Launch Jupyter notebook on AWS
Project description
This script launches a cluster on AWS EC2 instances and starts a Jupyter notebook on them.
Please read the manual for the details of all supported commands.
QuickStartGuide.md offers a guided example to show what aws-jupyter
can do.
aws-jupyter
is intended as a commandline tool, but you can integrate it to
a custom Python script. module-doc.md provides a brief how-to.
Install
Pleasure ensure you have Python 3. aws-jupyter
can be install using pip
:
pip install aws-jupyter
After the installation, you can try it out using the example launch script:
launch-aws-jupyter
It will create a cluster with 2 spot instances.
In addition,
we create the EC2 instances using an AMI image that located in the region us-west-2
.
So please make sure that your local environment is set up to use that region
(you can run aws-jupyter config
to verify the setting).
After installation, please run aws-jupyter config
to make sure the configuration is properly set.
Upgrade
In case we change the default AWS region, please upgrade aws-jupyter
in 3 steps:
- Upgrade the package:
pip install --upgrade aws-jupyter
. - Create the new key pair in the new AWS region, and modify the "key_name" and "ssh_key" fields of the credential file accordingly (read below).
- Switch to default AMI and region:
aws-jupyter config --default-ami --default-region
, and set the credential file to the location of the new one when prompted.
AWS Credential
The scripts in this repository requires a credentials.yml
file in following format:
Arbitrary Name:
access_key_id: your_aws_access_key_id
secret_access_key: your_aws_secret_access_key
key_name: your_ec2_key_pair_name
ssh_key: /path/to/the/ec2/key/pair/file
The credential file in the Spark Notebook project can be directly used here.
The credential file (or a soft link to it) should be located in the same folder where
you invoke these scripts (i.e. you should be able to see it using ls .
command).
The credential file must always stay private and not be shared. Remember to add
credential.yml
to the .gitignore
file of your project so that this
file would not be pushed to GitHub.
Usage
Run any script in this directory with -h
argument will print the help message of the script.
Create a new cluster
aws-jupyter create
creates a cluster on the m3.xlarge
instance using an AMI based on Ubuntu.
If the instance comes with attached SSD, it will be mounted to /mnt
.
Example:
aws-jupyter create -c 2 --name testing
Check if a cluster is ready
aws-jupyter check
checks if a cluster is up and running. In addition, it also creates a
neighbors.txt
file which contains the IP addresses of all the instances in the cluster.
Example
aws-jupyter check --name testing
Terminate a cluster
aws-jupyter terminate
terminates a cluster by stopping and terminating all instances
in this cluster.
Example
aws-jupyter terminate --name testing
Run a script on a cluster
aws-jupyter run
runs a given script on all instances in the cluster.
It starts the script in the background, and redirect the stdout/stderr
into a file on the instances which can be checked later.
Thus it terminates does not necessarily mean the script has finshed executing on the cluster.
In addition, it only launches the script on all instances, but does not check if the script
executes without error.
Example
aws-jupyter run --script ./script-examples/hello-world.sh
Send a local directory to the remote instances
Send a local directory to all instances of a cluster. It can be used to, for example, distributing the configuratoin files to all instances.
Example
aws-jupyter send-dir --local ./configs/ --remote ~/remote-configs
Retrieve files from all instances in a cluster
Retrieve files from the same location on all instances of a cluster. It can be used to collect the output of the program from the workers. A local directory for saving the downloaded files should be provided to this script. This script will create a separate sub-directory for each worker and download its files to this sub-directory.
Example
mkdir _result
aws-jupyter retrieve --remote /tmp/std* --local ./_result/
Install a package on all instances
You can install any missing packages after the instances are ready (i.e. aws-jupyter check
shows Jupyter notebook URL) by following these step:
- create a script on your local computer, which install the required package. For example, assume we want to install
pandas
,
$ echo "pip install pandas" > install-pandas.sh
- run the script on all instances
aws-jupyter run -s install-pandas.sh --output
The --output
argument ensures that the script will run in foreground, so that you can check if the installation succeed.
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