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A sidecar

Project description

Kernel Sidecar

Pypi Tests Python versions

Kernel-Sidecar

This package offers the building blocks for creating a "Kernel Sidecar" Jupyter framework. In normal Jupyter Notebook architecture, one or many frontends manage the document model (code cells, outputs, metadata, etc) and send requests to a single Kernel. Each frontend observes responses on different ZMQ channels (iopub, shell, etc) but may end up with some inconsistency based on the Kernel only sending certain responses to the client that made the request.

In a kernel-sidecar architecture, all frontend clients talk to the kernel-sidecar client, and only the kernel-sidecar client communicates with the Kernel over ZMQ. That pattern offers several potential features:

  • Keep a document model within kernel-sidecar or the backend architecture
  • Add "extension"-esque capabilities on the backend such as auto-linting code on execute
  • Eliminate inconsistencies in what messages individual frontends receive because of Kernel replies
  • Model all requests, replies, and the Notebook document with Pydantic

Installation

pip install kernel-sidecar

Key Concepts

KernelSidecarClient

A manager that uses jupyter_client under the hood to create ZMQ connections and watch for messages coming in over different ZMQ channels (iopub, shell, etc. An important assumption here is that kernel-sidecar is the only client talking to the Kernel, which means every message observed coming from the Kernel should be a reply (based on parent_header_msg.msg_id) to a request sent from this client.

When the KernelSidecarClient send a request to the Kernel, it is wrapped in an KernelAction class. Every message received from the Kernel is delegated to the requesting Action and triggers callbacks attached to the Action class.

Actions

Actions in kernel-sidecar encompass a request-reply cycle, including an await action syntax, where the Action is complete when the Kernel has reported its status returning to idle and optionally emitted a reply appropriate for the request. For instance, an execute_request is "done" when the status has been reported as idle and the Kernel has emitted an execute_reply, both with the parent_header_msg.msg_id the same as the execute_request header.msg_id.

In a nutshell, an actions.KernelAction takes in a requests.Request and zero-to-many handlers.Handler subclasses (or just async functions) and creates an awaitable instance. kernel.send(action) submits the Request over ZMQ, and registers the Action so that all observed messages get routed to that Action to be handled by the Handlers/callbacks.

Most of the time, you should be able to just use convience functions in the KernelSidecarClient class to create the actions. See tests/test_actions.py for many examples of using Actions and Handlers.

Handlers

When the KernelSidecarClient receives a message over ZMQ, parses it into a Pydantic model, and delegates it to the appropriate Action to be handled, it passes on that message to every Handler attached to the Action and awaits all of them to handle that message. Handler objects can define handling different message types by creating methods handle_<msg_type>. See handlers.DebugHandler or cli.OutputHandler for examples of custom Handlers.

Comms

Comms are a flexible way for a client and the Kernel to send messages outside of the execute_request format. The most widely used package that utilizes Comms is probably ipywidgets, but Comms in general are a very powerful tool for a Sidecar application. A Comm can be opened by either the Sidecar or the Kernel. A target for that Comm should be registered on the other side before the open happens. It's probably most typical to register a Comm target in the Kernel by sending an execute_request, then sending a comm_open from the Sidecar side. See tests/test_comms.py for examples.

Once a Comm is open, it has a unique comm_id. KernelSidecarClient will automatically route all comm_msg messages to a CommHandler instance by comm_id in the comm_msg content. That routing pattern is a bit confusing as it overlaps the Handler / Action pattern, but it's necessary because comm_msg can come in as a result of execute_request's or comm_msg's or potentially other messages. So the CommManager -> CommHandler routing basically needs to be applied to every message the KernelSidecarClient receives over ZMQ.

Models

kernel-sidecar has Pydantic models for:

  • The Jupyter Notebook document (models/notebook.py), which should be consistent with nbformat parsing / structure
  • Request messages sent to the Kernel over ZMQ (models/requests.py)
  • Messages received over ZMQ from the Kernel (models/messages.py)

CLI

kernel-sidecar ships a small CLI for testing a connection to a Kernel.

 sidecar --help
Usage: sidecar [OPTIONS]

Options:
  -f FILE                         Kernel connection file  [required]
  --debug / --no-debug            Turn on DEBUG logging  [default: no-debug]
  --execute TEXT                  Execute code string instead of sending
                                  kernel info request
  --install-completion [bash|zsh|fish|powershell|pwsh]
                                  Install completion for the specified shell.
  --show-completion [bash|zsh|fish|powershell|pwsh]
                                  Show completion for the specified shell, to
                                  copy it or customize the installation.
  --help                          Show this message and exit.

Try it out by starting an IPython kernel in one terminal and using the CLI in another.

python -m ipykernel_launcher --debug -f /tmp/kernel.json
kernel-sidecar on  release-0.3.2 [$?] is 📦 v0.3.1 via 🐍 v3.11.0 (kernel-sidecar-py3.11)  sidecar -f /tmp/kernel.json
2023-03-10T14:31:59.992235Z [info     ] Attempting to connect:
{'control_port': 34897,
 'hb_port': 49821,
 'iopub_port': 40577,
 'ip': '127.0.0.1',
 'kernel_name': '',
 'key': '615bcebc-baf2e28abad1f6c017dc71dc',
 'shell_port': 37421,
 'signature_scheme': 'hmac-sha256',
 'stdin_port': 41405,
 'transport': 'tcp'} [kernel_sidecar.cli] filename=cli.py func_name=main lineno=62
2023-03-10T14:32:00.026503Z [info     ] {'banner': 'Python 3.11.0 (main, Nov  7 2022, 09:38:45) [GCC 9.4.0]\n'
           "Type 'copyright', 'credits' or 'license' for more information\n"
           "IPython 8.10.0 -- An enhanced Interactive Python. Type '?' for "
           'help.\n',
 'debugger': None,
 'help_links': [{'text': 'Python Reference',
                 'url': 'https://docs.python.org/3.11'},
                {'text': 'IPython Reference',
                 'url': 'https://ipython.org/documentation.html'},
                {'text': 'NumPy Reference',
                 'url': 'https://docs.scipy.org/doc/numpy/reference/'},
                {'text': 'SciPy Reference',
                 'url': 'https://docs.scipy.org/doc/scipy/reference/'},
                {'text': 'Matplotlib Reference',
                 'url': 'https://matplotlib.org/contents.html'},
                {'text': 'SymPy Reference',
                 'url': 'http://docs.sympy.org/latest/index.html'},
                {'text': 'pandas Reference',
                 'url': 'https://pandas.pydata.org/pandas-docs/stable/'}],
 'implementation': 'ipython',
 'implementation_version': '8.10.0',
 'language_info': {'codemirror_mode': {'name': 'ipython', 'version': 3},
                   'file_extension': '.py',
                   'mimetype': 'text/x-python',
                   'name': 'python',
                   'nbconvert_exporter': 'python',
                   'pygments_lexer': 'ipython3',
                   'version': '3.11.0'},
 'protocol_version': '5.3',
 'status': 'ok'} [kernel_sidecar.cli] filename=cli.py func_name=connect lineno=44
 sidecar -f /tmp/kernel.json --execute "print('Hello, World'); 1/0"
2023-03-10T14:33:27.394935Z [info     ] Attempting to connect:
{'control_port': 34897,
 'hb_port': 49821,
 'iopub_port': 40577,
 'ip': '127.0.0.1',
 'kernel_name': '',
 'key': '615bcebc-baf2e28abad1f6c017dc71dc',
 'shell_port': 37421,
 'signature_scheme': 'hmac-sha256',
 'stdin_port': 41405,
 'transport': 'tcp'} [kernel_sidecar.cli] filename=cli.py func_name=main lineno=62
2023-03-10T14:33:27.629630Z [info     ] Hello, World
                  [kernel_sidecar.cli] filename=cli.py func_name=handle_stream lineno=23
2023-03-10T14:33:27.702700Z [error    ] division by zero               [kernel_sidecar.cli] filename=cli.py func_name=handle_error lineno=31

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