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Jupyter Docker Stacks

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Jupyter Docker Stacks are a set of ready-to-run Docker images containing Jupyter applications and interactive computing tools. You can use a stack image to do any of the following (and more):

  • Start a personal Jupyter Server with the JupyterLab frontend (default)
  • Run JupyterLab for a team using JupyterHub
  • Start a personal Jupyter Notebook server in a local Docker container
  • Write your own project Dockerfile

Quick Start

You can try a relatively recent build of the jupyter/base-notebook image on mybinder.org by simply clicking the preceding link. Otherwise, the examples below may help you get started if you have Docker installed, know which Docker image you want to use and want to launch a single Jupyter Server in a container.

The User Guide on ReadTheDocs describes additional uses and features in detail.

Example 1:

This command pulls the jupyter/scipy-notebook image tagged 2023-02-28 from Docker Hub if it is not already present on the local host. It then starts a container running a Jupyter Server and exposes the container's internal port 8888 to port 10000 of the host machine:

docker run -p 10000:8888 jupyter/scipy-notebook:2023-02-28

You can modify the port on which the container's port is exposed by changing the value of the -p option to -p 8888:8888.

Visiting http://<hostname>:10000/?token=<token> in a browser loads JupyterLab, where:

  • hostname is the name of the computer running Docker
  • token is the secret token printed in the console.

The container remains intact for restart after the Jupyter Server exits.

Example 2:

This command pulls the jupyter/datascience-notebook image tagged 2023-02-28 from Docker Hub if it is not already present on the local host. It then starts an ephemeral container running a Jupyter Server and exposes the server on host port 10000.

docker run -it --rm -p 10000:8888 -v "${PWD}":/home/jovyan/work jupyter/datascience-notebook:2023-02-28

The use of the -v flag in the command mounts the current working directory on the host (${PWD} in the example command) as /home/jovyan/work in the container. The server logs appear in the terminal.

Visiting http://<hostname>:10000/?token=<token> in a browser loads JupyterLab.

Due to the usage of the flag --rm Docker automatically cleans up the container and removes the file system when the container exits, but any changes made to the ~/work directory and its files in the container will remain intact on the host. The -it flag allocates pseudo-TTY.

Contributing

Please see the Contributor Guide on ReadTheDocs for information about how to contribute package updates, recipes, features, tests, and community maintained stacks.

Maintainer Help Wanted

We value all positive contributions to the Docker stacks project, from bug reports to pull requests to help with answering questions. We'd also like to invite members of the community to help with two maintainer activities:

  • Issue triaging: Reading and providing a first response to issues, labeling issues appropriately, redirecting cross-project questions to Jupyter Discourse
  • Pull request reviews: Reading proposed documentation and code changes, working with the submitter to improve the contribution, deciding if the contribution should take another form (e.g., a recipe instead of a permanent change to the images)

Anyone in the community can jump in and help with these activities anytime. We will happily grant additional permissions (e.g., the ability to merge PRs) to anyone who shows an ongoing interest in working on the project.

Jupyter Notebook Deprecation Notice

Following Jupyter Notebook notice, JupyterLab is now the default for all the Jupyter Docker stack images. It is still possible to switch back to Jupyter Notebook (or to launch a different startup command). You can achieve this by passing the environment variable DOCKER_STACKS_JUPYTER_CMD=notebook (or any other valid jupyter subcommand) at container startup; more information is available in the documentation.

According to the Jupyter Notebook project status and its compatibility with JupyterLab, these Docker images may remove the classic Jupyter Notebook interface altogether in favor of another classic-like UI built atop JupyterLab.

This change is tracked in the issue #1217; please check its content for more information.

Alternatives

Resources

CPU Architectures

  • We publish containers for both x86_64 and aarch64 platforms, except for tensorflow-notebook, which only supports x86_64 for now
  • Single-platform images have either aarch64 or x86_64 tag prefixes, for example, jupyter/base-notebook:aarch64-python-3.10.5
  • Starting from 2022-09-21, we create multi-platform images

Using old images

This project only builds one set of images at a time. On 2022-10-09, we rebuilt images with old Ubuntu and python versions for users who still need them:

Ubuntu Python Tag
20.04 3.7 1aac87eb7fa5
20.04 3.8 a374cab4fcb6
20.04 3.9 5ae537728c69
20.04 3.10 f3079808ca8c
22.04 3.7 b86753318aa1
22.04 3.8 7285848c0a11
22.04 3.9 ed2908bbb62e
22.04 3.10 latest (this image is rebuilt weekly)

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Ready-to-run Docker images containing Jupyter applications

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  • Python 65.5%
  • Dockerfile 15.4%
  • Shell 10.9%
  • Jupyter Notebook 5.1%
  • Makefile 3.1%