Jupyter on farmshare 2

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Line 3: Line 3:
# ssh rice
# ssh rice
# module load anaconda3
# module load anaconda3
 +
# jupyter notebook
 +
# hit Q and y to exit the CLI browser that comes up by default
 +
 +
Now you have a terminal sitting there with instructions with a URL with a token.  Note the port number and also the full URL and also the hostname in your CLI prompt. e.g. "http://localhost:8888/?token=b758b09b77a7409599110e8c0269cd88d7ad8447cea266b7" on rice13
 +
 +
In a new terminal:
 +
 +
# ssh sunetid@rice13.stanford.edu -L 8888:localhost:8888
 +
# this will map the port 8888 on your localhost to port 8888 on rice13
 +
 +
Now you have a second terminal sitting there running a shell and a port-forward tunnel.
 +
 +
In your local browser, put in the URL that is printed in your first terminal.  And you should see your Jupyter notebook.

Revision as of 12:12, 16 May 2017

Like Jupyter but on FarmShare2.

  1. ssh rice
  2. module load anaconda3
  3. jupyter notebook
  4. hit Q and y to exit the CLI browser that comes up by default

Now you have a terminal sitting there with instructions with a URL with a token. Note the port number and also the full URL and also the hostname in your CLI prompt. e.g. "http://localhost:8888/?token=b758b09b77a7409599110e8c0269cd88d7ad8447cea266b7" on rice13

In a new terminal:

  1. ssh sunetid@rice13.stanford.edu -L 8888:localhost:8888
  2. this will map the port 8888 on your localhost to port 8888 on rice13

Now you have a second terminal sitting there running a shell and a port-forward tunnel.

In your local browser, put in the URL that is printed in your first terminal. And you should see your Jupyter notebook.

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