"""A MultiKernelManager for use in the Jupyter server - raises HTTPErrors - creates REST API models """ # Copyright (c) Jupyter Development Team. # Distributed under the terms of the Modified BSD License. import asyncio import os from collections import defaultdict from datetime import datetime from datetime import timedelta from functools import partial from jupyter_client.multikernelmanager import AsyncMultiKernelManager from jupyter_client.multikernelmanager import MultiKernelManager from jupyter_client.session import Session from jupyter_core.paths import exists from tornado import web from tornado.concurrent import Future from tornado.ioloop import IOLoop from tornado.ioloop import PeriodicCallback from traitlets import Any from traitlets import Bool from traitlets import default from traitlets import Dict from traitlets import Float from traitlets import Instance from traitlets import Integer from traitlets import List from traitlets import TraitError from traitlets import Unicode from traitlets import validate from jupyter_server._tz import isoformat from jupyter_server._tz import utcnow from jupyter_server.prometheus.metrics import KERNEL_CURRENTLY_RUNNING_TOTAL from jupyter_server.utils import ensure_async from jupyter_server.utils import to_os_path class MappingKernelManager(MultiKernelManager): """A KernelManager that handles - File mapping - HTTP error handling - Kernel message filtering """ @default("kernel_manager_class") def _default_kernel_manager_class(self): return "jupyter_client.ioloop.IOLoopKernelManager" kernel_argv = List(Unicode()) root_dir = Unicode(config=True) _kernel_connections = Dict() _kernel_ports = Dict() _culler_callback = None _initialized_culler = False @default("root_dir") def _default_root_dir(self): try: return self.parent.root_dir except AttributeError: return os.getcwd() @validate("root_dir") def _update_root_dir(self, proposal): """Do a bit of validation of the root dir.""" value = proposal["value"] if not os.path.isabs(value): # If we receive a non-absolute path, make it absolute. value = os.path.abspath(value) if not exists(value) or not os.path.isdir(value): raise TraitError("kernel root dir %r is not a directory" % value) return value cull_idle_timeout = Integer( 0, config=True, help="""Timeout (in seconds) after which a kernel is considered idle and ready to be culled. Values of 0 or lower disable culling. Very short timeouts may result in kernels being culled for users with poor network connections.""", ) cull_interval_default = 300 # 5 minutes cull_interval = Integer( cull_interval_default, config=True, help="""The interval (in seconds) on which to check for idle kernels exceeding the cull timeout value.""", ) cull_connected = Bool( False, config=True, help="""Whether to consider culling kernels which have one or more connections. Only effective if cull_idle_timeout > 0.""", ) cull_busy = Bool( False, config=True, help="""Whether to consider culling kernels which are busy. Only effective if cull_idle_timeout > 0.""", ) buffer_offline_messages = Bool( True, config=True, help="""Whether messages from kernels whose frontends have disconnected should be buffered in-memory. When True (default), messages are buffered and replayed on reconnect, avoiding lost messages due to interrupted connectivity. Disable if long-running kernels will produce too much output while no frontends are connected. """, ) kernel_info_timeout = Float( 60, config=True, help="""Timeout for giving up on a kernel (in seconds). On starting and restarting kernels, we check whether the kernel is running and responsive by sending kernel_info_requests. This sets the timeout in seconds for how long the kernel can take before being presumed dead. This affects the MappingKernelManager (which handles kernel restarts) and the ZMQChannelsHandler (which handles the startup). """, ) _kernel_buffers = Any() @default("_kernel_buffers") def _default_kernel_buffers(self): return defaultdict(lambda: {"buffer": [], "session_key": "", "channels": {}}) last_kernel_activity = Instance( datetime, help="The last activity on any kernel, including shutting down a kernel" ) def __init__(self, **kwargs): self.pinned_superclass = MultiKernelManager self.pinned_superclass.__init__(self, **kwargs) self.last_kernel_activity = utcnow() allowed_message_types = List( trait=Unicode(), config=True, help="""White list of allowed kernel message types. When the list is empty, all message types are allowed. """, ) allow_tracebacks = Bool( True, config=True, help=("Whether to send tracebacks to clients on exceptions.") ) traceback_replacement_message = Unicode( "An exception occurred at runtime, which is not shown due to security reasons.", config=True, help=("Message to print when allow_tracebacks is False, and an exception occurs"), ) # ------------------------------------------------------------------------- # Methods for managing kernels and sessions # ------------------------------------------------------------------------- def _handle_kernel_died(self, kernel_id): """notice that a kernel died""" self.log.warning("Kernel %s died, removing from map.", kernel_id) self.remove_kernel(kernel_id) def cwd_for_path(self, path): """Turn API path into absolute OS path.""" os_path = to_os_path(path, self.root_dir) # in the case of documents and kernels not being on the same filesystem, # walk up to root_dir if the paths don't exist while not os.path.isdir(os_path) and os_path != self.root_dir: os_path = os.path.dirname(os_path) return os_path async def start_kernel(self, kernel_id=None, path=None, **kwargs): """Start a kernel for a session and return its kernel_id. Parameters ---------- kernel_id : uuid The uuid to associate the new kernel with. If this is not None, this kernel will be persistent whenever it is requested. path : API path The API path (unicode, '/' delimited) for the cwd. Will be transformed to an OS path relative to root_dir. kernel_name : str The name identifying which kernel spec to launch. This is ignored if an existing kernel is returned, but it may be checked in the future. """ if kernel_id is None or kernel_id not in self: if path is not None: kwargs["cwd"] = self.cwd_for_path(path) if kernel_id is not None: kwargs["kernel_id"] = kernel_id kernel_id = await ensure_async(self.pinned_superclass.start_kernel(self, **kwargs)) self._kernel_connections[kernel_id] = 0 fut = asyncio.ensure_future(self._finish_kernel_start(kernel_id)) if not getattr(self, "use_pending_kernels", None): await fut # add busy/activity markers: kernel = self.get_kernel(kernel_id) kernel.execution_state = "starting" kernel.reason = "" kernel.last_activity = utcnow() self.log.info("Kernel started: %s" % kernel_id) self.log.debug("Kernel args: %r" % kwargs) # Increase the metric of number of kernels running # for the relevant kernel type by 1 KERNEL_CURRENTLY_RUNNING_TOTAL.labels(type=self._kernels[kernel_id].kernel_name).inc() else: self.log.info("Using existing kernel: %s" % kernel_id) # Initialize culling if not already if not self._initialized_culler: self.initialize_culler() return kernel_id async def _finish_kernel_start(self, kernel_id): km = self.get_kernel(kernel_id) if hasattr(km, "ready"): try: await km.ready except Exception: self.log.exception(km.ready.exception()) return self._kernel_ports[kernel_id] = km.ports self.start_watching_activity(kernel_id) # register callback for failed auto-restart self.add_restart_callback( kernel_id, lambda: self._handle_kernel_died(kernel_id), "dead", ) def ports_changed(self, kernel_id): """Used by ZMQChannelsHandler to determine how to coordinate nudge and replays. Ports are captured when starting a kernel (via MappingKernelManager). Ports are considered changed (following restarts) if the referenced KernelManager is using a set of ports different from those captured at startup. If changes are detected, the captured set is updated and a value of True is returned. NOTE: Use is exclusive to ZMQChannelsHandler because this object is a singleton instance while ZMQChannelsHandler instances are per WebSocket connection that can vary per kernel lifetime. """ changed_ports = self._get_changed_ports(kernel_id) if changed_ports: # If changed, update captured ports and return True, else return False. self.log.debug(f"Port change detected for kernel: {kernel_id}") self._kernel_ports[kernel_id] = changed_ports return True return False def _get_changed_ports(self, kernel_id): """Internal method to test if a kernel's ports have changed and, if so, return their values. This method does NOT update the captured ports for the kernel as that can only be done by ZMQChannelsHandler, but instead returns the new list of ports if they are different than those captured at startup. This enables the ability to conditionally restart activity monitoring immediately following a kernel's restart (if ports have changed). """ # Get current ports and return comparison with ports captured at startup. km = self.get_kernel(kernel_id) if km.ports != self._kernel_ports[kernel_id]: return km.ports return None def start_buffering(self, kernel_id, session_key, channels): """Start buffering messages for a kernel Parameters ---------- kernel_id : str The id of the kernel to stop buffering. session_key : str The session_key, if any, that should get the buffer. If the session_key matches the current buffered session_key, the buffer will be returned. channels : dict({'channel': ZMQStream}) The zmq channels whose messages should be buffered. """ if not self.buffer_offline_messages: for channel, stream in channels.items(): stream.close() return self.log.info("Starting buffering for %s", session_key) self._check_kernel_id(kernel_id) # clear previous buffering state self.stop_buffering(kernel_id) buffer_info = self._kernel_buffers[kernel_id] # record the session key because only one session can buffer buffer_info["session_key"] = session_key # TODO: the buffer should likely be a memory bounded queue, we're starting with a list to keep it simple buffer_info["buffer"] = [] buffer_info["channels"] = channels # forward any future messages to the internal buffer def buffer_msg(channel, msg_parts): self.log.debug("Buffering msg on %s:%s", kernel_id, channel) buffer_info["buffer"].append((channel, msg_parts)) for channel, stream in channels.items(): stream.on_recv(partial(buffer_msg, channel)) def get_buffer(self, kernel_id, session_key): """Get the buffer for a given kernel Parameters ---------- kernel_id : str The id of the kernel to stop buffering. session_key : str, optional The session_key, if any, that should get the buffer. If the session_key matches the current buffered session_key, the buffer will be returned. """ self.log.debug("Getting buffer for %s", kernel_id) if kernel_id not in self._kernel_buffers: return buffer_info = self._kernel_buffers[kernel_id] if buffer_info["session_key"] == session_key: # remove buffer self._kernel_buffers.pop(kernel_id) # only return buffer_info if it's a match return buffer_info else: self.stop_buffering(kernel_id) def stop_buffering(self, kernel_id): """Stop buffering kernel messages Parameters ---------- kernel_id : str The id of the kernel to stop buffering. """ self.log.debug("Clearing buffer for %s", kernel_id) self._check_kernel_id(kernel_id) if kernel_id not in self._kernel_buffers: return buffer_info = self._kernel_buffers.pop(kernel_id) # close buffering streams for stream in buffer_info["channels"].values(): if not stream.closed(): stream.on_recv(None) stream.close() msg_buffer = buffer_info["buffer"] if msg_buffer: self.log.info( "Discarding %s buffered messages for %s", len(msg_buffer), buffer_info["session_key"], ) def shutdown_kernel(self, kernel_id, now=False, restart=False): """Shutdown a kernel by kernel_id""" self._check_kernel_id(kernel_id) self.stop_watching_activity(kernel_id) self.stop_buffering(kernel_id) self._kernel_connections.pop(kernel_id, None) # Decrease the metric of number of kernels # running for the relevant kernel type by 1 KERNEL_CURRENTLY_RUNNING_TOTAL.labels(type=self._kernels[kernel_id].kernel_name).dec() self.pinned_superclass.shutdown_kernel(self, kernel_id, now=now, restart=restart) # Unlike its async sibling method in AsyncMappingKernelManager, removing the kernel_id # from the connections dictionary isn't as problematic before the shutdown since the # method is synchronous. However, we'll keep the relative call orders the same from # a maintenance perspective. self._kernel_connections.pop(kernel_id, None) self._kernel_ports.pop(kernel_id, None) async def restart_kernel(self, kernel_id, now=False): """Restart a kernel by kernel_id""" self._check_kernel_id(kernel_id) await ensure_async(self.pinned_superclass.restart_kernel(self, kernel_id, now=now)) kernel = self.get_kernel(kernel_id) # return a Future that will resolve when the kernel has successfully restarted channel = kernel.connect_shell() future = Future() def finish(): """Common cleanup when restart finishes/fails for any reason.""" if not channel.closed(): channel.close() loop.remove_timeout(timeout) kernel.remove_restart_callback(on_restart_failed, "dead") def on_reply(msg): self.log.debug("Kernel info reply received: %s", kernel_id) finish() if not future.done(): future.set_result(msg) def on_timeout(): self.log.warning("Timeout waiting for kernel_info_reply: %s", kernel_id) finish() if not future.done(): future.set_exception(TimeoutError("Timeout waiting for restart")) def on_restart_failed(): self.log.warning("Restarting kernel failed: %s", kernel_id) finish() if not future.done(): future.set_exception(RuntimeError("Restart failed")) kernel.add_restart_callback(on_restart_failed, "dead") kernel.session.send(channel, "kernel_info_request") channel.on_recv(on_reply) loop = IOLoop.current() timeout = loop.add_timeout(loop.time() + self.kernel_info_timeout, on_timeout) # Re-establish activity watching if ports have changed... if self._get_changed_ports(kernel_id) is not None: self.stop_watching_activity(kernel_id) self.start_watching_activity(kernel_id) return future def notify_connect(self, kernel_id): """Notice a new connection to a kernel""" if kernel_id in self._kernel_connections: self._kernel_connections[kernel_id] += 1 def notify_disconnect(self, kernel_id): """Notice a disconnection from a kernel""" if kernel_id in self._kernel_connections: self._kernel_connections[kernel_id] -= 1 def kernel_model(self, kernel_id): """Return a JSON-safe dict representing a kernel For use in representing kernels in the JSON APIs. """ self._check_kernel_id(kernel_id) kernel = self._kernels[kernel_id] model = { "id": kernel_id, "name": kernel.kernel_name, "last_activity": isoformat(kernel.last_activity), "execution_state": kernel.execution_state, "connections": self._kernel_connections.get(kernel_id, 0), } if getattr(kernel, "reason", None): model["reason"] = kernel.reason return model def list_kernels(self): """Returns a list of kernel_id's of kernels running.""" kernels = [] kernel_ids = self.pinned_superclass.list_kernel_ids(self) for kernel_id in kernel_ids: try: model = self.kernel_model(kernel_id) kernels.append(model) except (web.HTTPError, KeyError): pass # Probably due to a (now) non-existent kernel, continue building the list return kernels # override _check_kernel_id to raise 404 instead of KeyError def _check_kernel_id(self, kernel_id): """Check a that a kernel_id exists and raise 404 if not.""" if kernel_id not in self: raise web.HTTPError(404, "Kernel does not exist: %s" % kernel_id) # monitoring activity: def start_watching_activity(self, kernel_id): """Start watching IOPub messages on a kernel for activity. - update last_activity on every message - record execution_state from status messages """ kernel = self._kernels[kernel_id] # add busy/activity markers: kernel.execution_state = "starting" kernel.reason = "" kernel.last_activity = utcnow() kernel._activity_stream = kernel.connect_iopub() session = Session( config=kernel.session.config, key=kernel.session.key, ) def record_activity(msg_list): """Record an IOPub message arriving from a kernel""" self.last_kernel_activity = kernel.last_activity = utcnow() idents, fed_msg_list = session.feed_identities(msg_list) msg = session.deserialize(fed_msg_list) msg_type = msg["header"]["msg_type"] if msg_type == "status": kernel.execution_state = msg["content"]["execution_state"] self.log.debug( "activity on %s: %s (%s)", kernel_id, msg_type, kernel.execution_state ) else: self.log.debug("activity on %s: %s", kernel_id, msg_type) kernel._activity_stream.on_recv(record_activity) def stop_watching_activity(self, kernel_id): """Stop watching IOPub messages on a kernel for activity.""" kernel = self._kernels[kernel_id] if getattr(kernel, "_activity_stream", None): kernel._activity_stream.close() kernel._activity_stream = None def initialize_culler(self): """Start idle culler if 'cull_idle_timeout' is greater than zero. Regardless of that value, set flag that we've been here. """ if not self._initialized_culler and self.cull_idle_timeout > 0: if self._culler_callback is None: loop = IOLoop.current() if self.cull_interval <= 0: # handle case where user set invalid value self.log.warning( "Invalid value for 'cull_interval' detected (%s) - using default value (%s).", self.cull_interval, self.cull_interval_default, ) self.cull_interval = self.cull_interval_default self._culler_callback = PeriodicCallback( self.cull_kernels, 1000 * self.cull_interval ) self.log.info( "Culling kernels with idle durations > %s seconds at %s second intervals ...", self.cull_idle_timeout, self.cull_interval, ) if self.cull_busy: self.log.info("Culling kernels even if busy") if self.cull_connected: self.log.info("Culling kernels even with connected clients") self._culler_callback.start() self._initialized_culler = True async def cull_kernels(self): self.log.debug( "Polling every %s seconds for kernels idle > %s seconds...", self.cull_interval, self.cull_idle_timeout, ) """Create a separate list of kernels to avoid conflicting updates while iterating""" for kernel_id in list(self._kernels): try: await self.cull_kernel_if_idle(kernel_id) except Exception as e: self.log.exception( "The following exception was encountered while checking the idle duration of kernel %s: %s", kernel_id, e, ) async def cull_kernel_if_idle(self, kernel_id): kernel = self._kernels[kernel_id] if getattr(kernel, "execution_state") == "dead": self.log.warning( "Culling '%s' dead kernel '%s' (%s).", kernel.execution_state, kernel.kernel_name, kernel_id, ) await ensure_async(self.shutdown_kernel(kernel_id)) return if hasattr( kernel, "last_activity" ): # last_activity is monkey-patched, so ensure that has occurred self.log.debug( "kernel_id=%s, kernel_name=%s, last_activity=%s", kernel_id, kernel.kernel_name, kernel.last_activity, ) dt_now = utcnow() dt_idle = dt_now - kernel.last_activity # Compute idle properties is_idle_time = dt_idle > timedelta(seconds=self.cull_idle_timeout) is_idle_execute = self.cull_busy or (kernel.execution_state != "busy") connections = self._kernel_connections.get(kernel_id, 0) is_idle_connected = self.cull_connected or not connections # Cull the kernel if all three criteria are met if is_idle_time and is_idle_execute and is_idle_connected: idle_duration = int(dt_idle.total_seconds()) self.log.warning( "Culling '%s' kernel '%s' (%s) with %d connections due to %s seconds of inactivity.", kernel.execution_state, kernel.kernel_name, kernel_id, connections, idle_duration, ) await ensure_async(self.shutdown_kernel(kernel_id)) # AsyncMappingKernelManager inherits as much as possible from MappingKernelManager, # overriding only what is different. class AsyncMappingKernelManager(MappingKernelManager, AsyncMultiKernelManager): @default("kernel_manager_class") def _default_kernel_manager_class(self): return "jupyter_client.ioloop.AsyncIOLoopKernelManager" def __init__(self, **kwargs): self.pinned_superclass = AsyncMultiKernelManager self.pinned_superclass.__init__(self, **kwargs) self.last_kernel_activity = utcnow() async def shutdown_kernel(self, kernel_id, now=False, restart=False): """Shutdown a kernel by kernel_id""" self._check_kernel_id(kernel_id) self.stop_watching_activity(kernel_id) self.stop_buffering(kernel_id) # Decrease the metric of number of kernels # running for the relevant kernel type by 1 KERNEL_CURRENTLY_RUNNING_TOTAL.labels(type=self._kernels[kernel_id].kernel_name).dec() # Finish shutting down the kernel before clearing state to avoid a race condition. ret = await self.pinned_superclass.shutdown_kernel( self, kernel_id, now=now, restart=restart ) self._kernel_connections.pop(kernel_id, None) self._kernel_ports.pop(kernel_id, None) return ret