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iGalileo

iGalileo is a Galileo kernel for use alongside the Jupyter framework

This allows users to experiment with Galileo using powerful Jupyter notebooks

Screenshot of a Jupyter notebook running Galileo

Installation

The galileo kernel can be run in two ways: Using Docker or by building it from source. For either approach, a small file kernel.json has to be placed in a new folder in your home or user directory:

  • Mac:~/Library/Jupyter/kernels/igalileo/kernel.json
  • Linux: ~/.local/share/jupyter/kernels/igalileo/kernel.json
  • Windows: %APPDATA%\jupyter\kernels\igalileo\kernel.json A sample kernel.json file is in the igalileo folder, containing:
{
    "argv": [
        "<PATH_TO_GALILEO>/run_{docker|sbt}.sh",
        "{connection_file}"
    ],
    "display_name": "iGalileo",
    "language": "galileo"
}

Replace <PATH_TO_GALILEO> with the absolute path to the kernel folder (the one containing the kernel.json file, created above), and point to either run_docker.sh or run_sbt.sh. If all goes will, iGalileo should be listed as part of the available Jupyter kernels. You can see that list with the command

jupyter kernelspec list

Using Docker

This is the easiest route and should only take a few minutes. Having a working docker environment is the only prerequisite.

Select run_docker.sh above as the script, and copy run_docker.sh from the igalileo folder here to the kernel folder.

Building from source

Prerequisites:

  • A scala and java environment including the sbt build tool
  • Download this repo from git and ensure the package can be built without error:
    • git clone https://github.com/cascala/igalileo.git
    • cd igalileo
    • sbt package

Select run_sbt.sh above as the script, and copy run_sbt.sh from the igalileo folder here to the kernel folder.

Running iGalileo

Launch Jupyter as usual (jupyter notebook), and select the Galileo kernel. Good luck - don't hesitate to share any feedback as an issue.