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A collection of ready-to-run Jupyter notebooks for learning and experimenting with the OpenVINO™ Toolkit. The notebooks provide an introduction to OpenVINO basics and teach developers how to leverage our API for optimized deep learning inference.
🚀 Checkout interactive GitHub pages application for navigation between OpenVINO™ Notebooks content: OpenVINO™ Notebooks at GitHub Pages
List of all notebooks is available in index file.
- Table of Contents
- đź“ť Installation Guide
- 🚀 Getting Started
- ⚙️ System Requirements
- đź’» Run the Notebooks
- 🧹 Cleaning Up
⚠️ Troubleshooting- 📚 Additional Resources
- 🧑‍💻 Contributors
- âť“ FAQ
OpenVINO Notebooks require Python and Git. To get started, select the guide for your operating system or environment:
Windows | Ubuntu | macOS | Red Hat | CentOS | Azure ML | Docker | Amazon SageMaker |
---|
Explore Jupyter notebooks using this page, select one related to your needs or give them all a try. Good Luck!
NOTE: The main branch of this repository was updated to support the new OpenVINO 2024.3 release. To upgrade to the new release version, please run pip install --upgrade -r requirements.txt
in your openvino_env
virtual environment. If you need to install for the first time, see the Installation Guide section below. If you wish to use the previous release version of OpenVINO, please checkout the 2024.2 branch. If you wish to use the previous Long Term Support (LTS) version of OpenVINO check out the 2023.3 branch.
If you need help, please start a GitHub Discussion.
If you run into issues, please check the troubleshooting section, FAQs or start a GitHub discussion.
Notebooks with and buttons can be run without installing anything. Binder and Google Colab are free online services with limited resources. For the best performance, please follow the Installation Guide and run the notebooks locally.
The notebooks run almost anywhere — your laptop, a cloud VM, or even a Docker container. The table below lists the supported operating systems and Python versions.
Supported Operating System | Python Version (64-bit) |
---|---|
Ubuntu 20.04 LTS, 64-bit | 3.8 - 3.11 |
Ubuntu 22.04 LTS, 64-bit | 3.8 - 3.11 |
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8, 64-bit | 3.8 - 3.11 |
CentOS 7, 64-bit | 3.8 - 3.11 |
macOS 10.15.x versions or higher | 3.8 - 3.11 |
Windows 10, 64-bit Pro, Enterprise or Education editions | 3.8 - 3.11 |
Windows Server 2016 or higher | 3.8 - 3.11 |
If you wish to launch only one notebook, like the Monodepth notebook, run the command below (from the repository root directory):
jupyter lab notebooks/vision-monodepth/vision-monodepth.ipynb
Launch Jupyter Lab with index README.md
file opened for easier navigation between notebooks directories and files. Run the following command from the repository root directory:
jupyter lab notebooks/README.md
Alternatively, in your browser select a notebook from the file browser in Jupyter Lab using the left sidebar. Each tutorial is located in a subdirectory within the notebooks
directory.
-
Shut Down Jupyter Kernel
To end your Jupyter session, press
Ctrl-c
. This will prompt you toShutdown this Jupyter server (y/[n])?
entery
and hitEnter
.
-
Deactivate Virtual Environment
To deactivate your virtualenv, simply run
deactivate
from the terminal window where you activatedopenvino_env
. This will deactivate your environment.To reactivate your environment, run
source openvino_env/bin/activate
on Linux oropenvino_env\Scripts\activate
on Windows, then typejupyter lab
orjupyter notebook
to launch the notebooks again.
-
Delete Virtual Environment (Optional)
To remove your virtual environment, simply delete the
openvino_env
directory:
-
On Linux and macOS:
rm -rf openvino_env
-
On Windows:
rmdir /s openvino_env
-
Remove
openvino_env
Kernel from Jupyterjupyter kernelspec remove openvino_env
If these tips do not solve your problem, please open a discussion topic or create an issue!
- To check some common installation problems, run
python check_install.py
. This script is located in the openvino_notebooks directory. Please run it after activating theopenvino_env
virtual environment. - If you get an
ImportError
, double-check that you installed the Jupyter kernel. If necessary, choose theopenvino_env
kernel from the Kernel->Change Kernel menu in Jupyter Lab or Jupyter Notebook. - If OpenVINO is installed globally, do not run installation commands in a terminal where
setupvars.bat
orsetupvars.sh
are sourced. - For Windows installation, it is recommended to use Command Prompt (
cmd.exe
), not PowerShell.
- OpenVINO Blog - a collection of technical articles with OpenVINO best practices, interesting use cases and tutorials.
- Awesome OpenVINO - a curated list of OpenVINO based AI projects.
- OpenVINO GenAI Samples - collection of OpenVINO GenAI API samples.
- Edge AI Reference Kit - pre-built components and code samples designed to accelerate the development and deployment of production-grade AI applications across various industries, such as retail, healthcare, and manufacturing.
- Open Model Zoo demos - console applications that provide templates to help implement specific deep learning inference scenarios. These applications show how to preprocess and postprocess data for model inference and organize processing pipelines.
- oneAPI-samples repository demonstrates the performance and productivity offered by oneAPI and its toolkits such as oneDNN in a multiarchitecture environment. OpenVINO™ toolkit takes advantage of the discrete GPUs using oneAPI, an open programming model for multi-architecture programming.
Made with contrib.rocks
.
- Which devices does OpenVINO support?
- What is the first CPU generation you support with OpenVINO?
- Are there any success stories about deploying real-world solutions with OpenVINO?
* Other names and brands may be claimed as the property of others.