The SudoSpawner enables JupyterHub to spawn single-user servers without being root, by spawning an intermediate process via sudo
, which takes actions on behalf of the user.
The sudospawner
mediator, the intermediate process, can only do two things:
- send a signal to another process using the os.kill() call
- spawn single-user servers
Launching the sudospawner
script is the only action that requires a JupyterHub administrator to have sudo
access to execute.
Install:
pip install -e .
To configure JupyterHub to use SudoSpawner, add the following to your
jupyterhub_config.py
:c.JupyterHub.spawner_class='sudospawner.SudoSpawner'
The JupyterHub documentation has additional information about creating a configuration file, if needed, and recommended file locations for configuration files.
If you would like to use JupyterLab, then all you have to do is set the default_url
in jupyterhub_config.py
:
c.Spawner.default_url = '/lab'
In order to limit what permissions the use of sudospawner grants the Hub, when a single-user server is launched the executable spawned is hardcoded as dirname(sudospawner)/jupyterhub-singleuser
. This requires the sudospawner
executable to be in the same directory as the jupyterhub-singleuser
command. It is very important that users cannot modify the bin/
directory containing sudospawner
, otherwise they can modify what sudospawner
actually enables JupyterHub to do.
You may want to initialize user environment variables before launching the server, or do other initialization. If you install a script called sudospawner-singleuser
next to sudospawner
, this will be used instead of the direct jupyterhub-singleuser
command.
For example, you might want to spawn notebook servers from conda environments that are revised and deployed separately from your hub instance.
#!/bin/bash -lset -e # Activate the notebook environmentsource /opt/miniconda/bin/activate /opt/envs/notebook-latest # Show environment info in the log to aid debugging conda info # Delegate the notebook server launch to the jupyterhub-singleuser script.# this is how most sudospawner-singleuser scripts should end.exec"$(dirname "$0")/jupyterhub-singleuser"$@
The Dockerfile in this repo contains an example configuration for setting up a JupyterHub system, without any need to run anything as root.