notebook: Notebook gets Malformed HTTP headers from Chrome
When I attempt to view notebook at localhost:8888 in chrome, the connection times out, and jupyter notebook generates the following message:
[I 09:08:25.604 NotebookApp] Malformed HTTP message from ::1: Malformed HTTP headers: ''
I have also received:
Malformed HTTP message from ::1: Malformed HTTP headers: '\n\x05z\xc2\xaf\xc3\xa3\xc2\xa0\xc3\x90TP\x03\xc3\x9eSe\xc2\xa3\xc2\x96\xc2\x98\xc3\xab+\xc3\x84\xc3\xbd\xc2\x8a\x19\xc2\x861\xc3\xac3G\x00\x00 \n\n'
Everything works just fine in safari.
My setup is as follows: macOS sierra 10.12.13 chrome 56.0.2924.87 (64-bit) jupyter 4.2.0 jupyter notebook 4.2.3
and I’m simply running jupyter notbook from the command line. I get the following log ouput on launch, which I assume is normal:
[I 08:51:09.307 NotebookApp] [nb_conda_kernels] enabled, 3 kernels found [I 08:51:09.729 NotebookApp] ✓ nbpresent HTML export ENABLED [W 08:51:09.729 NotebookApp] ✗ nbpresent PDF export DISABLED: No module named nbbrowserpdf.exporters.pdf [I 08:51:09.734 NotebookApp] [nb_conda] enabled [I 08:51:09.813 NotebookApp] [nb_anacondacloud] enabled [I 08:51:09.819 NotebookApp] Serving notebooks from local directory: /Users/ianriley/Development/kaggle [I 08:51:09.819 NotebookApp] 0 active kernels [I 08:51:09.819 NotebookApp] The Jupyter Notebook is running at: http://localhost:8888/ [I 08:51:09.819 NotebookApp] Use Control-C to stop this server and shut down all kernels (twice to skip confirmation).
I noticed the pdf warning message, but figured it’s not important to viewing a notebook in a browser.
About this issue
- Original URL
- State: open
- Created 7 years ago
- Reactions: 4
- Comments: 16
I think this has to do with https://<ip>:<port> only. When I tried http://<ip>:<port> it worked. Not sure of the reason though.
On Wed, Oct 4, 2017 at 5:12 AM, Pēteris Paikens notifications@github.com wrote:
Find a new method. In the chrome you can try to go here chrome://net-internals/#hsts
And under the “Delete domain security policies” Input “localhost” And click delete
Then use the http instead of https. It should work!
Two solutions worked for me:
1) Resetting Chrome settings by going to chrome://settings/resetProfileSettings
2) Accessing the notebook via http instead of https (remove the “s” in http) - I was able to access my notebook this way via Safari, but not Chrome as Chrome defaults to https
Five years later, you’re a life saver.
Chrome, and Secure Browsers on Chrome have a setting Privacy And Security -> More -> “Automatically use HTTPS Encryption”. You have to turn that off in settings.
If you tried to use http://< ip > : < port > and didn’t work, try this one: Clear your browser’s cache, then restart Jupiter.
Thanks @labeebee,worked for me on GCP instance 😃