Jupyter Notebook (notebook
module) contains both:
- the server for notebooks (the backend of the web application that hosts the notebook contents, proxies interaction with kernels, and interacts with the operating system by e.g. opening an internet browser on start; this part is generally written in Python), and
- the client (the frontend of the web application, e.g. HTML code, javascript, and some extra REST API points on the server).
However, because there are now multiple clients (frontends) providing different web applications for notebooks:
- Jupyter Notebook
- JupyterLab
- RetroLab
- nteract
- multiple proprietary clients developed outside of project Jupyter
It made sense to split the server component used by all of these so that e.g. JupyterLab does not have to depend on notebook. This also means that if a fix to the server component is needed, it can be released quickly independent of Jupyter Notebook release cycle (and users of all frontents can benefit immediately).
As a consequence, and to make the break up clean, the old Jupyter Notebook was split into:
- jupyter-server - the server which was adapted by JuptyterLab, RetroLab, nteract
- nbclassic - the Jupyter Notebook as a jupyter-server extension
This implies changes for users and developers, some already described in "migrate from notebook" docs:
- the options specific to server rather than notebook were renamed from
c.NotebookApp
to c.ServerApp
(the options specific to notebook remain c.NotebookApp
)
- the server-specific configuration is now stored in
jupyter_server_config.py
rather than jupyter_notebook_config.py
(same for .json
version)
- users should now use
jupyter server extension
rather than jupyter serverextension
(note the extra space!) to list, enable or disable extensions
- the server extensions need to place their files in a new location:
etc/jupyter/jupyter_server_config.d
rather than etc/jupyter/jupyter_notebook_config.d
(in practice most extensions that were updated to support jupyter server are now placing files in both locations for backward compatibility with notebook, but this will change in the future)
It is important to note that depending on how you start your jupyter notebook, you will see different servers being used:
jupyter nbclassic
(assuming nbclassic is installed) will use the new jupyter-server
jupyter notebook
will use the old notebook
server
jupyter lab
will use new jupyter-server
starting with JupyterLab 3.0 unless running on JupyterHub/Binder where it might still be using old notebook
server, depending on configuration
This also implies that you may see different extensions when running jupyter notebook
vs jupyter nbclassic
(depending on whether their developers updated the locations, and whether they decided they want to support the legacy notebook
server).
The creation of nbclassic
replacement rather than removal of the server code from existing notebook
package was meant to ensure backward compatibility, and this is why you still have two copies of the Tornado server (one provided by jupyter notebook
and one by jupyter server
). To make the situation simpler you could remove notebook
and install nblcassic
, but given that the transition is in progress you may need to adjust a few things manually. However, this is only a temporary situation, as it is planned that Notebook will be migrated to use jupyter server
starting with v7.0.
This might look inconvenient for now, but this step ensures greater maintainability of the core Jupyter infrastructure in the future and will benefit users and system admins greatly later on.