Peer-to-peer file sharing for JupyterLab - create named shares (drops) or requests (inboxes), get a link, share it. Files served directly from your server; recipients can use a JupyterLab panel or a plain browser.
Project description
jupyterlab_share_files_extension
Peer-to-peer file sharing for JupyterLab. Create a share (file drop) or request (inbox) from a side panel, copy the link, paste it in chat - recipients open it in their own JupyterLab panel or any plain browser.
Features
- Shares - read-only drops of files and folders; recipients download
- Requests - inboxes; recipients upload, organised per uploader
- Connections - paste someone's link to subscribe to their share or upload to their request
- Drag-and-drop from the file browser - drop zone (new share), share row (add files), request row (upload)
- Browse inside a share - double-click a folder to drill in; the
..row goes back up - Open files directly - double-click a file in the panel, JupyterLab opens it with the right viewer
- Copy/paste between the panel and the file browser
- Right-click context menu - in the file browser ("Share Files...") and on panel rows ("Copy to Current Folder", "Show in File Browser")
- Hidden files visible by default - dotfiles like
.env,.gitignoreare shareable; toggle in Settings - Standalone HTML page - link works in any browser, no JupyterLab needed
- QR code in the share-link dialog for scanning from a phone
- Live upload notifications when someone uploads to your request
- Self-connect guard - pasting your own link shows a "you already own this" dialog
- Symlink-friendly - sharing
@shared/...and similar works - Delete to trash - panel deletes go to the OS trash by default (
c.ShareFilesConfig.use_trash) - HTTPS-aware links - share URLs follow the scheme the browser is on
- Cloudflare tunnel sharing - optional: links carry a public Cloudflare hostname, usable outside your network; the cloud icon in the panel header shows the state, toggles public/private links, and opens a setup popup when nothing is configured yet (docs/cloudflare_setup.md)
- Settings toggles - shares, requests, hidden-file visibility, poll interval
Requirements
- JupyterLab >= 4.0.0
- Python >= 3.9
Install
Developers (project Makefile):
make install
End-users (PyPI):
pip install jupyterlab_share_files_extension
Configuration
Optional, in jupyter_server_config.py:
c.ShareFilesConfig.shares_dir = "uploads" # default - relative to the notebook root
c.ShareFilesConfig.use_trash = True # default: True
c.ShareFilesConfig.verify_peer_tls = True # default: True
shares_dir- where shares/requests/connections are stored; relative paths resolve against the notebook root (the server'sroot_dir), created on demand
Must resolve inside the notebook root - the extension refuses to start with aStorageErrorotherwise (shares outside the root are unreachable from the file browser and Contents API)use_trash-Falsedeletes permanently instead of moving to the OS trashverify_peer_tls- setFalsewhen peers (e.g. a JupyterHub) use a self-signed certificate; server-side saves/uploads to such peers otherwise fail with a 502pollIntervalSeconds- panel refresh interval, in Settings Editor under Share Files (default 15, minimum 2); one tick refreshes all shares, requests and connectionstunnelAutostart- Settings Editor under Share Files (default on); bring the Cloudflare tunnel up at server startup when one is configured
CLI
jupyterlab_share_files - the panel's operations as subcommands. A thin client over the same authenticated HTTP API the panel uses, acting as one user via that user's Jupyter/JupyterHub token; scripts and AI agents drive the extension with it. Output is human-readable by default; --json switches to machine-readable JSON.
Environment variables:
SHARE_FILES_BASE_URL- base URL of the Jupyter server running the extension
On JupyterHub this must be the public user URL (e.g.https://hub.example.com/user/<name>/) so generated links carry the public host; falls back toJUPYTER_SERVER_URL(internal on JupyterHub - links would not be shareable)SHARE_FILES_TOKEN- Jupyter or JupyterHub API token; falls back toJUPYTERHUB_API_TOKEN/JUPYTER_TOKENSHARE_FILES_INSECURE-1skips TLS verification (self-signed hub certificates); off by default
jupyterlab_share_files list-items
jupyterlab_share_files create-share <name> [paths...]
jupyterlab_share_files create-request <name>
jupyterlab_share_files connect <link>
jupyterlab_share_files disconnect <key>
jupyterlab_share_files close-share <id>
jupyterlab_share_files close-request <id>
jupyterlab_share_files pick-up <key> [names...] [--target-dir DIR]
jupyterlab_share_files send-to-request <key> <paths...> [--uploader NAME]
jupyterlab_share_files list-request-uploads <id>
Cloudflare tunnel sharing
The cloudflare command exposes share/request links beyond the hub or local network through a Cloudflare tunnel. Six orthogonal subcommands cover the lifecycle; cloudflare --help carries the full reference with examples. Policy and configuration guide: docs/cloudflare_setup.md.
setup --token <T> --account-id <A> --hostname <H> --private-base-url <URL>- save credentials (chmod-600 config file) and provision end to end: create/reuse the user's own tunnel (namedshare-files-<sluggified private base URL>- deterministic, so repeated setups reuse it; unique per user/server on a shared account), route the hostname to the server URL, add a proxied CNAME, enforce HTTPS, savepublic_base_url, start the connector daemon
--private-base-urlis required - the URL thecloudflaredconnector reaches the server at; explicit, never inferred; must behttps(error with guidance otherwise;localhostis fine if served over https)validate- end-to-end check of the saved config: token validity (user-owned and account-ownedcfat_tokens), bind capability (list tunnels), create capability - proven by creating a test tunnel and removing it - and that thecloudflaredbinary is reachable on PATH (the extension launches the connector itself; missing binary = the tunnel can never come up)info- current configuration; tokens masked to their last 4 characters, account id in full,private_base_url/public_base_url,tunnel_active,daemon_running(cloudflared process) andtunnel_status(Cloudflare-side)start/stop- switch between public links (tunnel active, daemon running) and private links (daemon stopped); credentials, tunnel and DNS kept, effective on the next request without a restartreset- reset the saved token to none (clears account id, tunnel state,public_base_url); links revert to the local/hub address on the next request; Cloudflare-side resources untouched
The connector daemon is guaranteed by the extension: at server startup (and after setup) it makes sure cloudflared tunnel run is running, retrying up to c.ShareFilesConfig.cloudflared_retries times (default 3); all attempts failing is logged as an error, success as info. Autostart is a user setting - Settings Editor → Share Files → "Start the Cloudflare tunnel automatically" (default on); switched off, the server starts with private links and the tunnel down.
The cloud icon in the panel header (left of the filter icon) is always visible and shows/controls the state: green filled cloud = tunnel on, links public; dim dashed silhouette = tunnel off (or not configured), links private; blinking blue = connecting. Configured: clicking toggles between public and private links - same switch as cloudflare start/stop. Not configured: clicking opens a setup popup with the same inputs as cloudflare setup (token, account id, public hostname, private base URL), each with a hint where to take the value from.
When a link is displayed (copy-link icon), the dialog checks reachability: the server probes its own public link (through the Cloudflare edge when active) and the dialog shows "Link is reachable" (green) or "not reachable" (red) - a frontend fetch would be blocked by CORS, so the probe runs server-side (api/link-check).
How links change: the server reads public_base_url and the tunnel toggle per request (no restart needed) and rewrites only the scheme+host of generated links - the path stays auto-detected from the server's own base URL. Without Cloudflare config (or with the tunnel switched off), links keep the old behaviour (the host the browser is on).
What is exposed: only the extension's unauthenticated /public/... endpoints pass through the tunnel; the hub login, authenticated API and the rest of the private network answer 404 at the Cloudflare edge. Plain http to the share hostname is 301-redirected to https.
Token policies required: Account → Cloudflare Tunnel → Edit and zone-scoped DNS → Edit for the hostname's domain.
jupyterlab_share_files cloudflare setup --token <api-token> --account-id <account-id> \
--hostname share.example.com --private-base-url "https://hub.example.com/user/<name>/"
jupyterlab_share_files cloudflare validate
jupyterlab_share_files cloudflare info
jupyterlab_share_files cloudflare start
jupyterlab_share_files cloudflare stop
jupyterlab_share_files cloudflare reset
Security
- The link is the credential (40 bits of entropy); no expiry, no PIN - share over trusted channels (Slack, email)
- HTTPS is inherited from your JupyterHub/Jupyter proxy
- With Cloudflare sharing active, links are reachable from the whole internet - HTTPS only, and only the
/public/...capability endpoints; everything else stays unreachable
Uninstall
pip uninstall jupyterlab_share_files_extension
Project details
Release history Release notifications | RSS feed
Download files
Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.
Source Distribution
Built Distribution
Filter files by name, interpreter, ABI, and platform.
If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.
Copy a direct link to the current filters