Wednesday, June 03, 2026

DOCKER AND KUBERNETES: A GUIDE FROM FUNDAMENTALS TO ADVANCED CONCEPTS





INTRODUCTION: THE PROBLEM THAT CONTAINERIZATION SOLVES

Before we dive into Docker and Kubernetes, we need to understand the problem these technologies solve. Imagine you are a developer who has built an application on your laptop. The application works perfectly in your development environment. You have installed specific versions of Python, Node.js, various libraries, and configured environment variables exactly the way your application needs them. Now comes the moment to deploy this application to a production server or share it with your team members.

This is where the nightmare often begins. Your colleague tries to run your application on their machine, but it fails with cryptic error messages. The production server runs a different operating system version. The library versions don't match. Environment variables are configured differently. You find yourself saying the infamous phrase that every developer has heard or said: "But it works on my machine!"

This problem has plagued software development for decades. The traditional solution involved writing extensive documentation about dependencies, creating complex installation scripts, and spending countless hours debugging environment-specific issues. Docker emerged as a revolutionary solution to this problem by introducing the concept of containerization.

PART ONE: UNDERSTANDING DOCKER

WHAT IS DOCKER AND WHY DOES IT MATTER

Docker is a platform that allows you to package your application along with all its dependencies, libraries, and configuration files into a standardized unit called a container. Think of a container as a lightweight, portable box that contains everything your application needs to run. This box can be moved from your laptop to a colleague's computer, to a testing server, or to production, and it will work exactly the same way everywhere.

The key insight behind Docker is that instead of shipping just your code and asking everyone to set up the same environment, you ship the entire environment along with your code. This eliminates the "works on my machine" problem because every machine is now running the same environment.

Docker is different from virtual machines, although they might seem similar at first glance. A virtual machine includes an entire operating system, which makes it heavy and slow to start. A Docker container, on the other hand, shares the host operating system's kernel and only packages the application and its dependencies. This makes containers much lighter and faster than virtual machines.

THE FUNDAMENTAL BUILDING BLOCKS OF DOCKER

To understand Docker, you need to grasp three fundamental concepts: images, containers, and the Docker engine.

A Docker image is like a blueprint or a template. It contains the application code, runtime environment, libraries, dependencies, and configuration files needed to run an application. Images are read-only and immutable, meaning once created, they don't change. You can think of an image as a recipe that describes exactly how to create a running instance of your application.

A Docker container is a running instance of an image. When you execute an image, Docker creates a container from it. The container is where your application actually runs. You can create multiple containers from the same image, and each container runs independently. If an image is a recipe, then a container is the actual dish you've cooked from that recipe.

The Docker engine is the software that runs on your machine and manages images and containers. It handles the creation, execution, and monitoring of containers. The Docker engine consists of a server (a daemon process), a REST API that programs can use to talk to the daemon, and a command-line interface client.

CREATING YOUR FIRST DOCKER IMAGE WITH A DOCKERFILE

The most common way to create a Docker image is by writing a Dockerfile. A Dockerfile is a text file that contains a series of instructions telling Docker how to build your image. Let's create a simple example to understand how this works.

Imagine we have a simple Python web application that displays "Hello from Docker!" when you visit it. Here is what our Python application code might look like:

# app.py - A simple Flask web application
from flask import Flask

# Create a Flask application instance
app = Flask(__name__)

@app.route('/')
def hello():
    """
    This function handles requests to the root URL.
    It returns a simple greeting message.
    """
    return 'Hello from Docker! This application is running inside a container.'

if __name__ == '__main__':
    # Run the application on all available network interfaces
    # This allows the application to be accessible from outside the container
    app.run(host='0.0.0.0', port=5000)

Now we need to create a Dockerfile that tells Docker how to package this application. Here is what the Dockerfile would look like:

# Dockerfile - Instructions for building our Docker image

# Start from an official Python runtime as the base image
# This gives us a Linux environment with Python already installed
FROM python:3.9-slim

# Set the working directory inside the container
# All subsequent commands will be executed in this directory
WORKDIR /app

# Copy the requirements file into the container
# This file lists all Python packages our application needs
COPY requirements.txt .

# Install the Python dependencies
# The --no-cache-dir flag keeps the image size smaller
RUN pip install --no-cache-dir -r requirements.txt

# Copy the application code into the container
# This brings our app.py file into the container's /app directory
COPY app.py .

# Expose port 5000 to allow external access
# This is the port our Flask application listens on
EXPOSE 5000

# Define the command to run when the container starts
# This starts our Flask application
CMD ["python", "app.py"]

The requirements.txt file would contain the dependencies:

Flask==2.3.0

Let's break down what each instruction in the Dockerfile does. The FROM instruction specifies the base image to start from. In this case, we are using an official Python image that already has Python 3.9 installed on a slim version of Linux. This saves us from having to install Python ourselves.

The WORKDIR instruction sets the working directory inside the container. Any subsequent commands will be executed relative to this directory. If the directory doesn't exist, Docker creates it automatically.

The COPY instruction copies files from your local machine into the container. We first copy the requirements.txt file, then install the dependencies, and finally copy the application code. You might wonder why we copy requirements.txt separately before copying the application code. This is a Docker best practice related to layer caching, which we will discuss shortly.

The RUN instruction executes commands during the image build process. Here we use it to install Python packages using pip. The results of this command become part of the image.

The EXPOSE instruction documents which port the container will listen on at runtime. It doesn't actually publish the port, but it serves as documentation for anyone using the image.

The CMD instruction specifies the default command to run when a container starts from this image. In our case, it runs the Python application.

BUILDING AND RUNNING YOUR DOCKER CONTAINER

Once you have created the Dockerfile, you can build an image from it using the Docker command-line interface. Here is how you would build the image:

# Build the Docker image
# -t flag tags the image with a name for easy reference
# The dot at the end tells Docker to use the current directory as the build context
docker build -t my-python-app .

When you run this command, Docker reads the Dockerfile and executes each instruction in order. You will see output showing each step being executed. Docker creates a new layer for each instruction, and these layers are stacked on top of each other to form the final image.

After the build completes successfully, you can see your image in the list of available images:

# List all Docker images on your system
docker images

This command will show you all images, including the one you just built. You will see information like the repository name, tag, image ID, when it was created, and its size.

Now comes the exciting part: running your container. You create and start a container from your image using the docker run command:

# Run a container from the image
# -d flag runs the container in detached mode (in the background)
# -p flag maps port 5000 on your host to port 5000 in the container
# --name gives the container a friendly name
docker run -d -p 5000:5000 --name my-running-app my-python-app

Let's understand what each flag does. The -d flag runs the container in detached mode, meaning it runs in the background and doesn't tie up your terminal. The -p flag maps a port on your host machine to a port in the container. The format is host-port:container-port. This allows you to access the application running inside the container from your browser. The --name flag gives your container a friendly name instead of a random generated one.

After running this command, your application is running inside a Docker container. You can open a web browser and navigate to http://localhost:5000 to see your application in action.

MANAGING DOCKER CONTAINERS

Docker provides several commands to manage running containers. You can view all running containers with:

# List all running containers
docker ps

This shows you information about each running container, including its container ID, the image it was created from, the command it's running, when it was created, its status, port mappings, and its name.

To see all containers, including stopped ones, you add the -a flag:

# List all containers, including stopped ones
docker ps -a

You can view the logs from a container to see what your application is outputting:

# View logs from a container
# -f flag follows the log output (like tail -f)
docker logs -f my-running-app

To stop a running container, you use the stop command:

# Stop a running container gracefully
docker stop my-running-app

This sends a SIGTERM signal to the main process in the container, giving it time to shut down gracefully. If the container doesn't stop within a timeout period, Docker sends a SIGKILL signal to force it to stop.

To start a stopped container again:

# Start a stopped container
docker start my-running-app

To remove a container completely:

# Remove a stopped container
# You must stop the container before removing it
docker rm my-running-app

If you want to remove a running container, you can force it:

# Force remove a running container
docker rm -f my-running-app

UNDERSTANDING DOCKER LAYERS AND CACHING

One of Docker's powerful features is its layered architecture. Each instruction in a Dockerfile creates a new layer in the image. These layers are stacked on top of each other, and Docker uses a copy-on-write mechanism to make this efficient.

When you build an image, Docker caches each layer. If you rebuild the image and nothing has changed in a particular layer, Docker reuses the cached layer instead of rebuilding it. This makes subsequent builds much faster.

This is why we copied requirements.txt separately before copying the application code in our earlier example. The dependencies listed in requirements.txt don't change often, but the application code changes frequently during development. By copying requirements.txt first and installing dependencies, that layer gets cached. When we change app.py and rebuild, Docker reuses the cached dependency layer and only rebuilds the layers that copy the application code.

Here is a visual representation of how layers work:

Image Layers (from bottom to top):

Layer 5: CMD ["python", "app.py"]
Layer 4: COPY app.py .
Layer 3: RUN pip install -r requirements.txt
Layer 2: COPY requirements.txt .
Layer 1: WORKDIR /app
Layer 0: FROM python:3.9-slim (base image)

Each layer is read-only and stacked on top of the previous one.
When a container runs, Docker adds a writable layer on top.

DOCKER VOLUMES: PERSISTING DATA BEYOND CONTAINER LIFECYCLE

Containers are ephemeral by design. When you remove a container, any data stored inside it is lost. This is fine for stateless applications, but what about databases or applications that need to persist data?

Docker volumes solve this problem. A volume is a directory that exists outside the container's filesystem but can be mounted into the container. Data written to a volume persists even after the container is removed.

Let's look at an example using a PostgreSQL database:

# Run a PostgreSQL container with a volume for data persistence
# -v flag creates a volume and mounts it into the container
# The format is volume-name:container-path
docker run -d \
  --name my-postgres \
  -e POSTGRES_PASSWORD=mysecretpassword \
  -v postgres-data:/var/lib/postgresql/data \
  postgres:13

In this example, we create a volume named postgres-data and mount it to the directory where PostgreSQL stores its data inside the container. Even if we remove the container, the data in the postgres-data volume remains on the host machine.

You can also mount a directory from your host machine into a container. This is called a bind mount:

# Run a container with a bind mount
# This mounts the current directory into /app in the container
docker run -d \
  --name dev-container \
  -v $(pwd):/app \
  my-python-app

Bind mounts are useful during development because changes you make to files on your host machine are immediately reflected inside the container.

DOCKER NETWORKING: CONNECTING CONTAINERS

In real-world applications, you often need multiple containers to work together. For example, you might have a web application container that needs to communicate with a database container. Docker provides networking capabilities to enable this communication.

By default, Docker creates a bridge network. Containers on the same bridge network can communicate with each other using container names as hostnames. Let's see this in action with a multi-container application:

# Create a custom network
docker network create my-app-network

# Run a PostgreSQL database on this network
docker run -d \
  --name database \
  --network my-app-network \
  -e POSTGRES_PASSWORD=secret \
  postgres:13

# Run a web application on the same network
# The application can connect to the database using "database" as the hostname
docker run -d \
  --name webapp \
  --network my-app-network \
  -p 8080:8080 \
  my-web-app

In this setup, the webapp container can connect to the database using the hostname "database" because they are on the same Docker network. Docker's internal DNS resolves container names to IP addresses automatically.

DOCKER COMPOSE: ORCHESTRATING MULTI-CONTAINER APPLICATIONS

As applications grow more complex, managing multiple containers with individual docker run commands becomes cumbersome. Docker Compose is a tool that allows you to define and run multi-container applications using a YAML configuration file.

Here is an example docker-compose.yml file for a web application with a database:

# docker-compose.yml
# This file defines a multi-container application

version: '3.8'

services:
  # Database service
  database:
    image: postgres:13
    environment:
      POSTGRES_PASSWORD: secret
      POSTGRES_USER: appuser
      POSTGRES_DB: appdb
    volumes:
      # Persist database data
      - postgres-data:/var/lib/postgresql/data
    networks:
      - app-network

  # Web application service
  webapp:
    build:
      context: .
      dockerfile: Dockerfile
    ports:
      - "8080:8080"
    environment:
      DATABASE_URL: postgresql://appuser:secret@database:5432/appdb
    depends_on:
      # Ensure database starts before webapp
      - database
    networks:
      - app-network

# Define volumes
volumes:
  postgres-data:

# Define networks
networks:
  app-network:

With this configuration file, you can start the entire application stack with a single command:

# Start all services defined in docker-compose.yml
docker-compose up -d

This command reads the docker-compose.yml file, creates the necessary networks and volumes, builds images if needed, and starts all containers in the correct order. The -d flag runs everything in detached mode.

To stop all services:

# Stop all services
docker-compose down

To view logs from all services:

# View logs from all services
docker-compose logs -f

Docker Compose makes it easy to define complex applications with multiple interconnected services, making development and testing much more manageable.

ADVANCED DOCKER CONCEPTS: MULTI-STAGE BUILDS

As you become more proficient with Docker, you will encounter situations where you want to optimize your images for size and security. Multi-stage builds are a powerful technique for creating smaller, more secure production images.

The idea is to use multiple FROM statements in your Dockerfile. Each FROM statement begins a new stage. You can copy artifacts from one stage to another, leaving behind everything you don't need in the final image.

Here is an example of a multi-stage build for a Go application:

# Dockerfile with multi-stage build

# Stage 1: Build stage
# Use a full Go image with all build tools
FROM golang:1.19 AS builder

WORKDIR /app

# Copy go module files
COPY go.mod go.sum ./

# Download dependencies
RUN go mod download

# Copy source code
COPY . .

# Build the application
# CGO_ENABLED=0 creates a statically linked binary
RUN CGO_ENABLED=0 GOOS=linux go build -o myapp .

# Stage 2: Production stage
# Use a minimal base image
FROM alpine:latest

# Install CA certificates for HTTPS requests
RUN apk --no-cache add ca-certificates

WORKDIR /root/

# Copy only the compiled binary from the builder stage
# This leaves behind all the source code and build tools
COPY --from=builder /app/myapp .

# Run the binary
CMD ["./myapp"]

In this example, the first stage uses a full Go development image to compile the application. The second stage uses a minimal Alpine Linux image and copies only the compiled binary from the first stage. The final image is much smaller because it doesn't include the Go compiler, source code, or build dependencies.

DOCKER BEST PRACTICES AND SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS

As you work with Docker, following best practices will help you create efficient, secure, and maintainable images. One important practice is to use official base images from trusted sources. Official images are maintained by the Docker community and the software vendors, and they are regularly updated with security patches.

Another best practice is to keep your images small. Smaller images download faster, use less disk space, and have a smaller attack surface. Use minimal base images like Alpine Linux when possible, and use multi-stage builds to exclude unnecessary files from the final image.

You should also be mindful of security. Never include secrets like passwords or API keys directly in your Dockerfile or image. Use environment variables or Docker secrets to provide sensitive information at runtime. Run containers with the least privileges necessary, and consider using read-only filesystems when appropriate.

Here is an example of running a container with enhanced security:

# Run a container with security enhancements
docker run -d \
  --name secure-app \
  --read-only \
  --tmpfs /tmp \
  --user 1000:1000 \
  --cap-drop ALL \
  --security-opt no-new-privileges \
  my-app

This command runs the container with a read-only root filesystem, creates a temporary filesystem for /tmp, runs as a non-root user, drops all Linux capabilities, and prevents privilege escalation.

PART TWO: UNDERSTANDING KUBERNETES

THE NEED FOR CONTAINER ORCHESTRATION

Now that you understand Docker and containers, let's explore why Kubernetes exists and what problems it solves. Imagine you have successfully containerized your application using Docker. Your application runs perfectly in containers on your development machine. Now you need to deploy it to production.

In production, you face several challenges that Docker alone doesn't solve. Your application needs to handle thousands of users, so you need to run multiple instances of your containers across multiple servers. If a container crashes, you need something to automatically restart it. When you deploy a new version, you want to update containers gradually without downtime. You need to distribute incoming traffic across multiple container instances. You need to manage secrets, configuration, and storage across a cluster of machines.

These are orchestration problems, and Kubernetes is the leading solution for container orchestration. Kubernetes is an open-source platform that automates the deployment, scaling, and management of containerized applications across clusters of machines.

WHAT IS KUBERNETES AND ITS CORE PHILOSOPHY

Kubernetes, often abbreviated as K8s, was originally developed by Google based on their experience running billions of containers in production. Google donated Kubernetes to the Cloud Native Computing Foundation in 2014, and it has since become the de facto standard for container orchestration.

The core philosophy of Kubernetes is declarative configuration. Instead of telling Kubernetes exactly how to deploy your application step by step, you declare the desired state of your system, and Kubernetes works continuously to make the actual state match your desired state. If a container crashes, Kubernetes notices that the actual state doesn't match the desired state and automatically starts a new container to fix it.

This declarative approach is fundamentally different from imperative approaches where you execute a series of commands. With Kubernetes, you write YAML files describing what you want, and Kubernetes figures out how to make it happen.

KUBERNETES ARCHITECTURE: THE BIG PICTURE

Before diving into details, let's understand the high-level architecture of a Kubernetes cluster. A Kubernetes cluster consists of two types of machines: master nodes (also called control plane nodes) and worker nodes.

The master nodes run the control plane components that manage the cluster. These components make decisions about the cluster, detect and respond to events, and schedule workloads. The main control plane components are the API server, the scheduler, the controller manager, and etcd.

The worker nodes are where your application containers actually run. Each worker node runs several components including the kubelet, the container runtime, and the kube-proxy.

Here is a simplified view of the architecture:

Kubernetes Cluster Architecture:

Master Node (Control Plane):
  - API Server: The front-end for the Kubernetes control plane
  - Scheduler: Assigns pods to nodes
  - Controller Manager: Runs controller processes
  - etcd: Distributed key-value store for cluster data

Worker Nodes (multiple):
  - kubelet: Agent that ensures containers are running
  - Container Runtime: Software that runs containers (Docker, containerd, etc.)
  - kube-proxy: Maintains network rules for pod communication
  - Pods: The smallest deployable units containing one or more containers

THE FUNDAMENTAL UNIT: PODS

In Kubernetes, the smallest deployable unit is not a container, but a pod. A pod is a group of one or more containers that share storage and network resources. Containers in the same pod can communicate with each other using localhost, and they share the same IP address.

Most commonly, a pod contains a single container. However, pods can contain multiple containers when those containers are tightly coupled and need to share resources. For example, you might have a main application container and a sidecar container that collects logs.

Here is a simple pod definition in YAML:

# pod-definition.yaml
# This defines a single pod running an nginx container

apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
  # Name of the pod
  name: nginx-pod
  labels:
    # Labels are key-value pairs used to organize and select objects
    app: nginx
    environment: production
spec:
  # List of containers in this pod
  containers:
  - name: nginx-container
    # Container image to use
    image: nginx:1.21
    ports:
    # Port that the container exposes
    - containerPort: 80
      protocol: TCP
    resources:
      # Resource requests and limits
      requests:
        memory: "64Mi"
        cpu: "250m"
      limits:
        memory: "128Mi"
        cpu: "500m"

To create this pod in a Kubernetes cluster, you would use the kubectl command-line tool:

# Create the pod from the YAML file
kubectl apply -f pod-definition.yaml

The kubectl apply command sends the pod definition to the Kubernetes API server, which then schedules the pod on an available worker node. The kubelet on that node pulls the container image and starts the container.

You can view the status of your pods:

# List all pods in the current namespace
kubectl get pods

# Get detailed information about a specific pod
kubectl describe pod nginx-pod

# View logs from a pod
kubectl logs nginx-pod

DEPLOYMENTS: MANAGING REPLICA SETS AND ROLLING UPDATES

While you can create individual pods, in practice you rarely do this. Instead, you use higher-level abstractions like Deployments. A Deployment manages a set of identical pods, ensuring that a specified number of them are running at all times.

Deployments provide several powerful features. They can automatically replace failed pods, scale the number of replicas up or down, and perform rolling updates to deploy new versions without downtime.

Here is a Deployment definition:

# deployment-definition.yaml
# This defines a deployment that manages multiple nginx pods

apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
  name: nginx-deployment
  labels:
    app: nginx
spec:
  # Number of pod replicas to maintain
  replicas: 3
  selector:
    # The deployment manages pods with these labels
    matchLabels:
      app: nginx
  template:
    # This is the pod template
    # The deployment creates pods based on this template
    metadata:
      labels:
        app: nginx
    spec:
      containers:
      - name: nginx
        image: nginx:1.21
        ports:
        - containerPort: 80
        resources:
          requests:
            memory: "64Mi"
            cpu: "250m"
          limits:
            memory: "128Mi"
            cpu: "500m"

When you create this Deployment, Kubernetes creates three nginx pods. If one pod fails, Kubernetes automatically creates a new one to maintain the desired count of three replicas.

# Create the deployment
kubectl apply -f deployment-definition.yaml

# View deployments
kubectl get deployments

# View the pods created by the deployment
kubectl get pods

# Scale the deployment to 5 replicas
kubectl scale deployment nginx-deployment --replicas=5

One of the most powerful features of Deployments is rolling updates. When you update the container image in a Deployment, Kubernetes gradually replaces old pods with new ones, ensuring that your application remains available during the update.

# Update the deployment to use a new nginx version
kubectl set image deployment/nginx-deployment nginx=nginx:1.22

# Watch the rollout status
kubectl rollout status deployment/nginx-deployment

# View rollout history
kubectl rollout history deployment/nginx-deployment

# Rollback to the previous version if something goes wrong
kubectl rollout undo deployment/nginx-deployment

SERVICES: EXPOSING YOUR APPLICATION TO THE NETWORK

Pods are ephemeral. They can be created and destroyed at any time. Each pod gets its own IP address, but that IP address changes when the pod is recreated. This creates a problem: how do other parts of your application reliably connect to your pods?

Kubernetes Services solve this problem. A Service provides a stable IP address and DNS name for a set of pods. Even as individual pods come and go, the Service remains constant, and traffic is automatically routed to healthy pods.

There are several types of Services. A ClusterIP Service exposes pods only within the cluster. A NodePort Service exposes pods on a specific port on each node. A LoadBalancer Service creates an external load balancer in cloud environments.

Here is a Service definition that exposes our nginx deployment:

# service-definition.yaml
# This creates a service that exposes the nginx deployment

apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
  name: nginx-service
spec:
  # Type of service
  # ClusterIP: Internal cluster access only
  # NodePort: Exposes on each node's IP at a static port
  # LoadBalancer: Creates an external load balancer (cloud providers)
  type: LoadBalancer
  selector:
    # The service routes traffic to pods with this label
    app: nginx
  ports:
  - protocol: TCP
    # Port that the service listens on
    port: 80
    # Port on the pod that traffic is forwarded to
    targetPort: 80

When you create this Service, Kubernetes assigns it a stable cluster IP address. Any pod in the cluster can reach the nginx pods by connecting to this Service IP or its DNS name.

# Create the service
kubectl apply -f service-definition.yaml

# View services
kubectl get services

# Get detailed information about the service
kubectl describe service nginx-service

The Service uses a selector to determine which pods to route traffic to. In this case, it routes to all pods with the label app: nginx. As pods are created or destroyed, the Service automatically updates its list of endpoints.

CONFIGMAPS AND SECRETS: MANAGING CONFIGURATION

Applications need configuration data like database connection strings, API endpoints, and feature flags. Kubernetes provides ConfigMaps for storing non-sensitive configuration data and Secrets for storing sensitive data like passwords and API keys.

Here is an example of a ConfigMap:

# configmap-definition.yaml
# This stores configuration data that can be consumed by pods

apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
metadata:
  name: app-config
data:
  # Configuration as key-value pairs
  database_host: "postgres.default.svc.cluster.local"
  database_port: "5432"
  log_level: "info"
  # You can also store entire configuration files
  app.properties: |
    feature.new_ui=true
    feature.beta_api=false
    cache.ttl=3600

You can consume a ConfigMap in a pod in several ways. You can expose it as environment variables or mount it as a volume. Here is a pod that uses the ConfigMap:

# pod-with-config.yaml
# This pod uses configuration from a ConfigMap

apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
  name: app-pod
spec:
  containers:
  - name: app-container
    image: myapp:1.0
    # Inject ConfigMap values as environment variables
    env:
    - name: DATABASE_HOST
      valueFrom:
        configMapKeyRef:
          name: app-config
          key: database_host
    - name: DATABASE_PORT
      valueFrom:
        configMapKeyRef:
          name: app-config
          key: database_port
    # Mount the entire ConfigMap as a volume
    volumeMounts:
    - name: config-volume
      mountPath: /etc/config
  volumes:
  - name: config-volume
    configMap:
      name: app-config

Secrets work similarly to ConfigMaps but are designed for sensitive data. Kubernetes encodes Secret values in base64 and provides additional security features.

# secret-definition.yaml
# This stores sensitive data like passwords

apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
  name: database-secret
type: Opaque
data:
  # Values must be base64 encoded
  # You can encode values using: echo -n 'mypassword' | base64
  username: YWRtaW4=
  password: cGFzc3dvcmQxMjM=

You can create Secrets from the command line as well:

# Create a secret from literal values
kubectl create secret generic database-secret \
  --from-literal=username=admin \
  --from-literal=password=password123

Using Secrets in pods is similar to using ConfigMaps:

# pod-with-secret.yaml
# This pod uses credentials from a Secret

apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
  name: app-with-db
spec:
  containers:
  - name: app
    image: myapp:1.0
    env:
    # Inject secret values as environment variables
    - name: DB_USERNAME
      valueFrom:
        secretKeyRef:
          name: database-secret
          key: username
    - name: DB_PASSWORD
      valueFrom:
        secretKeyRef:
          name: database-secret
          key: password

PERSISTENT VOLUMES: MANAGING STORAGE

Just like with Docker, containers in Kubernetes are ephemeral. When a pod is deleted, any data stored in its containers is lost. For stateful applications like databases, you need persistent storage that survives pod restarts and rescheduling.

Kubernetes provides a storage abstraction through Persistent Volumes and Persistent Volume Claims. A Persistent Volume is a piece of storage in the cluster that has been provisioned by an administrator or dynamically provisioned using Storage Classes. A Persistent Volume Claim is a request for storage by a user.

Here is an example of a Persistent Volume:

# persistent-volume.yaml
# This defines a piece of storage available in the cluster

apiVersion: v1
kind: PersistentVolume
metadata:
  name: postgres-pv
spec:
  # Storage capacity
  capacity:
    storage: 10Gi
  # Access modes define how the volume can be mounted
  # ReadWriteOnce: Can be mounted read-write by a single node
  # ReadOnlyMany: Can be mounted read-only by many nodes
  # ReadWriteMany: Can be mounted read-write by many nodes
  accessModes:
    - ReadWriteOnce
  # Reclaim policy determines what happens when the claim is deleted
  # Retain: Keep the volume and its data
  # Delete: Delete the volume and its data
  # Recycle: Scrub the data and make available again (deprecated)
  persistentVolumeReclaimPolicy: Retain
  # Storage class for dynamic provisioning
  storageClassName: standard
  # The actual storage backend
  # This example uses a local path, but in production you would use
  # network storage like NFS, AWS EBS, GCP Persistent Disk, etc.
  hostPath:
    path: /mnt/data/postgres

Now a pod can request storage using a Persistent Volume Claim:

# persistent-volume-claim.yaml
# This is a request for storage

apiVersion: v1
kind: PersistentVolumeClaim
metadata:
  name: postgres-pvc
spec:
  accessModes:
    - ReadWriteOnce
  resources:
    requests:
      # Request 10Gi of storage
      storage: 10Gi
  storageClassName: standard

Kubernetes matches the claim to an available Persistent Volume. Once bound, the pod can use the claim:

# postgres-deployment.yaml
# This deployment uses persistent storage for the database

apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
  name: postgres
spec:
  replicas: 1
  selector:
    matchLabels:
      app: postgres
  template:
    metadata:
      labels:
        app: postgres
    spec:
      containers:
      - name: postgres
        image: postgres:13
        env:
        - name: POSTGRES_PASSWORD
          valueFrom:
            secretKeyRef:
              name: database-secret
              key: password
        ports:
        - containerPort: 5432
        # Mount the persistent volume claim
        volumeMounts:
        - name: postgres-storage
          mountPath: /var/lib/postgresql/data
      volumes:
      - name: postgres-storage
        persistentVolumeClaim:
          # Reference to the PVC
          claimName: postgres-pvc

NAMESPACES: ORGANIZING CLUSTER RESOURCES

As your Kubernetes cluster grows, you need a way to organize resources and provide isolation between different teams or projects. Namespaces provide this capability. A namespace is a virtual cluster within your physical cluster.

Kubernetes starts with several default namespaces. The default namespace is where resources are created if you don't specify a namespace. The kube-system namespace contains resources created by Kubernetes itself. The kube-public namespace is readable by all users and is typically used for cluster information.

You can create your own namespaces:

# namespace-definition.yaml
# This creates a new namespace for a development environment

apiVersion: v1
kind: Namespace
metadata:
  name: development

Or create it using kubectl:

# Create a namespace
kubectl create namespace development

When you create resources, you can specify which namespace they belong to:

# deployment-in-namespace.yaml
# This deployment is created in the development namespace

apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
  name: myapp
  namespace: development
spec:
  replicas: 2
  selector:
    matchLabels:
      app: myapp
  template:
    metadata:
      labels:
        app: myapp
    spec:
      containers:
      - name: myapp
        image: myapp:1.0

You can also specify the namespace when using kubectl:

# List pods in a specific namespace
kubectl get pods -n development

# List pods in all namespaces
kubectl get pods --all-namespaces

Namespaces provide resource isolation and can have resource quotas applied to limit the amount of CPU, memory, and other resources that can be consumed.

ADVANCED KUBERNETES CONCEPTS: STATEFULSETS

While Deployments are perfect for stateless applications, stateful applications like databases have special requirements. They need stable network identities, stable persistent storage, and ordered deployment and scaling. StatefulSets are designed for these use cases.

A StatefulSet is similar to a Deployment but provides guarantees about the ordering and uniqueness of pods. Each pod in a StatefulSet has a persistent identifier that it maintains across rescheduling.

Here is an example StatefulSet for a MongoDB cluster:

# statefulset-definition.yaml
# This creates a StatefulSet for MongoDB with persistent storage

apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: StatefulSet
metadata:
  name: mongodb
spec:
  # Service name for stable network identity
  serviceName: mongodb-service
  replicas: 3
  selector:
    matchLabels:
      app: mongodb
  template:
    metadata:
      labels:
        app: mongodb
    spec:
      containers:
      - name: mongodb
        image: mongo:5.0
        ports:
        - containerPort: 27017
        volumeMounts:
        - name: mongodb-storage
          mountPath: /data/db
  # Volume claim templates create a PVC for each pod
  volumeClaimTemplates:
  - metadata:
      name: mongodb-storage
    spec:
      accessModes: [ "ReadWriteOnce" ]
      resources:
        requests:
          storage: 10Gi

In this StatefulSet, each pod gets a unique name like mongodb-0, mongodb-1, mongodb-2. Each pod also gets its own Persistent Volume Claim. If a pod is rescheduled, it maintains the same name and is reattached to the same storage.

DAEMONSETS: RUNNING PODS ON EVERY NODE

Sometimes you need to run a pod on every node in your cluster. Common use cases include log collection agents, monitoring agents, and network plugins. DaemonSets ensure that a copy of a pod runs on all or selected nodes.

Here is an example DaemonSet for a log collection agent:

# daemonset-definition.yaml
# This runs a log collector on every node

apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: DaemonSet
metadata:
  name: log-collector
  namespace: kube-system
spec:
  selector:
    matchLabels:
      app: log-collector
  template:
    metadata:
      labels:
        app: log-collector
    spec:
      # Tolerate taints so the pod can run on all nodes
      tolerations:
      - key: node-role.kubernetes.io/master
        effect: NoSchedule
      containers:
      - name: fluentd
        image: fluentd:v1.14
        volumeMounts:
        # Mount the host's log directory
        - name: varlog
          mountPath: /var/log
        # Mount the Docker container logs
        - name: varlibdockercontainers
          mountPath: /var/lib/docker/containers
          readOnly: true
      volumes:
      # Access host directories
      - name: varlog
        hostPath:
          path: /var/log
      - name: varlibdockercontainers
        hostPath:
          path: /var/lib/docker/containers

When you create this DaemonSet, Kubernetes automatically creates a pod on each node. If you add a new node to the cluster, Kubernetes automatically schedules the DaemonSet pod on it.

JOBS AND CRONJOBS: RUNNING BATCH WORKLOADS

Not all workloads are long-running services. Sometimes you need to run a task to completion, like a data processing job or a database migration. Kubernetes provides Jobs for this purpose.

A Job creates one or more pods and ensures that a specified number of them successfully complete. Here is an example:

# job-definition.yaml
# This runs a batch processing job

apiVersion: batch/v1
kind: Job
metadata:
  name: data-processor
spec:
  # Number of successful completions required
  completions: 5
  # Number of pods to run in parallel
  parallelism: 2
  template:
    spec:
      containers:
      - name: processor
        image: data-processor:1.0
        command: ["python", "process_data.py"]
      # Restart policy must be Never or OnFailure for Jobs
      restartPolicy: Never
  # Number of retries before marking the job as failed
  backoffLimit: 3

This Job runs the data processing task five times, running two pods in parallel at a time. If a pod fails, Kubernetes retries up to three times.

For recurring tasks, you can use a CronJob:

# cronjob-definition.yaml
# This runs a backup job every day at 2 AM

apiVersion: batch/v1
kind: CronJob
metadata:
  name: database-backup
spec:
  # Schedule in cron format
  # minute hour day month weekday
  schedule: "0 2 * * *"
  jobTemplate:
    spec:
      template:
        spec:
          containers:
          - name: backup
            image: backup-tool:1.0
            command: ["sh", "-c", "backup_database.sh"]
            env:
            - name: DB_HOST
              value: postgres-service
          restartPolicy: OnFailure

This CronJob creates a Job every day at 2 AM to back up the database.

RESOURCE MANAGEMENT: REQUESTS AND LIMITS

Kubernetes allows you to specify how much CPU and memory each container needs. Resource requests are the amount of resources guaranteed to a container. Resource limits are the maximum amount of resources a container can use.

Here is an example with resource specifications:

# deployment-with-resources.yaml
# This deployment specifies resource requirements

apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
  name: resource-demo
spec:
  replicas: 3
  selector:
    matchLabels:
      app: resource-demo
  template:
    metadata:
      labels:
        app: resource-demo
    spec:
      containers:
      - name: app
        image: myapp:1.0
        resources:
          # Requests: Guaranteed resources
          requests:
            # 250 milliCPU (0.25 CPU cores)
            cpu: "250m"
            # 64 Mebibytes of memory
            memory: "64Mi"
          # Limits: Maximum resources allowed
          limits:
            # 500 milliCPU (0.5 CPU cores)
            cpu: "500m"
            # 128 Mebibytes of memory
            memory: "128Mi"

When you specify requests, the Kubernetes scheduler uses this information to decide which node has enough resources to run the pod. If a container tries to use more than its limit, Kubernetes throttles CPU usage or terminates the container if it exceeds memory limits.

HORIZONTAL POD AUTOSCALING: AUTOMATIC SCALING

One of Kubernetes' most powerful features is automatic scaling based on metrics. The Horizontal Pod Autoscaler automatically scales the number of pods in a deployment based on observed CPU utilization or custom metrics.

Here is an example HorizontalPodAutoscaler:

# hpa-definition.yaml
# This automatically scales pods based on CPU usage

apiVersion: autoscaling/v2
kind: HorizontalPodAutoscaler
metadata:
  name: myapp-hpa
spec:
  # The deployment to scale
  scaleTargetRef:
    apiVersion: apps/v1
    kind: Deployment
    name: myapp
  # Minimum and maximum number of replicas
  minReplicas: 2
  maxReplicas: 10
  metrics:
  # Scale based on CPU utilization
  - type: Resource
    resource:
      name: cpu
      target:
        type: Utilization
        # Target 70% CPU utilization
        averageUtilization: 70
  # Scale based on memory utilization
  - type: Resource
    resource:
      name: memory
      target:
        type: Utilization
        # Target 80% memory utilization
        averageUtilization: 80

With this HorizontalPodAutoscaler in place, Kubernetes monitors the CPU and memory usage of your pods. If the average utilization exceeds the target, Kubernetes increases the number of replicas. If utilization is below the target, it decreases the number of replicas, always staying within the min and max bounds.

INGRESS: ADVANCED HTTP ROUTING

While Services provide basic load balancing, Ingress provides more sophisticated HTTP routing capabilities. An Ingress allows you to define rules for routing external HTTP traffic to different services based on hostnames and URL paths.

Here is an example Ingress configuration:

# ingress-definition.yaml
# This routes traffic based on hostnames and paths

apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: Ingress
metadata:
  name: myapp-ingress
  annotations:
    # Annotations configure the ingress controller
    nginx.ingress.kubernetes.io/rewrite-target: /
spec:
  # TLS configuration for HTTPS
  tls:
  - hosts:
    - myapp.example.com
    secretName: myapp-tls-secret
  rules:
  # Route traffic for myapp.example.com
  - host: myapp.example.com
    http:
      paths:
      # Route /api requests to the api service
      - path: /api
        pathType: Prefix
        backend:
          service:
            name: api-service
            port:
              number: 8080
      # Route /web requests to the web service
      - path: /web
        pathType: Prefix
        backend:
          service:
            name: web-service
            port:
              number: 80
  # Route traffic for admin.example.com to a different service
  - host: admin.example.com
    http:
      paths:
      - path: /
        pathType: Prefix
        backend:
          service:
            name: admin-service
            port:
              number: 80

An Ingress requires an Ingress Controller to be installed in your cluster. Popular options include NGINX Ingress Controller, Traefik, and HAProxy Ingress.

HEALTH CHECKS: LIVENESS AND READINESS PROBES

Kubernetes needs to know when your application is healthy and ready to serve traffic. You configure this using liveness and readiness probes.

A liveness probe determines if a container is running properly. If the liveness probe fails, Kubernetes kills the container and restarts it. A readiness probe determines if a container is ready to serve traffic. If the readiness probe fails, Kubernetes removes the pod from service endpoints until it becomes ready again.

Here is an example with both types of probes:

# deployment-with-probes.yaml
# This deployment includes health checks

apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
  name: webapp
spec:
  replicas: 3
  selector:
    matchLabels:
      app: webapp
  template:
    metadata:
      labels:
        app: webapp
    spec:
      containers:
      - name: webapp
        image: mywebapp:1.0
        ports:
        - containerPort: 8080
        # Liveness probe: Is the container alive?
        livenessProbe:
          httpGet:
            path: /health
            port: 8080
          # Wait 30 seconds before starting probes
          initialDelaySeconds: 30
          # Check every 10 seconds
          periodSeconds: 10
          # Fail after 3 consecutive failures
          failureThreshold: 3
        # Readiness probe: Is the container ready to serve traffic?
        readinessProbe:
          httpGet:
            path: /ready
            port: 8080
          # Start checking immediately
          initialDelaySeconds: 5
          # Check every 5 seconds
          periodSeconds: 5
          # Fail after 2 consecutive failures
          failureThreshold: 2

You can also use TCP socket probes or execute commands inside the container:

# Example of different probe types
livenessProbe:
  # TCP socket probe
  tcpSocket:
    port: 8080
  initialDelaySeconds: 15
  periodSeconds: 20

readinessProbe:
  # Command execution probe
  exec:
    command:
    - cat
    - /tmp/healthy
  initialDelaySeconds: 5
  periodSeconds: 5

PUTTING IT ALL TOGETHER: A COMPLETE APPLICATION

Let's bring together everything we have learned by deploying a complete three-tier application consisting of a frontend, backend API, and database.

First, we create a namespace for our application:

# namespace.yaml
apiVersion: v1
kind: Namespace
metadata:
  name: myapp

Next, we create a Secret for database credentials:

# database-secret.yaml
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
  name: db-credentials
  namespace: myapp
type: Opaque
stringData:
  username: appuser
  password: securepassword123

We create a ConfigMap for application configuration:

# app-config.yaml
apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
metadata:
  name: app-config
  namespace: myapp
data:
  api_url: "http://backend-service:8080"
  log_level: "info"
  cache_enabled: "true"

Now we deploy the database using a StatefulSet:

# database-statefulset.yaml
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: StatefulSet
metadata:
  name: postgres
  namespace: myapp
spec:
  serviceName: postgres-service
  replicas: 1
  selector:
    matchLabels:
      app: postgres
  template:
    metadata:
      labels:
        app: postgres
    spec:
      containers:
      - name: postgres
        image: postgres:13
        ports:
        - containerPort: 5432
        env:
        - name: POSTGRES_USER
          valueFrom:
            secretKeyRef:
              name: db-credentials
              key: username
        - name: POSTGRES_PASSWORD
          valueFrom:
            secretKeyRef:
              name: db-credentials
              key: password
        - name: POSTGRES_DB
          value: appdb
        volumeMounts:
        - name: postgres-storage
          mountPath: /var/lib/postgresql/data
  volumeClaimTemplates:
  - metadata:
      name: postgres-storage
    spec:
      accessModes: [ "ReadWriteOnce" ]
      resources:
        requests:
          storage: 10Gi

We create a Service for the database:

# database-service.yaml
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
  name: postgres-service
  namespace: myapp
spec:
  selector:
    app: postgres
  ports:
  - port: 5432
    targetPort: 5432
  clusterIP: None  # Headless service for StatefulSet

Next, we deploy the backend API:

# backend-deployment.yaml
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
  name: backend
  namespace: myapp
spec:
  replicas: 3
  selector:
    matchLabels:
      app: backend
  template:
    metadata:
      labels:
        app: backend
    spec:
      containers:
      - name: backend
        image: mybackend:1.0
        ports:
        - containerPort: 8080
        env:
        - name: DATABASE_URL
          value: "postgresql://$(DB_USER):$(DB_PASSWORD)@postgres-service:5432/appdb"
        - name: DB_USER
          valueFrom:
            secretKeyRef:
              name: db-credentials
              key: username
        - name: DB_PASSWORD
          valueFrom:
            secretKeyRef:
              name: db-credentials
              key: password
        - name: LOG_LEVEL
          valueFrom:
            configMapKeyRef:
              name: app-config
              key: log_level
        resources:
          requests:
            cpu: "200m"
            memory: "256Mi"
          limits:
            cpu: "500m"
            memory: "512Mi"
        livenessProbe:
          httpGet:
            path: /health
            port: 8080
          initialDelaySeconds: 30
          periodSeconds: 10
        readinessProbe:
          httpGet:
            path: /ready
            port: 8080
          initialDelaySeconds: 5
          periodSeconds: 5

We create a Service for the backend:

# backend-service.yaml
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
  name: backend-service
  namespace: myapp
spec:
  selector:
    app: backend
  ports:
  - port: 8080
    targetPort: 8080
  type: ClusterIP

We deploy the frontend:

# frontend-deployment.yaml
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
  name: frontend
  namespace: myapp
spec:
  replicas: 2
  selector:
    matchLabels:
      app: frontend
  template:
    metadata:
      labels:
        app: frontend
    spec:
      containers:
      - name: frontend
        image: myfrontend:1.0
        ports:
        - containerPort: 80
        envFrom:
        - configMapRef:
            name: app-config
        resources:
          requests:
            cpu: "100m"
            memory: "128Mi"
          limits:
            cpu: "200m"
            memory: "256Mi"

We create a Service for the frontend:

# frontend-service.yaml
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
  name: frontend-service
  namespace: myapp
spec:
  selector:
    app: frontend
  ports:
  - port: 80
    targetPort: 80
  type: LoadBalancer

Finally, we create an Ingress to route external traffic:

# ingress.yaml
apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: Ingress
metadata:
  name: myapp-ingress
  namespace: myapp
spec:
  rules:
  - host: myapp.example.com
    http:
      paths:
      - path: /api
        pathType: Prefix
        backend:
          service:
            name: backend-service
            port:
              number: 8080
      - path: /
        pathType: Prefix
        backend:
          service:
            name: frontend-service
            port:
              number: 80

To deploy this entire application, you would apply all these YAML files:

# Apply all configurations
kubectl apply -f namespace.yaml
kubectl apply -f database-secret.yaml
kubectl apply -f app-config.yaml
kubectl apply -f database-statefulset.yaml
kubectl apply -f database-service.yaml
kubectl apply -f backend-deployment.yaml
kubectl apply -f backend-service.yaml
kubectl apply -f frontend-deployment.yaml
kubectl apply -f frontend-service.yaml
kubectl apply -f ingress.yaml

CONCLUSION: THE JOURNEY FROM DOCKER TO KUBERNETES

We have covered a comprehensive journey from understanding the basics of containerization with Docker to orchestrating complex applications with Kubernetes. Docker solved the fundamental problem of packaging applications with their dependencies, ensuring consistency across different environments. Kubernetes took this further by providing a robust platform for deploying, scaling, and managing containerized applications in production.

Docker taught us about images, containers, Dockerfiles, volumes, and networks. We learned how to package applications into portable containers and how to use Docker Compose to manage multi-container applications. These concepts form the foundation for understanding Kubernetes.

Kubernetes introduced us to a declarative approach to infrastructure management. Instead of imperatively executing commands, we declare our desired state in YAML files, and Kubernetes continuously works to maintain that state. We explored pods as the fundamental unit of deployment, Deployments for managing replicated applications, Services for stable networking, ConfigMaps and Secrets for configuration management, and Persistent Volumes for storage.

We then progressed to advanced concepts like StatefulSets for stateful applications, DaemonSets for node-level services, Jobs and CronJobs for batch workloads, Horizontal Pod Autoscaling for automatic scaling, Ingress for sophisticated HTTP routing, and health checks for ensuring application reliability.

The power of Kubernetes lies not just in its individual features but in how they work together to create a comprehensive platform for running production applications. When a pod fails, Kubernetes automatically restarts it. When traffic increases, the Horizontal Pod Autoscaler creates more pods. When you deploy a new version, rolling updates ensure zero downtime. When you need to route traffic based on URLs, Ingress provides that capability.

As you continue your journey with Docker and Kubernetes, remember that these technologies are tools to solve real problems. Start with simple use cases, understand the fundamentals deeply, and gradually adopt more advanced features as your needs grow. The learning curve can be steep, but the benefits of containerization and orchestration make it worthwhile for modern application development and deployment.

Tuesday, June 02, 2026

ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AGENTS FOR JUPYTER NOTEBOOK GENERATION



An advancement in the realm of artificial intelligence is the emergence of LLM-based agents capable of autonomously generating executable Jupyter Notebooks from natural language prompts. These sophisticated agents empower users, from data scientists to business analysts, to rapidly prototype analyses, visualize data, and explore complex datasets without writing a single line of code themselves. This article delves deeply into the architecture, constituents, and implementation details required to construct such an agent, emphasizing support for diverse LLM deployments and hardware configurations.

INTRODUCTION

The paradigm of an LLM-based agent for Jupyter Notebook generation represents a significant leap in productivity and accessibility within data science and software development. Instead of manually crafting code, users can articulate their analytical goals or programming tasks in plain English. The agent then interprets these intentions, plans a series of actions, generates the necessary code, executes it (potentially), and compiles the results into a structured, runnable Jupyter Notebook. This capability democratizes advanced computational tasks, making them accessible to a broader audience and accelerating development cycles for experienced practitioners. The system we envision supports both local and remote Large Language Models (LLMs) and is designed to operate seamlessly across various GPU architectures including NVIDIA CUDA, AMD ROCm, Apple Metal Performance Shaders (MPS), and Intel's integrated and discrete GPUs.

CORE ARCHITECTURE OF THE NOTEBOOK GENERATION AGENT

The architecture of an LLM-based agent for generating Jupyter Notebooks is inherently modular, comprising several interconnected components that work in concert to fulfill user requests. At its heart lies an orchestration layer that leverages the reasoning capabilities of a Large Language Model. This layer interacts with a suite of specialized tools, an execution environment, and a robust LLM integration layer that abstracts away the complexities of different LLM providers and hardware backends. The final output is a well-structured Jupyter Notebook, ready for immediate use or further refinement.

Figure 1: High-Level Agent Architecture


CONSTITUENTS AND THEIR DETAILS

Let us explore each constituent of this architecture in detail.

  1. User Interface and Prompt Engineering

    The user interface serves as the primary gateway for interaction, allowing users to submit their requests in natural language. This interface can range from a simple command-line tool to a sophisticated web application. Effective prompt engineering is crucial here, as the clarity and specificity of the user's prompt directly impact the agent's ability to generate accurate and relevant notebooks. The agent's internal prompt, which guides the LLM, will often include instructions on the desired output format (e.g., Python code, markdown for explanations), available tools, and constraints.

    Example of a user prompt: "Analyze the 'sales_data.csv' file. Show the top 5 products by total sales. Create a line plot of monthly sales trends and save the notebook as 'sales_analysis.ipynb'."

  2. Agent Orchestration Layer

    This layer acts as the brain of the agent, responsible for interpreting the user's prompt, devising a plan to achieve the stated goal, executing that plan using available tools, and refining the approach based on observations. It embodies the "Plan, Act, Observe, Refine" loop.

    • Planning: The LLM analyzes the user's request and breaks it down into a sequence of smaller, manageable tasks. For instance, "analyze sales data" might become "load data", "calculate total sales per product", "identify top 5 products", "aggregate sales by month", "generate plot code", "assemble notebook".
    • Acting: The agent invokes specific tools (e.g., a code interpreter, a file reader) to perform the planned tasks. The LLM generates the arguments or code for these tools.
    • Observing: The agent receives feedback from the tools, such as the output of executed code, error messages, or data summaries.
    • Refining: Based on the observations, the LLM adjusts its plan, corrects errors, or generates further steps to move closer to the goal. This iterative process is fundamental to the agent's intelligence and robustness.

    A conceptual snippet for the agent's core loop might look like this:

    class NotebookAgent:
        def __init__(self, llm_connector, tools):
            self.llm = llm_connector
            self.tools = tools
            self.notebook_cells = [] # Stores generated cells
    
        def generate_notebook_from_prompt(self, user_prompt):
            # Initial planning phase using the LLM
            initial_plan_prompt = f"""
            You are an expert data scientist agent. Your goal is to generate a Jupyter Notebook
            that fulfills the user's request. Break down the user's request into a series of
            steps, including data loading, processing, analysis, visualization, and notebook
            assembly. List the steps clearly.
    
            User Request: {user_prompt}
            """
            plan_response = self.llm.invoke(initial_plan_prompt)
            current_plan = self._parse_plan(plan_response)
    
            for step in current_plan:
                # For each step, generate code or invoke a tool
                action_prompt = f"""
                Based on the overall plan and the current step, generate the Python code
                or specify the tool to use.
                Current Step: {step}
                Previous Cells: {self.notebook_cells}
                """
                action_response = self.llm.invoke(action_prompt)
                action_type, content = self._parse_action(action_response)
    
                if action_type == "code":
                    # Add code to notebook cells
                    self.notebook_cells.append({"cell_type": "code", "source": content})
                    # Potentially execute code and observe output for next steps
                    # output = self.tools["code_interpreter"].execute(content)
                    # self._process_observation(output)
                elif action_type == "markdown":
                    self.notebook_cells.append({"cell_type": "markdown", "source": content})
                elif action_type == "tool_invocation":
                    tool_name, tool_args = self._parse_tool_invocation(content)
                    if tool_name in self.tools:
                        tool_output = self.tools[tool_name].run(tool_args)
                        # Process tool_output, potentially add to notebook or inform LLM
                        self._process_tool_output(tool_output)
                    else:
                        print(f"Error: Tool '{tool_name}' not found.")
    
            # Final assembly and saving of the notebook
            return self._assemble_and_save_notebook(self.notebook_cells, "generated_notebook.ipynb")
    
        def _parse_plan(self, llm_output):
            # Placeholder for parsing LLM's plan output into actionable steps
            # This would typically involve more sophisticated parsing, potentially
            # using regex or another LLM call for structured output.
            print(f"Parsed plan: {llm_output}")
            return llm_output.split("\n") # Simple split for demonstration
    
        def _parse_action(self, llm_output):
            # Placeholder for parsing LLM's action output (code, markdown, tool)
            # Example: "CODE: print('Hello')" or "MARKDOWN: # Introduction"
            if llm_output.startswith("CODE:"):
                return "code", llm_output[len("CODE:"):].strip()
            elif llm_output.startswith("MARKDOWN:"):
                return "markdown", llm_output[len("MARKDOWN:"):].strip()
            elif llm_output.startswith("TOOL:"):
                # Example: TOOL: file_reader(path='data.csv')
                return "tool_invocation", llm_output[len("TOOL:"):].strip()
            return "unknown", llm_output
    
        def _process_tool_output(self, output):
            # Placeholder for processing tool output, e.g., feeding back to LLM
            print(f"Tool output processed: {output}")
    
        def _assemble_and_save_notebook(self, cells, filename):
            # This method would use nbformat to create and save the .ipynb file
            print(f"Assembling and saving notebook to {filename} with {len(cells)} cells.")
            # Actual implementation would use nbformat
            return filename
    
  3. LLM Integration Layer

    This is a critical component that abstracts the complexities of interacting with various LLMs, whether they are hosted remotely (e.g., OpenAI, Anthropic) or run locally (e.g., Llama 2, Mixtral). It also manages the underlying hardware configuration, ensuring optimal utilization of GPUs across different vendors.

    • Remote LLMs: For remote models, this layer handles API key management, rate limiting, request/response serialization, and error handling. It provides a unified interface regardless of the specific API endpoint.
    • Local LLMs: For local models, this layer manages model loading, memory allocation, and device placement. It needs to support various local inference engines and frameworks.

    The key challenge here is supporting diverse GPU architectures. This layer must intelligently detect available hardware and configure the LLM inference engine accordingly.

    • NVIDIA CUDA: The most common, typically handled by PyTorch or TensorFlow, and specific libraries like llama_cpp_python when compiled with CUDA support. Detection often involves torch.cuda.is_available().
    • AMD ROCm: AMD's open-source platform. PyTorch and TensorFlow have ROCm backends. llama_cpp_python can be compiled with ROCm support. Detection might involve checking for ROCM_PATHenvironment variables or using torch.xpu.is_available() if using Intel's oneAPI for cross-vendor support.
    • Apple MPS (Metal Performance Shaders): Apple's framework for accelerating machine learning on Apple Silicon. PyTorch supports MPS via torch.backends.mps.is_available().
    • Intel GPUs (integrated and discrete): Intel provides oneAPI and specific optimizations for PyTorch and TensorFlow. Detection might involve torch.xpu.is_available() or checking for Intel-specific libraries.

    A simplified LLMConnector class demonstrating this abstraction:

    import os
    import torch
    from openai import OpenAI
    from llama_cpp import Llama # For local GGUF models
    
    class LLMConnector:
        def __init__(self, model_type="local", model_name="llama2-7b-chat.Q4_K_M.gguf", api_key=None, base_url=None):
            self.model_type = model_type
            self.model_name = model_name
            self.api_key = api_key
            self.base_url = base_url
            self.llm_instance = None
            self._initialize_llm()
    
        def _initialize_llm(self):
            if self.model_type == "remote":
                if not self.api_key:
                    raise ValueError("API key is required for remote LLM.")
                self.llm_instance = OpenAI(api_key=self.api_key, base_url=self.base_url)
                print(f"Initialized remote LLM: {self.model_name}")
            elif self.model_type == "local":
                model_path = os.path.join("models", self.model_name)
                if not os.path.exists(model_path):
                    raise FileNotFoundError(f"Local model not found at {model_path}")
    
                # Determine GPU layers based on available hardware
                n_gpu_layers = 0
                if torch.cuda.is_available():
                    print("CUDA GPU detected.")
                    n_gpu_layers = -1 # Use all GPU layers
                elif hasattr(torch.backends, 'mps') and torch.backends.mps.is_available():
                    print("Apple MPS detected.")
                    n_gpu_layers = -1 # Use all GPU layers
                elif os.getenv("ROCM_PATH") or (hasattr(torch, 'xpu') and torch.xpu.is_available()):
                    # Basic check for ROCm or Intel XPU (oneAPI)
                    print("ROCm or Intel XPU detected.")
                    n_gpu_layers = -1 # Use all GPU layers
                else:
                    print("No suitable GPU detected or configured, running on CPU.")
                    n_gpu_layers = 0 # Run on CPU
    
                try:
                    self.llm_instance = Llama(
                        model_path=model_path,
                        n_ctx=4096, # Context window size
                        n_gpu_layers=n_gpu_layers, # Number of layers to offload to GPU
                        verbose=False # Suppress Llama.cpp verbose output
                    )
                    print(f"Initialized local LLM: {self.model_name} with {n_gpu_layers} GPU layers.")
                except Exception as e:
                    print(f"Error initializing local LLM: {e}. Falling back to CPU if possible.")
                    self.llm_instance = Llama(
                        model_path=model_path,
                        n_ctx=4096,
                        n_gpu_layers=0, # Force CPU
                        verbose=False
                    )
    
            else:
                raise ValueError(f"Unsupported LLM model type: {self.model_type}")
    
        def invoke(self, prompt, max_tokens=1024, temperature=0.7):
            if self.model_type == "remote":
                try:
                    response = self.llm_instance.chat.completions.create(
                        model=self.model_name,
                        messages=[{"role": "user", "content": prompt}],
                        max_tokens=max_tokens,
                        temperature=temperature
                    )
                    return response.choices[0].message.content
                except Exception as e:
                    print(f"Error invoking remote LLM: {e}")
                    raise
            elif self.model_type == "local":
                try:
                    response = self.llm_instance.create_chat_completion(
                        messages=[{"role": "user", "content": prompt}],
                        max_tokens=max_tokens,
                        temperature=temperature
                    )
                    return response["choices"][0]["message"]["content"]
                except Exception as e:
                    print(f"Error invoking local LLM: {e}")
                    raise
            return "" # Should not reach here
    

    This LLMConnector demonstrates how to abstract away the LLM interaction. For local models, it attempts to detect and utilize available GPU resources from NVIDIA, Apple, AMD, or Intel. The n_gpu_layers=-1 for llama_cpp_python is a common way to instruct it to offload as many layers as possible to the GPU. For transformers-based models, explicit device placement (model.to("cuda")model.to("mps")model.to("xpu")) would be managed within this layer.

  4. Tooling Layer

    The tooling layer provides the agent with capabilities beyond pure text generation. These tools are essentially functions or modules that the LLM can call to interact with the external environment, perform computations, or access data.

    Common tools include:

    • Code Interpreter: Executes Python code in a sandboxed environment. This is crucial for data loading, manipulation, statistical analysis, and plotting.
    • File System Access: Reads and writes files, lists directories.
    • Data Access: Connects to databases, APIs, or cloud storage.
    • Visualization Libraries: Generates plots and charts (e.g., Matplotlib, Seaborn, Plotly).
    • Internet Search: Fetches information from the web (e.g., for finding specific library usage or data formats).

    Each tool should have a clear description that the LLM can understand, along with defined input parameters and expected output formats.

    Example of a CodeInterpreter tool:

    import io
    import sys
    import traceback
    import pandas as pd # Example dependency for code execution
    
    class CodeInterpreter:
        def __init__(self, sandbox_mode=False):
            self.sandbox_mode = sandbox_mode
            self.global_vars = {} # For maintaining state across executions
            self.local_vars = {}
    
        def execute(self, code_string):
            # Redirect stdout and stderr to capture output
            old_stdout = sys.stdout
            old_stderr = sys.stderr
            redirected_output = io.StringIO()
            redirected_error = io.StringIO()
            sys.stdout = redirected_output
            sys.stderr = redirected_error
    
            try:
                # Execute code in a controlled environment
                # For true sandboxing, this would involve subprocesses, Docker, or similar.
                exec(code_string, self.global_vars, self.local_vars)
                output = redirected_output.getvalue()
                error = redirected_error.getvalue()
                if error:
                    return f"ERROR: {error}\nOUTPUT: {output}"
                return f"SUCCESS: {output}"
            except Exception as e:
                error_traceback = traceback.format_exc()
                return f"EXECUTION FAILED: {error_traceback}\nOUTPUT: {redirected_output.getvalue()}"
            finally:
                # Restore stdout and stderr
                sys.stdout = old_stdout
                sys.stderr = old_stderr
    
    # Example usage within the agent
    # code_interpreter = CodeInterpreter()
    # result = code_interpreter.execute("import pandas as pd\ndf = pd.DataFrame({'col': [1,2,3]})\nprint(df)")
    # print(result)
    

    For production environments, the CodeInterpreter must be robustly sandboxed, perhaps by running code in a separate process, a Docker container, or a dedicated Jupyter kernel managed via jupyter_client. This prevents malicious code execution and isolates dependencies.

  5. Notebook Generation Logic

    Once the agent has generated code snippets, markdown explanations, and potentially executed some steps to gather results, these pieces need to be assembled into a coherent Jupyter Notebook. The nbformat library is the standard Python library for reading, writing, and manipulating .ipynb files.

    The agent will construct a list of notebook cells, each containing either code or markdown. For code cells, it might also include execution outputs if the code was run internally for verification or to provide context.

    import nbformat
    from nbformat.v4 import new_notebook, new_code_cell, new_markdown_cell
    
    class NotebookAssembler:
        def __init__(self):
            pass
    
        def assemble_notebook(self, cells, filename="generated_notebook.ipynb"):
            """
            Assembles a list of cells into a Jupyter Notebook file.
    
            Args:
                cells (list): A list of dictionaries, each representing a cell.
                              Example: [{"cell_type": "code", "source": "print('Hello')"},
                                        {"cell_type": "markdown", "source": "# Introduction"}]
                filename (str): The name of the output .ipynb file.
            Returns:
                str: The path to the generated notebook file.
            """
            notebook = new_notebook()
            for cell_data in cells:
                if cell_data["cell_type"] == "code":
                    cell = new_code_cell(cell_data["source"])
                    # If execution outputs were captured, they could be added here
                    # cell.outputs = [...]
                elif cell_data["cell_type"] == "markdown":
                    cell = new_markdown_cell(cell_data["source"])
                else:
                    print(f"Warning: Unknown cell type '{cell_data['cell_type']}', skipping.")
                    continue
                notebook.cells.append(cell)
    
            try:
                with open(filename, 'w', encoding='utf-8') as f:
                    nbformat.write(notebook, f)
                print(f"Notebook successfully saved to {filename}")
                return filename
            except Exception as e:
                print(f"Error saving notebook to {filename}: {e}")
                raise
    
  6. Execution Environment (for Verification and Testing)

    While the agent generates the notebook, it's often beneficial for it to execute portions of the generated code internally to verify correctness, gather outputs, and inform subsequent steps. This execution must occur in a controlled, sandboxed environment to prevent security risks and manage dependencies.

    Options for an execution environment include:

    • Isolated Python subprocess calls.
    • Dedicated Docker containers, providing strong isolation.
    • Using jupyter_client to programmatically interact with a Jupyter kernel. This allows executing cells and capturing rich outputs, similar to how a user would interact with a notebook.

    The execution environment should also manage dependencies. Before running generated code, it might need to install required libraries (e.g., pandasmatplotlib).

  7. GPU/Hardware Abstraction

    As highlighted in the LLM Integration Layer, supporting diverse GPU architectures is paramount for broad applicability. The strategy involves:

    • Detection: Programmatically identify the available hardware (NVIDIA, AMD, Apple, Intel). Libraries like torch offer functions such as torch.cuda.is_available()torch.backends.mps.is_available(), and potentially torch.xpu.is_available() for Intel/ROCm. Environment variables like ROCM_PATH can also be indicative.
    • Configuration: Based on detection, configure the LLM inference engine.
      • For llama_cpp_python, this means setting n_gpu_layers appropriately during Llama object instantiation.
      • For transformers models, it involves moving the model to the correct device: model.to("cuda")model.to("mps")model.to("xpu"), or model.to("cpu").
      • For models that require specific backend installations (e.g., PyTorch with ROCm or Intel oneAPI), the system should guide the user on prerequisites or attempt to use a CPU fallback if GPU is unavailable or misconfigured.
    • Fallback: Always provide a CPU fallback mechanism if GPU acceleration is not available or encounters errors. This ensures the agent remains functional, albeit with potentially slower performance.

DETAILED IMPLEMENTATION ASPECTS

  1. Prompt Design for Notebook Generation

    Crafting effective prompts for the LLM is an art and a science. The agent's internal prompt should guide the LLM to:

    • Understand the user's intent.
    • Identify necessary tools.
    • Generate correct and executable code.
    • Provide clear markdown explanations.
    • Format the output appropriately for notebook cells.
    • Handle potential errors gracefully.

    The prompt should include:

    • Role definition: "You are an expert Python programmer and data scientist."
    • Task description: "Your goal is to generate a Jupyter Notebook to analyze data."
    • Available tools: "You have access to a CodeInterpreter tool to run Python code and a NotebookAssemblerto save the final notebook."
    • Output format instructions: "Generate code cells prefixed with 'CODE:' and markdown cells with 'MARKDOWN:'. If you need to execute code to get information, use the CodeInterpreter and respond with the output."
    • Constraints: "Ensure all necessary imports are at the beginning of the code cells. Provide comments for complex logic."
  2. Agent Loop: Plan, Act, Observe, Refine

    The iterative nature of the agent's operation is key to its intelligence.

    • Plan: The LLM generates a high-level plan.
    • Act: The LLM generates code or tool calls based on the plan.
    • Observe: The CodeInterpreter or other tools execute the action and return results (output, errors, data).
    • Refine: The LLM analyzes the observations. If successful, it proceeds to the next plan step. If an error occurs, it attempts to debug and correct the code, or adjust the plan. This feedback loop is what makes the agent robust.
  3. Code Execution and Sandboxing

    As previously discussed, executing arbitrary code generated by an LLM requires strict sandboxing.

    • Security: Prevent access to sensitive files, network resources, or system commands. Docker containers are an excellent solution for this, providing strong isolation.
    • Dependency Management: Each execution environment should have its own set of dependencies. The agent might need to infer and install required libraries (e.g., pip install pandas) before running the analysis code.
    • State Management: For a multi-step analysis, the execution environment needs to maintain state (e.g., variables defined in one cell should be accessible in subsequent cells). This is naturally handled by a single Jupyter kernel or by passing state explicitly between sandbox runs.
  4. Handling Dependencies

    The generated notebooks will inevitably rely on various Python libraries (e.g., pandasmatplotlibscikit-learn). The agent should:

    • Explicitly include import statements in the generated code.
    • Potentially suggest or automatically add !pip install <library_name> commands in the notebook's initial cells if it detects missing dependencies in the execution environment.
    • The execution environment itself must be configured with common data science libraries or have the capability to install them on demand.
  5. Error Handling and Debugging

    LLMs can make mistakes. The agent must be designed to handle errors gracefully.

    • Capture Errors: The CodeInterpreter must capture stdoutstderr, and exceptions.
    • Feedback to LLM: Error messages and stack traces should be fed back to the LLM in the "Observe" phase.
    • Correction Loop: The LLM should then attempt to debug the code, generate a corrected version, or modify its plan. This might involve prompting the LLM with the error message and the problematic code, asking it to identify and fix the issue.
    • User Notification: If the agent cannot resolve an error after several attempts, it should inform the user.
  6. Security Considerations

    Running LLM-generated code poses significant security risks.

    • Sandboxing: This is the most critical measure. Isolate code execution in containers or virtual machines.
    • Resource Limits: Limit CPU, memory, and execution time to prevent denial-of-service attacks or runaway processes.
    • Input Validation: While the agent processes natural language, any direct file paths or external resource URLs provided by the user or generated by the LLM should be carefully validated.
    • Least Privilege: The execution environment should run with the minimum necessary permissions.

CONCLUSION

Building an LLM-based agent for Jupyter Notebook generation is a complex yet highly rewarding endeavor. By meticulously designing the agent's orchestration, abstracting LLM interactions, providing robust tooling, and ensuring secure code execution across diverse hardware, we can create a powerful system that significantly enhances productivity and accessibility in data science and development. The ability to seamlessly switch between local and remote LLMs, coupled with comprehensive GPU support, ensures the agent's versatility and performance for a wide range of users and computational environments. Such an agent moves us closer to a future where natural language is a primary interface for complex computational tasks, empowering more individuals to harness the power of data and AI.

ADDENDUM: FULL RUNNING EXAMPLE

This full running example demonstrates a complete NotebookAgent that can process a user prompt, generate Python code, and assemble a Jupyter Notebook. It includes the LLMConnectorCodeInterpreter, and NotebookAssemblercomponents, integrated into a cohesive system. For the purpose of this running example, the LLMConnector will be configured to use a local LLM, and the CodeInterpreter will run in a simplified in-process mode for demonstration, but with the understanding that a production system would require robust sandboxing.

First, ensure you have the necessary libraries installed: pip install openai llama-cpp-python nbformat pandas matplotlib

You will also need a local GGUF model file, for example, llama2-7b-chat.Q4_K_M.gguf. Place this file in a directory named models relative to where your script runs. You can download such models from Hugging Face (e.g., TheBloke's repositories).

We will use a simple sales_data.csv file for our example. Create this file in the same directory as your Python script:

sales_data.csv

Date,Product,Sales 2023-01-01,Product A,100 2023-01-01,Product B,150 2023-01-02,Product A,120 2023-01-02,Product C,200 2023-01-03,Product B,180 2023-01-03,Product A,110 2023-02-01,Product A,90 2023-02-01,Product C,250 2023-02-02,Product B,160 2023-02-02,Product A,130 2023-03-01,Product A,110 2023-03-01,Product B,170

Now, here is the complete Python code for the agent:

import os
import io
import sys
import traceback
import pandas as pd
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
import nbformat
from nbformat.v4 import new_notebook, new_code_cell, new_markdown_cell
import torch
from openai import OpenAI
from llama_cpp import Llama # For local GGUF models

# --- 1. LLM Integration Layer ---
class LLMConnector:
    """
    Connects to various LLMs, abstracting local and remote inference.
    Handles GPU detection and configuration for local models.
    """
    def __init__(self, model_type="local", model_name="llama2-7b-chat.Q4_K_M.gguf", api_key=None, base_url=None):
        self.model_type = model_type
        self.model_name = model_name
        self.api_key = api_key
        self.base_url = base_url
        self.llm_instance = None
        self._initialize_llm()

    def _initialize_llm(self):
        """Initializes the LLM instance based on model_type."""
        if self.model_type == "remote":
            if not self.api_key:
                raise ValueError("API key is required for remote LLM.")
            # If base_url is provided, it can be a custom endpoint (e.g., local OpenAI-compatible server)
            self.llm_instance = OpenAI(api_key=self.api_key, base_url=self.base_url)
            print(f"Initialized remote LLM: {self.model_name}")
        elif self.model_type == "local":
            model_path = os.path.join("models", self.model_name)
            if not os.path.exists(model_path):
                raise FileNotFoundError(f"Local model not found at {model_path}. Please download it and place it in the 'models' directory.")

            # Determine GPU layers based on available hardware
            n_gpu_layers = 0
            if torch.cuda.is_available():
                print("CUDA GPU detected. Using all GPU layers.")
                n_gpu_layers = -1 # Use all GPU layers
            elif hasattr(torch.backends, 'mps') and torch.backends.mps.is_available():
                print("Apple MPS detected. Using all GPU layers.")
                n_gpu_layers = -1 # Use all GPU layers
            elif os.getenv("ROCM_PATH") or (hasattr(torch, 'xpu') and torch.xpu.is_available()):
                # Basic check for ROCm (AMD) or Intel XPU (oneAPI)
                # Note: Full ROCm/Intel support with llama.cpp requires specific compilation.
                # This check is a best effort.
                print("ROCm or Intel XPU detected. Attempting to use all GPU layers.")
                n_gpu_layers = -1 # Use all GPU layers
            else:
                print("No suitable GPU detected or configured for local LLM. Running on CPU.")
                n_gpu_layers = 0 # Run on CPU

            try:
                self.llm_instance = Llama(
                    model_path=model_path,
                    n_ctx=4096, # Context window size, adjust as needed
                    n_gpu_layers=n_gpu_layers, # Number of layers to offload to GPU
                    verbose=False # Suppress Llama.cpp verbose output
                )
                print(f"Initialized local LLM: {self.model_name} with {n_gpu_layers} GPU layers.")
            except Exception as e:
                print(f"Error initializing local LLM with GPU support: {e}. Falling back to CPU.")
                self.llm_instance = Llama(
                    model_path=model_path,
                    n_ctx=4096,
                    n_gpu_layers=0, # Force CPU
                    verbose=False
                )
        else:
            raise ValueError(f"Unsupported LLM model type: {self.model_type}. Choose 'local' or 'remote'.")

    def invoke(self, prompt, max_tokens=1024, temperature=0.7):
        """
        Invokes the LLM with the given prompt.
        """
        messages = [{"role": "user", "content": prompt}]
        if self.model_type == "remote":
            try:
                response = self.llm_instance.chat.completions.create(
                    model=self.model_name,
                    messages=messages,
                    max_tokens=max_tokens,
                    temperature=temperature
                )
                return response.choices[0].message.content
            except Exception as e:
                print(f"Error invoking remote LLM: {e}")
                raise
        elif self.model_type == "local":
            try:
                response = self.llm_instance.create_chat_completion(
                    messages=messages,
                    max_tokens=max_tokens,
                    temperature=temperature
                )
                return response["choices"][0]["message"]["content"]
            except Exception as e:
                print(f"Error invoking local LLM: {e}")
                raise
        return "" # Should not be reached

# --- 2. Tooling Layer: Code Interpreter ---
class CodeInterpreter:
    """
    Executes Python code in a controlled environment.
    For production, this should be a sandboxed subprocess or Docker container.
    """
    def __init__(self):
        # Global and local variables for maintaining execution state
        self.global_vars = {'pd': pd, 'plt': plt} # Pre-import common libraries
        self.local_vars = {}

    def execute(self, code_string):
        """
        Executes the given Python code string and captures its output.
        """
        old_stdout = sys.stdout
        old_stderr = sys.stderr
        redirected_output = io.StringIO()
        redirected_error = io.StringIO()
        sys.stdout = redirected_output
        sys.stderr = redirected_error

        try:
            # Execute code in the current process's namespace (simplified sandboxing)
            exec(code_string, self.global_vars, self.local_vars)
            output = redirected_output.getvalue()
            error = redirected_error.getvalue()
            if error:
                return f"EXECUTION ERROR (stderr):\n{error}\nOUTPUT (stdout):\n{output}"
            return f"EXECUTION SUCCESS:\n{output}"
        except Exception as e:
            error_traceback = traceback.format_exc()
            return f"EXECUTION FAILED (exception):\n{error_traceback}\nOUTPUT (stdout):\n{redirected_output.getvalue()}"
        finally:
            sys.stdout = old_stdout
            sys.stderr = old_stderr

# --- 3. Notebook Generation Logic ---
class NotebookAssembler:
    """
    Assembles a list of cells into a Jupyter Notebook (.ipynb) file.
    """
    def __init__(self):
        pass

    def assemble_notebook(self, cells, filename="generated_notebook.ipynb"):
        """
        Assembles a list of cell data into a Jupyter Notebook file.

        Args:
            cells (list): A list of dictionaries, each representing a cell.
                          Example: [{"cell_type": "code", "source": "print('Hello')"},
                                    {"cell_type": "markdown", "source": "# Introduction"}]
            filename (str): The name of the output .ipynb file.
        Returns:
            str: The path to the generated notebook file.
        """
        notebook = new_notebook()
        for cell_data in cells:
            if cell_data["cell_type"] == "code":
                cell = new_code_cell(cell_data["source"])
                # In a more advanced system, outputs from CodeInterpreter could be added here
                if "outputs" in cell_data:
                    cell.outputs = cell_data["outputs"]
            elif cell_data["cell_type"] == "markdown":
                cell = new_markdown_cell(cell_data["source"])
            else:
                print(f"Warning: Unknown cell type '{cell_data['cell_type']}', skipping.")
                continue
            notebook.cells.append(cell)

        try:
            with open(filename, 'w', encoding='utf-8') as f:
                nbformat.write(notebook, f)
            print(f"Notebook successfully saved to {filename}")
            return filename
        except Exception as e:
            print(f"Error saving notebook to {filename}: {e}")
            raise

# --- 4. Agent Orchestration Layer ---
class NotebookAgent:
    """
    Orchestrates the LLM, tools, and notebook assembly to generate Jupyter Notebooks.
    """
    def __init__(self, llm_connector, code_interpreter, notebook_assembler):
        self.llm = llm_connector
        self.code_interpreter = code_interpreter
        self.notebook_assembler = notebook_assembler
        self.notebook_cells = [] # Stores generated cells
        self.conversation_history = [] # For maintaining context with the LLM

    def _add_to_history(self, role, content):
        """Adds a message to the conversation history."""
        self.conversation_history.append({"role": role, "content": content})

    def _get_full_prompt(self, current_instruction):
        """Constructs the full prompt including history and current instruction."""
        # This is a simplified approach; for production, a more sophisticated
        # prompt engineering strategy (e.g., few-shot examples, specific tool descriptions)
        # would be used.
        base_prompt = """
        You are an expert Python programmer and data scientist. Your goal is to generate a
        Jupyter Notebook based on the user's request. You have access to a CodeInterpreter
        tool to execute Python code and observe its output. You must generate code cells
        and markdown cells.

        Instructions:
        1.  Start with a markdown introduction.
        2.  For each step, generate the necessary Python code.
        3.  If you need to verify code or get data, use the CodeInterpreter tool by
            outputting "TOOL_CODE_EXEC:<your python code here>". The output of the tool
            will be provided to you.
        4.  If you want to output a code cell for the notebook, use "NOTEBOOK_CODE:<your python code here>".
        5.  If you want to output a markdown cell for the notebook, use "NOTEBOOK_MARKDOWN:<your markdown content here>".
        6.  Ensure all necessary imports are at the beginning of relevant code cells.
        7.  Provide explanations in markdown cells for each code block.
        8.  Do not include any `!pip install` commands in the generated code, assume libraries are available.
        9.  After completing the task, indicate completion with "TASK_COMPLETE".

        Current Notebook Cells (so far):
        """
        current_cells_str = "\n".join([f"  - {c['cell_type'].upper()}: {c['source'][:50]}..." for c in self.notebook_cells])
        if not current_cells_str:
            current_cells_str = "  (No cells yet)"

        history_str = "\n".join([f"{msg['role'].upper()}: {msg['content']}" for msg in self.conversation_history])

        return f"{base_prompt}\n{current_cells_str}\n\n{history_str}\n\nUSER_INSTRUCTION: {current_instruction}\n\nYOUR_RESPONSE:"

    def generate_notebook_from_prompt(self, user_prompt, output_filename="generated_notebook.ipynb"):
        """
        Generates a Jupyter Notebook based on the user's natural language prompt.
        """
        print(f"Agent received prompt: '{user_prompt}'")
        self._add_to_history("user", user_prompt)

        max_iterations = 15 # Prevent infinite loops
        iteration = 0
        task_completed = False

        while iteration < max_iterations and not task_completed:
            iteration += 1
            print(f"\n--- Agent Iteration {iteration} ---")
            current_instruction = f"Continue generating the notebook based on the user's request: '{user_prompt}'. " \
                                  f"Current state: {len(self.notebook_cells)} cells generated." \
                                  f"If the task is complete, output 'TASK_COMPLETE'."

            full_llm_prompt = self._get_full_prompt(current_instruction)
            llm_response = self.llm.invoke(full_llm_prompt, max_tokens=2048, temperature=0.2)
            self._add_to_history("assistant", llm_response)
            print(f"LLM Response:\n{llm_response}")

            if "TASK_COMPLETE" in llm_response:
                task_completed = True
                print("LLM indicated task completion.")
                break

            # Process LLM's response for actions
            lines = llm_response.strip().split('\n')
            action_taken = False
            for line in lines:
                if line.startswith("NOTEBOOK_MARKDOWN:"):
                    markdown_content = line[len("NOTEBOOK_MARKDOWN:"):].strip()
                    self.notebook_cells.append({"cell_type": "markdown", "source": markdown_content})
                    print(f"Added MARKDOWN cell: {markdown_content[:50]}...")
                    action_taken = True
                elif line.startswith("NOTEBOOK_CODE:"):
                    code_content = line[len("NOTEBOOK_CODE:"):].strip()
                    self.notebook_cells.append({"cell_type": "code", "source": code_content})
                    print(f"Added CODE cell: {code_content[:50]}...")
                    action_taken = True
                elif line.startswith("TOOL_CODE_EXEC:"):
                    code_to_execute = line[len("TOOL_CODE_EXEC:"):].strip()
                    print(f"Executing code with CodeInterpreter: {code_to_execute[:100]}...")
                    execution_result = self.code_interpreter.execute(code_to_execute)
                    self._add_to_history("tool_output", execution_result)
                    print(f"CodeInterpreter Output:\n{execution_result[:200]}...") # Limit output for console
                    action_taken = True
                # Handle cases where LLM might just output text without a specific tag
                elif not line.strip().startswith(("NOTEBOOK_", "TOOL_CODE_EXEC:", "TASK_COMPLETE")):
                    # If it's not a recognized command, treat as a general comment or instruction for next turn
                    pass # The LLM's response is already in history, it will see it next turn.

            if not action_taken and not task_completed:
                print("LLM did not provide a recognized action. Will re-prompt.")
                # This might indicate the LLM is stuck or needs more specific guidance.
                # In a real system, this might trigger an error or a more direct prompt to the LLM.

        if not task_completed:
            print("Agent reached maximum iterations without completing the task.")

        # Final assembly and saving
        if self.notebook_cells:
            final_notebook_path = self.notebook_assembler.assemble_notebook(self.notebook_cells, output_filename)
            print(f"Notebook generation complete. Saved to: {final_notebook_path}")
            return final_notebook_path
        else:
            print("No cells were generated for the notebook.")
            return None

# --- Main Execution Block ---
if __name__ == "__main__":
    # Ensure 'models' directory exists for local LLM
    if not os.path.exists("models"):
        os.makedirs("models")
        print("Created 'models' directory. Please place your GGUF model file (e.g., llama2-7b-chat.Q4_K_M.gguf) inside it.")
        sys.exit(1) # Exit if model not present

    # Create a dummy sales_data.csv for the example
    sales_data_content = """Date,Product,Sales
2023-01-01,Product A,100
2023-01-01,Product B,150
2023-01-02,Product A,120
2023-01-02,Product C,200
2023-01-03,Product B,180
2023-01-03,Product A,110
2023-02-01,Product A,90
2023-02-01,Product C,250
2023-02-02,Product B,160
2023-02-02,Product A,130
2023-03-01,Product A,110
2023-03-01,Product B,170
"""
    with open("sales_data.csv", "w") as f:
        f.write(sales_data_content)
    print("Created 'sales_data.csv' for the example.")

    # --- Configuration ---
    # Choose 'local' or 'remote'
    # For 'remote', provide your OpenAI API key and model name
    # For 'local', ensure your GGUF model is in the 'models' directory
    LLM_CONFIG = {
        "type": "local",
        "model_name": "llama2-7b-chat.Q4_K_M.gguf", # Replace with your model if different
        "api_key": os.getenv("OPENAI_API_KEY"), # Only needed for remote
        "base_url": None # For custom OpenAI-compatible endpoints
    }

    print("\nInitializing LLM Connector...")
    llm_connector = LLMConnector(
        model_type=LLM_CONFIG["type"],
        model_name=LLM_CONFIG["model_name"],
        api_key=LLM_CONFIG["api_key"],
        base_url=LLM_CONFIG["base_url"]
    )

    print("\nInitializing Code Interpreter and Notebook Assembler...")
    code_interpreter = CodeInterpreter()
    notebook_assembler = NotebookAssembler()

    print("\nInitializing Notebook Agent...")
    agent = NotebookAgent(llm_connector, code_interpreter, notebook_assembler)

    user_request = "Analyze 'sales_data.csv'. Show the top 5 products by total sales. Create a line plot of monthly sales trends. Save the notebook as 'sales_analysis.ipynb'."
    print(f"\nUser Request: {user_request}")

    generated_notebook_path = agent.generate_notebook_from_prompt(user_request, "sales_analysis.ipynb")

    if generated_notebook_path:
        print(f"\nSuccessfully generated notebook: {generated_notebook_path}")
        print("You can now open 'sales_analysis.ipynb' with Jupyter Lab or Jupyter Notebook.")
    else:
        print("\nNotebook generation failed or no cells were produced.")