Tevian Dray wrote:
>
> Finally had a chance to test this; yes it works -- although it is
> apparently possible to send the two kill commands too close together. Thank
> you very much. Have to say it's a bit of a kluge, though -- the design
> assumpt
Finally had a chance to test this; yes it works -- although it is
apparently possible to send the two kill commands too close together. Thank
you very much. Have to say it's a bit of a kluge, though -- the design
assumption that notebooks will always be started in shell windows that stay
open
On Thursday, May 3, 2018 at 7:14:32 AM UTC-7, Francisco de Arriba wrote:
>
> We can try to move into Jupyter. But we found two new problems, how can we
> do to start a Jupyter server for multiple users accounts (using a command
> line like in notebook(accounts=True))
>
The standard solution is J
We can try to move into Jupyter. But we found two new problems, how can we
do to start a Jupyter server for multiple users accounts (using a command
line like in notebook(accounts=True)) and how can we transform .sws to a
compatible extension in Jupyter?
El viernes, 27 de abril de 2018, 22:00:3