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Source Control for Data Science - using Azure DevOps / VSTS with Jupyter Notebooks

So many of you will know about https://mybinder.org/ Binder is a awesome tool that allows you turn a Git repo into a collection of interactive Jupyter notebooks and it allows you to, open those notebooks in an executable environment, making your code immediately reproducible by anyone, anywhere.

Jupyter Notebooks in the cloud

Another great interactive tool for working with Notebooks is Microsoft Azure Notebook https://notebooks.azure.com

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Integrate notebooks with Git

However in many cases Data Scientists want to work collaboratively and then publish, share both their notebooks and results. This is where using some form of source control is vital.  

Here are a few suggestions and tips regarding how make process of notebooks PR reviews and overall co-existence with git more productive and easy.

1) Minimal requirement would be to manually always clear all outputs before pushing to repo.
2) This link talks about how to automate this: https://timstaley.co.uk/posts/making-git-and-jupyter-notebooks-play-nice/
3) Additional useful option would be to have "save hook" that automatically saves python-only script ver of the notebook (for future easier code reviews) as well as html ver (so it is possible to see the outputs), see ideas here https://www.svds.com/jupyter-notebook-best-practices-for-data-science/

So here is an example of this in practice

Setup Git Hooks

  1. Ensure you are running Git version 2.9 or greater
  2. Run the Makefile with make

First of all you need to create a new Makefile in the route of your repo

init:    git config core.hooksPath .githooks

Then need you need to create a .githooks folder within the root

with a pre-commit file

#!/bin/bash

IPYNB_FILES=`git diff --staged --name-only | awk "/.ipynb/"`echo "$IPYNB_FILES"

cd "notebooks"

function get_script_extension() {     # find file_extension from notebook metadata json, get value from file_extension property     echo $(awk '/"file_extension": ".*"/{ print $0 }' $1 | cut -d '"' -f4)}

if [[ -n "$IPYNB_FILES" ]]; then     for ipynb_file in $IPYNB_FILES     do         file_path="${ipynb_file##*/}"         file_no_extension="${file_path%.*}"

        # if file exists and is not a checkpoint file         if [[ -f "$file_path" ]] && [[ "$file_path" != *"checkpoint"* ]]; then             echo "Creating scripts from notebook."             jupyter nbconvert --to script "$file_path"             # update scripts file in scripts directory             extension=$(get_script_extension $file_path)             mv -f "$file_no_extension$extension" "../scripts"

            echo "Creating html from notebook."             jupyter nbconvert --to html "$file_path"             # update html file in scripts directory             mv -f "$file_no_extension.html" "../html"

            # clear notebook output             echo "Clearing notebook output."             jupyter nbconvert --ClearOutputPreprocessor.enabled=True --inplace "$file_no_extension.ipynb"         fi     donefi

# return to root directorycd ..

# add the newly created files to the current commitgit add -A

Within your repo you simply have the following three folders

Html – where a full rendered notebook is stored

Scripts – Where you R Scripts are stored

Notebooks – where you ipynb are stored

Enable Jupyter Notebook support in Azure DevOps

So this is the perfect layout for storing your experiments within GitHub or Azure Devops but one of the most frustrating things was viewing your output within Azure Devops/VSTS see https://developercommunity.visualstudio.com/content/idea/365561/add-support-for-viewing-jupyter-ipython-notebooks.html

The Microsoft team have developed a FREE VSTS Marketplace extension that will allow data scientists to use VSTS for source control and allow them to preview their Jupyter Notebooks from within VSTS (or TFS)

You simply install the extension to your Azure DevOps account https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=ms-air-aiagility.ipynb-renderer

Choose any Jupyter Notebook (.ipynb) file in your repo. The preview pane will show the rendered content of Jupyter Notebook.

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Conclusion

As you can see this makes using Azure DevOps ideal for data Scientist to collaborate and share resources and code across and experiment whilst using the githooks to ensure that they always have evidence based outcomes of each iteration and with the extension the notebooks can shared and discussed.