Running the jupyerlab
container will automatically start a JupyterLab server in the background on port 8888, with default login password nvidia
. The JupyterLab server logs will be saved to /data/logs/jupyter.log
if you need to inspect them (this location is automatically mounted under your jetson-containers/data
directory)
To change the default settings, you can set the $JUPYTER_ROOT
, $JUPYTER_PORT
, $JUPYTER_PASSWORD
, and $JUPYTER_LOG
environment variables when starting the container like so:
jetson-containers run \
--env JUPYTER_ROOT=/home/user \
--env JUPYTER_PORT=8000 \
--env JUPYTER_PASSWORD=password \
--env JUPYTER_LOGS=/dev/null \
$(autotag jupyterlab)
The /start_jupyter
script is the default CMD that the container runs when it starts - however, if you don't want the JupyterLab server started by default, you can either add a different CMD in your own Dockerfile, or override it at startup:
# skip straight to the terminal instead of starting JupyterLab first
jetson-containers run /bin/bash
You can then still manually run the /start_jupyter
script later when desired.
CONTAINERS
jupyterlab |
|
---|---|
Builds | |
Requires | L4T ['>=32.6'] |
Dependencies | build-essential python numpy rust |
Dependants | audiocraft efficientvit jupyter_clickable_image_widget l4t-ml langchain:samples llama-index sam tam voicecraft whisper |
Dockerfile | Dockerfile |
Images | dustynv/jupyterlab:r32.7.1 (2024-03-07, 0.7GB) dustynv/jupyterlab:r35.2.1 (2023-12-06, 5.3GB) dustynv/jupyterlab:r35.3.1 (2024-03-07, 5.4GB) dustynv/jupyterlab:r35.4.1 (2023-10-07, 5.3GB) dustynv/jupyterlab:r36.2.0 (2024-03-07, 0.6GB) |
Notes | will autostart Jupyter server on port 8888 unless container entry CMD is overridden |
CONTAINER IMAGES
Repository/Tag | Date | Arch | Size |
---|---|---|---|
dustynv/jupyterlab:r32.7.1 |
2024-03-07 |
arm64 |
0.7GB |
dustynv/jupyterlab:r35.2.1 |
2023-12-06 |
arm64 |
5.3GB |
dustynv/jupyterlab:r35.3.1 |
2024-03-07 |
arm64 |
5.4GB |
dustynv/jupyterlab:r35.4.1 |
2023-10-07 |
arm64 |
5.3GB |
dustynv/jupyterlab:r36.2.0 |
2024-03-07 |
arm64 |
0.6GB |
Container images are compatible with other minor versions of JetPack/L4T:
• L4T R32.7 containers can run on other versions of L4T R32.7 (JetPack 4.6+)
• L4T R35.x containers can run on other versions of L4T R35.x (JetPack 5.1+)
RUN CONTAINER
To start the container, you can use jetson-containers run
and autotag
, or manually put together a docker run
command:
# automatically pull or build a compatible container image
jetson-containers run $(autotag jupyterlab)
# or explicitly specify one of the container images above
jetson-containers run dustynv/jupyterlab:r35.3.1
# or if using 'docker run' (specify image and mounts/ect)
sudo docker run --runtime nvidia -it --rm --network=host dustynv/jupyterlab:r35.3.1
jetson-containers run
forwards arguments todocker run
with some defaults added (like--runtime nvidia
, mounts a/data
cache, and detects devices)
autotag
finds a container image that's compatible with your version of JetPack/L4T - either locally, pulled from a registry, or by building it.
To mount your own directories into the container, use the -v
or --volume
flags:
jetson-containers run -v /path/on/host:/path/in/container $(autotag jupyterlab)
To launch the container running a command, as opposed to an interactive shell:
jetson-containers run $(autotag jupyterlab) my_app --abc xyz
You can pass any options to it that you would to docker run
, and it'll print out the full command that it constructs before executing it.
BUILD CONTAINER
If you use autotag
as shown above, it'll ask to build the container for you if needed. To manually build it, first do the system setup, then run:
jetson-containers build jupyterlab
The dependencies from above will be built into the container, and it'll be tested during. Run it with --help
for build options.