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Making simple Python wrapper kernels

docs/source/development/wrapperkernels.rst

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Making simple Python wrapper kernels

.. versionadded:: 3.0

You can now re-use the kernel machinery in IPython to easily make new kernels. This is useful for languages that have Python bindings, such as Octave <http://www.gnu.org/software/octave/>_ (via Oct2Py <http://blink1073.github.io/oct2py/>), or languages where the REPL can be controlled in a tty using pexpect <https://pexpect.readthedocs.io/en/latest/>, such as bash.

.. seealso::

bash_kernel <https://github.com/takluyver/bash_kernel>_ A simple kernel for bash, written using this machinery

Required steps

Subclass :class:ipykernel.kernelbase.Kernel, and implement the following methods and attributes:

.. class:: MyKernel

.. attribute:: implementation implementation_version language language_version banner

 Information for :ref:`msging_kernel_info` replies. 'Implementation' refers
 to the kernel (e.g. IPython), and 'language' refers to the language it
 interprets (e.g. Python). The 'banner' is displayed to the user in console
 UIs before the first prompt. All of these values are strings.

.. attribute:: language_info

 Language information for :ref:`msging_kernel_info` replies, in a dictionary.
 This should contain the key ``mimetype`` with the mimetype of code in the
 target language (e.g. ``'text/x-python'``), and ``file_extension`` (e.g.
 ``'py'``).
 It may also contain keys ``codemirror_mode`` and ``pygments_lexer`` if they
 need to differ from :attr:`language`.

 Other keys may be added to this later.

.. method:: do_execute(code, silent, store_history=True, user_expressions=None, allow_stdin=False)

 Execute user code.
 
 :param str code: The code to be executed.
 :param bool silent: Whether to display output.
 :param bool store_history: Whether to record this code in history and
     increase the execution count. If silent is True, this is implicitly
     False.
 :param dict user_expressions: Mapping of names to expressions to evaluate
     after the code has run. You can ignore this if you need to.
 :param bool allow_stdin: Whether the frontend can provide input on request
     (e.g. for Python's :func:`raw_input`).
 
 Your method should return a dict containing the fields described in
 :ref:`execution_results`. To display output, it can send messages
 using :meth:`~ipykernel.kernelbase.Kernel.send_response`.
 See :doc:`messaging` for details of the different message types.

To launch your kernel, add this at the end of your module::

if __name__ == '__main__':
    from ipykernel.kernelapp import IPKernelApp
    IPKernelApp.launch_instance(kernel_class=MyKernel)

Example

echokernel.py will simply echo any input it's given to stdout::

from ipykernel.kernelbase import Kernel

class EchoKernel(Kernel):
    implementation = 'Echo'
    implementation_version = '1.0'
    language = 'no-op'
    language_version = '0.1'
    language_info = {'mimetype': 'text/plain'}
    banner = "Echo kernel - as useful as a parrot"

    def do_execute(self, code, silent, store_history=True, user_expressions=None,
                   allow_stdin=False):
        if not silent:
            stream_content = {'name': 'stdout', 'text': code}
            self.send_response(self.iopub_socket, 'stream', stream_content)

        return {'status': 'ok',
                # The base class increments the execution count
                'execution_count': self.execution_count,
                'payload': [],
                'user_expressions': {},
               }

if __name__ == '__main__':
    from ipykernel.kernelapp import IPKernelApp
    IPKernelApp.launch_instance(kernel_class=EchoKernel)

Here's the Kernel spec kernel.json file for this::

{"argv":["python","-m","echokernel", "-f", "{connection_file}"],
 "display_name":"Echo"
}

Optional steps

You can override a number of other methods to improve the functionality of your kernel. All of these methods should return a dictionary as described in the relevant section of the :doc:messaging spec <messaging>.

.. class:: MyBetterKernel

.. method:: do_complete(code, cusor_pos)

 Code completion
 
 :param str code: The code already present
 :param int cursor_pos: The position in the code where completion is requested
 
 .. seealso::
 
    :ref:`msging_completion` messages

.. method:: do_inspect(code, cusor_pos, detail_level=0)

 Object introspection
 
 :param str code: The code
 :param int cursor_pos: The position in the code where introspection is requested
 :param int detail_level: 0 or 1 for more or less detail. In IPython, 1 gets
     the source code.
 
 .. seealso::
 
    :ref:`msging_inspection` messages

.. method:: do_history(hist_access_type, output, raw, session=None, start=None, stop=None, n=None, pattern=None, unique=False)

 History access. Only the relevant parameters for the type of history
 request concerned will be passed, so your method definition must have defaults
 for all the arguments shown with defaults here.

 .. seealso::
 
    :ref:`msging_history` messages

.. method:: do_is_complete(code)

 Is code entered in a console-like interface complete and ready to execute,
 or should a continuation prompt be shown?
 
 :param str code: The code entered so far - possibly multiple lines
 
 .. seealso::
 
    :ref:`msging_is_complete` messages

.. method:: do_shutdown(restart)

 Shutdown the kernel. You only need to handle your own clean up - the kernel
 machinery will take care of cleaning up its own things before stopping.
 
 :param bool restart: Whether the kernel will be started again afterwards
 
 .. seealso::
 
    :ref:`msging_shutdown` messages