Jupyter Kernel Execution
Quarto executes Jupyter notebooks using nbclient
together with a few additional options to support some of Quarto’s features. Quarto has built-in support for these features in the python
and julia
Jupyter kernels.
In addition, starting in Quarto 1.5, any Jupyter kernel can configure itself to support the features described below.
Setup and cleanup cells
In order for Quarto notebooks and documents to communicate global options with a Jupyter Kernel, Quarto uses special setup and cleanup cells.
In python
and julia
kernels, the setup and cleanup cells are defined by the following files:
Adding support to a Jupyter kernel
This feature is new in the upcoming Quarto 1.5 release. To use the feature now, you’ll need to download and install the Quarto pre-release.
If a Jupyter kernel wants to execute in awareness of Quarto’s context, it should signal its support by adding the following files to the kernelspec directory:
quarto_setup_cell
: the source code for a setup cell to be executed by nbclient at the beginning of execution of any Quarto notebook or document. Quarto will create a Jupyter notebook cell with the contents of this file as thesource
field.quarto_cleanup_cell
: analogously to above, the source code for a cleanup cell.
In order to make the implementation of these features easier for writers of custom kernels, we have made available a fork of Jupyter’s echo_kernel
. This example kernel is meant to showcase the basics of a custom kernel implementation, and our fork adds the setup cell functionality. See the source for more.
Quarto document options
This feature is new in the upcoming Quarto 1.5 release. To use the feature now, you’ll need to download and install the Quarto pre-release.
Jupyter kernels can have access to a number of Quarto options that can affect cell execution.
Currently, the supported options are:
format
: the format that will be used to produce the documentparams
: the parameters that will be used in a parameterized executionallow_errors
: iftrue
, then the kernel is asked to not stop execution if a cell produces an errorfig_width
: the requested figure width in inchesfig_height
: the requested figure height in inchesfig_format
: the requested format for figure output (png
,jpg
, etc)fig_dpi
: the requested resolution for images in dots per inchcache
: iftrue
, then Jupyter cache will be used
Quarto uses Jupyter Comms to provide its options to a kernel during execution. Specifically, Quarto will open a comm with target name quarto_kernel_setup
, and its initialization message content will contain these options under the options
key.
In order to make the implementation of these features easier for writers of custom kernels, we have made available a fork of Jupyter’s echo_kernel
. This example kernel is meant to showcase the basics of a custom kernel implementation, and our fork adds the setup cell functionality. See the source for more.
Daemonization
Quarto offers built-in support for julia
and python
kernels by default, see the docs for more (Julia, Python).
Adding support to a Jupyter kernel
This feature is new in the upcoming Quarto 1.5 release. To use the feature now, you’ll need to download and install the Quarto pre-release.
Arbitrary Jupyter kernels can indicate support for daemons. To do so, provide a quarto_setup_cell
file in the kernelspec directory so that setup cells can be executed, and ensure that the execution of the setup cell returns an output result with metadata indicating support for running as a daemon. The supported metadata options are:
daemonize
: if a kernel returnstrue
when executing Quarto’s setup cell, then Quarto will maintain a persistent kernel. The daemon options are the same as in the documentation above.restart_kernel
: if a kernel returnstrue
, then Quarto will forcibly restart the kernel. This allows kernels to detect that their configuration has been changed such that it cannot support continued execution in the same process.
In order to make the implementation of these features easier for writers of custom kernels, we have made available a fork of Jupyter’s echo_kernel
. This example kernel is meant to showcase the basics of a custom kernel implementation, and our fork adds the setup cell functionality. See the source for more.