💨 💨 The Binder Project is moving to a new repo. 💨 💨
📚 Same functionality. Better performance for you. 📚
Over the past few months, we've been improving Binder's architecture and infrastructure. We're retiring this repo as it will no longer be actively developed. Future development will occur under the JupyterHub organization.
- All development of the Binder technology will occur in the binderhub repo
- Documentation for users will occur in the jupyterhub binder repo
- All conversations and chat for users will occur in the jupyterhub binder gitter channel
Thanks for updating your bookmarked links.
💨 💨 The Binder Project is moving to a new repo. 💨 💨
A binder-deploy implementation that launches containers on a Kubernetes cluster
The deploy
API
defines how Binder
templates
can be launched on any container management system. In our production environment, all templates
are launched on a Kubernetes cluster using this module.
By default, containers are transient and are culled after one hour of inactivity.
When containers are first deployed (through POST
ing to /applications/<template name>
), they
are assigned an id
but not a location
. Once the location
has been assigned (generally 5-10s
after the container has been scheduled), the client can redirect to that location. After the
initial deployment command, the location
can be determined by polling the
/applications/<template name>/<id>
endpoint.
The simplest way to run the binder-build
server is through the
binder-control
module, which manages the
server's lifecycle and service (the database and logging system) dependencies. Additionally,
binder-control
uses the PM2 process manager to monitor/restart the server in the event of
failures. In binder-control
, the deploy server can be started with with custom configuration
parameters through
binder-control deploy-kubernetes start --api-key=<key> --config=/path/to/config
It will also be started with reasonable defaults through
binder-control start-all
If you'd prefer to use binder-build
in standalone mode:
git clone git@github.com:binder-project/binder-deploy-kubernetes
cd binder-deploy-kubernetes
npm i && npm start
The deploy
portion of the Binder API consists of the following endpoints:
Get the status of a single deployed template with a given ID
GET /applications/binder-project-example-requirements/84b8f9e8d573e73016fa2c14bad86a4d HTTP 1.1
returns
{
"id": "84b8f9e8d573e73016fa2c14bad86a4d",
"template-name": "binder-project-example-requirements",
"location": "104.197.56.211/user/84b8f9e8d573e73016fa2c14bad86a4d",
"status": "deleted"
}
Get the status of all deployed templates for a template name
GET /applications/binder-project-example-requirements HTTP 1.1
Authorization: 880df8bbabdf4b48f412208938c220fe
returns
[
{
"id": "74156d847a6bc8e07c64a43aaed53514",
"template-name": "binder-project-example-requirements",
"location": "104.197.56.211/user/74156d847a6bc8e07c64a43aaed53514",
"status": "deleted"
},
...
{
"id": "880aa1c3798c32ad6fc120267e3ae610",
"template-name": "binder-project-example-requirements",
"location": "104.197.56.211/user/880aa1c3798c32ad6fc120267e3ae610",
"status": "deleted"
}
]
Launch a new instance of a template
POST /applications/binder-project-example-requirements
Content-Type: application/json
returns
{
"id": "a16653059942e2ef2b1c7b458d6a2463"
}
The best way to interact with the deploy server is through the
binder-client
. Once the client has been
installed, all endpoints are accessible either programmatically or through the CLI. For example:
From JS
var binder = require('binder-client')
binder.deploy.status(<deployment options>, function (err, status) {
...
})
From the CLI
binder deploy status <image-name> --api-key=<key> --host=<host> --port=<port>