Run some IPython ZMQ kernel in the background, without an interactive shell. You can connect to that kernel remotely via ZMQ.
Installation (package is on PyPI):
pip install background_zmq_ipython
Usage:
import background_zmq_ipython background_zmq_ipython.init_ipython_kernel()
The kernel will then run in the background in its own thread. The init will print some message similar to this on stdout:
To connect another client to this IPython kernel, use: jupyter console --existing kernel-1111.json
Now, after you connected, how to access globals from the main module? E.g. let's say there is a variable a
.
sys.modules["__main__"].a
should work. Viasys.modules
, you can access all the imported modules. Or just doimport mod
again.Get the stack of all/other frames via
sys._current_frames()
, and there you can access the globals from other threads as well.You can provide
user_ns
toinit_ipython_kernel
, e.g:init_ipython_kernel(user_ns=globals())
or:
init_ipython_kernel(user_ns={"main_globals": globals()})
or:
init_ipython_kernel(user_ns={"a": a})
Alternatives / related links:
- pydbattach
- Twisted SSH (example code)
IPython.embed_kernel
in a background thread (example code). This has some issues (e.g. here; messing around withsys.stdout
etc).- This code was introduced in this StackOverflow question, and also discussed in this IPython GitHub issue #8097, but it has become outdated, so this project provides a rewrite / updated code, and the goal was also an easy to install pip package.