Integrating Jupyter notebooks with OpenShift cloud services allows data scientists to get started quickly, without having to understand or manage any of the OpenShift infrastructure details. This video demonstrates the service binding between a Jupyter notebook and the Red Hat OpenShift Database Access connection to database cloud services. This allows a notebook user to access database instances without ever leaving their notebook to obtain credentials. The recipe described in this video assumes that the Kubeflow Notebook Controller has been installed on your OpenShift cluster, and you have a basic working knowledge of OpenShift, Jupyter Notebooks and RHODA.
For folks wanting to try it on their own, the Jupyter Notebooks referred to in the video are available in the rhoda-notebook-controller Github repository. This video is meant as a follow on video to Red Hat OpenShift Database Access admin/developer workflows explained here:
To learn more about OpenShift Data Science you can read the blog or visit red.ht/dbaccess to try it out.
About the authors
More like this
Looking ahead to 2026: Red Hat’s view across the hybrid cloud
Red Hat to acquire Chatterbox Labs: Frequently Asked Questions
Fail Better | Command Line Heroes
How Bad Is Betting Wrong On The Future? | Compiler
Browse by channel
Automation
The latest on IT automation for tech, teams, and environments
Artificial intelligence
Updates on the platforms that free customers to run AI workloads anywhere
Open hybrid cloud
Explore how we build a more flexible future with hybrid cloud
Security
The latest on how we reduce risks across environments and technologies
Edge computing
Updates on the platforms that simplify operations at the edge
Infrastructure
The latest on the world’s leading enterprise Linux platform
Applications
Inside our solutions to the toughest application challenges
Virtualization
The future of enterprise virtualization for your workloads on-premise or across clouds