You're right, Lucas. Copying the notebook folder as-is do the trick. I'm wondering now if there is a way to generate those unique ids to avoid copying the whole structure.
Or maybe I can consider that a limitation of the import feature I'm doing now. On Thu, Feb 1, 2018 at 10:15 AM, Partridge, Lucas (GE Aviation) < lucas.partri...@ge.com> wrote: > As far as I know all you have to do is copy the contents of the notebook > folder as-is into the same folder of the new Zeppelin instance. That’s what > I did when I moved from one Zeppelin version to another recently and it all > appears to work! I think Zeppelin just reads the contents of that folder > on startup. AFAIK no database is involved. I think it’s much simpler than > you think. > > > > Just give it a try and see if that works for you. I guess there may be > interpreter backward-compatibility issues if you try skipping too many > Zeppelin versions at once. I don’t know how that situation’s handled. > > > > *From:* Ricardo Martinelli de Oliveira [mailto:rmart...@redhat.com] > *Sent:* 01 February 2018 11:18 > *To:* users@zeppelin.apache.org > *Subject:* EXT: Re: Importing notes > > > > It doesn't matter where you store the notebooks (in a volume or directly > in the container), what I'm trying to achieve is copy my notebooks > somewhere that zeppelin could read and import all notebooks inside that > path without having to manually click on the "Import Notebook" link. > Imagine I have a folder with dozens of notebooks, it will be a painful task > import them one by one. > > I'm still doing research about this and if I findsomething I'll share with > you. > > > > On Wed, Jan 31, 2018 at 3:45 PM, Mohit Jaggi <mohitja...@gmail.com> wrote: > > I think the names are merely descriptions and are stored in the notebooks. > I think you can mount a volume in your container and store the notebooks on > that volume. > > > > On Wed, Jan 31, 2018 at 8:36 AM, Michael Segel <msegel_had...@hotmail.com> > wrote: > > If you look at the names of the notebooks, they appear to be Unique IDs > and not the name/label you provided when you created them. So there has to > be a link between the name of the notebook and the reference. Where is > that being stored? That’s what is missing. > > > > Just out of curiosity… would it be possible to store the notes in a > central repo outside of the container? > > > > > > On Jan 31, 2018, at 4:44 AM, Ricardo Martinelli de Oliveira < > rmart...@redhat.com> wrote: > > > > I did a quick research in the configuration and the code and the store > type is what defines the way the notes will be stored. The default is Git, > which means it will be stored in the notebook directory and can be > versioned using git. > > However, I see that VFS implementation is supported and by VFS I was > wondering if there is a mechanism that scans the notebook directory and > look for new notebooks. > > > > On Tue, Jan 30, 2018 at 10:43 PM, Michael Segel <msegel_had...@hotmail.com> > wrote: > > I don’t think you can… > > If you look in the ../notebook directory, the notes are all identified by > an unique id. > > My guess? That the references are stored within a database. (Derby? ) > > > > > On Jan 30, 2018, at 6:25 PM, Ricardo Martinelli de Oliveira < > rmart...@redhat.com> wrote: > > > > Hello, > > > > Is there a way to import notes from a command line? I am trying to write > a script that imports all my notes in a zeppelin docker container, but the > only ways to import is from the web UI or REST. In the script, zeppelin is > not started (there is no reason to be) so I'm trying to find a way to > import the note in a disconnected way. > > > > Any ideas to do this? > > > > > -- > > *Ricardo Martinelli de Oliveira* > Senior Software Engineer > T: +55 11 3524-6125 <+55%2011%203524-6126> | M: +55 11 9 7069-6531 > Av. Brigadeiro Faria Lima 3900, 8° Andar. São Paulo, Brasil > <https://maps.google.com/?q=Av.+Brigadeiro+Faria+Lima+3900,+8%C2%B0+Andar.+S%C3%A3o+Paulo,+Brasil&entry=gmail&source=g> > . > > <https://red.ht/sig> > > *TRIED. TESTED. TRUSTED.* <https://redhat.com/trusted> > > Red Hat é reconhecida entre as melhores empresas para trabalhar no Brasil > pelo *Great Place to Work*. > > > > > > > > > -- > > *Ricardo Martinelli de Oliveira* > Senior Software Engineer > T: +55 11 3524-6125 <+55%2011%203524-6126> | M: +55 11 9 7069-6531 > Av. Brigadeiro Faria Lima 3900, 8° Andar. São Paulo, Brasil > <https://maps.google.com/?q=Av.+Brigadeiro+Faria+Lima+3900,+8%C2%B0+Andar.+S%C3%A3o+Paulo,+Brasil&entry=gmail&source=g> > . > > <https://red.ht/sig> > > *TRIED. TESTED. TRUSTED.* <https://redhat.com/trusted> > > Red Hat é reconhecida entre as melhores empresas para trabalhar no Brasil > pelo *Great Place to Work*. > -- Ricardo Martinelli de Oliveira Senior Software Engineer T: +55 11 3524-6125 <+55%2011%203524-6126> | M: +55 11 9 7069-6531 Av. Brigadeiro Faria Lima 3900, 8° Andar. São Paulo, Brasil <https://maps.google.com/?q=Av.+Brigadeiro+Faria+Lima+3900,+8%C2%B0+Andar.+S%C3%A3o+Paulo,+Brasil&entry=gmail&source=g> . <https://red.ht/sig> TRIED. TESTED. TRUSTED. <https://redhat.com/trusted> Red Hat é reconhecida entre as melhores empresas para trabalhar no Brasil pelo *Great Place to Work*.