The slices package provides type-safe generic replacements for the
old typed sort convenience functions. The codebase already uses
slices.Sort in 43 call sites; this finishes the migration for the
remaining 29.
- sort.Strings(x) -> slices.Sort(x)
- sort.Float64s(x) -> slices.Sort(x)
- sort.StringsAreSorted(x) -> slices.IsSorted(x)
WaitBuffer is a thread-safe io.Writer that supports blocking until
accumulated output matches a substring or custom predicate. It
replaces ad-hoc safeBuffer/syncWriter types and time.Sleep-based
poll loops in tests with signal-driven waits.
- WaitFor/WaitForNth/WaitForCond for blocking on output
- Replace custom buffer types in cli/sync_test.go and
provisionersdk/agent_test.go
- Convert time.Sleep poll loops to require.Eventually/require.Never
in cli/ssh_test.go, coderd/activitybump_test.go,
coderd/workspaceagentsrpc_test.go, workspaceproxy_test.go, and
scaletest tests
Fixescoder/internal#642
We recently fixed Windows specific flakes for this test and reenabled
it. It then failed intermittently due to context deadline expiration.
The temporary path created on Windows contained invalid characters. This
resulted in a silent startup script failure on Windows. The test then
fruitlessly waited until context expiration. The test now uses a valid
path on Windows.
relates to #21335
Enables the agent socket by default and updates docs to strike references to having to enable it.
The PRs in this stack change the MCP server that Tasks use to update their status to rely on the agent socket, rather than directly dialing Coderd with the agent token.
Default disable was a reasonable default when it was only used for the experimental script ordering features, but now that we want to use it for Tasks, it should be default on.
Replace the external moby/moby/pkg/namesgenerator dependency with an
internal implementation using gofakeit/v7. The moby package has ~25k
unique name combinations, and with its retry parameter only adds a
random digit 0-9, giving ~250k possibilities. In parallel tests, this
has led to collisions (flakes).
The new internal API at coderd/util/namesgenerator eliminates the
external dependnecy and offers functions with explicit uniqueness
guarantees. This PR also consolidates fragmented name generation in a
few places to use the new package.
| Old (moby/moby) | New |
|-------------------------------------|------------------------|
| namesgenerator.GetRandomName(0) | NameWith("_") |
| namesgenerator.GetRandomName(>0) | NameDigitWith("_") |
| testutil.GetRandomName(t) | UniqueName() |
| testutil.GetRandomNameHyphenated(t) | UniqueNameWith("-") |
namesgenerator package API:
- NameWith(delim): random name, not unique
- NameDigitWith(delim): random name with 1-9 suffix, not unique
- UniqueName(): guaranteed unique via atomic counter
- UniqueNameWith(delim): unique with custom delimiter
Names continue to be docker style `[adjective][delim][surname]`. Unique
names are truncated to 32 characters (preserving the numeric suffix) to
fit common name length limits in Coder.
Related test flakes:
https://github.com/coder/internal/issues/1212https://github.com/coder/internal/issues/118https://github.com/coder/internal/issues/1068
Fixes all our Go file imports to match the preferred spec that we've _mostly_ been using. For example:
```
import (
"context"
"time"
"github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus"
"golang.org/x/xerrors"
"gopkg.in/natefinch/lumberjack.v2"
"cdr.dev/slog/v3"
"github.com/coder/coder/v2/codersdk/agentsdk"
"github.com/coder/serpent"
)
```
3 groups: standard library, 3rd partly libs, Coder libs.
This PR makes the change across the codebase. The PR in the stack above modifies our formatting to maintain this state of affairs, and is a separate PR so it's possible to review that one in detail.
Upgrades to slog v3 which includes a small, but backward incompatible API change to the acceptible call arguments when logging. This change allows us to verify via compile time type checking that arguments are correct and won't cause a panic, as was possible in slog v1, which this replaces (v2 was tagged but never used in coder/coder).
It also updates dependencies that also use slog and were updated.
I've left the `aibridge` dependency as a commit SHA, under the assumption that the team there (cc @pawbana @dannykopping ) will tag and update the dependency soon and on their own schedule.
Other dependencies, I pushed new tags.
Fixes https://github.com/coder/internal/issues/1119
## Description
The `CacheTFProviders` function in `testutil/terraform_cache.go` was
only available on Linux and macOS due to the `//go:build linux ||
darwin` build tag. This caused a compile error on Windows when
`enterprise/coderd/workspaces_test.go` tried to call it:
```
enterprise\coderd\workspaces_test.go:3403:28: undefined: testutil.CacheTFProviders
```
## Changes
1. Added `testutil/terraform_cache_windows.go` with a Windows-specific
stub implementation that returns an empty string
2. Updated `downloadProviders` helper in
`enterprise/coderd/workspaces_test.go` to handle empty paths gracefully
## Behavior
- On Linux/macOS: Terraform providers are cached as before
- On Windows: Provider caching is skipped, tests download providers
normally during `terraform init`
## Testing
This should fix the Windows nightly gauntlet failure. The test will
still run on Windows, just without provider caching optimization.
Co-authored-by: blink-so[bot] <211532188+blink-so[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Fixes flaky `TestWorkspaceTagsTerraform` and
`TestWorkspaceTemplateParamsChange` tests that were failing with
`connection reset by peer` errors when downloading the coder/coder
provider.
This applies the same caching solution which was done in
https://github.com/coder/coder/pull/17373
1. Extracts provider caching logic into `testutil/terraform_cache.go`
2. Updates TestProvision to use the shared caching helpers
3. Updates enterprise workspace tests to use the shared caching helpers
The cache is persisted at `~/.cache/coderv2-test/` and automatically
cached between CI runs via existing GitHub Actions cache setup.
Closes https://github.com/coder/internal/issues/607
This PR adds a readiness wait to OAuth2 metadata endpoint tests to avoid rare races with server startup. Instead of immediately making HTTP requests, the tests now use `testutil.Eventually` to retry the requests until they succeed, with a short interval between attempts. This helps prevent flaky tests that might fail due to timing issues during server initialization.
Fixes: https://github.com/coder/internal/issues/996
Fixes flakes like the following:
```
workspaces_test.go:4938:
Error Trace: /home/runner/work/coder/coder/coderd/coderdtest/coderdtest.go:1279
/home/runner/work/coder/coder/coderd/workspaces_test.go:4938
/home/runner/work/coder/coder/coderd/workspaces_test.go:5044
Error: Received unexpected error:
POST http://127.0.0.1:42597/api/v2/users/me/workspaces: unexpected status code 409: Workspace "romantic-mcclintock" already exists.
name: This value is already in use and should be unique.
Test: TestWorkspaceCreateWithImplicitPreset/SinglePresetWithParameters
```
https://github.com/coder/coder/actions/runs/17142665868/job/48633017007?pr=19464
Which are caused by insufficient randomness when creating multiple
workspaces with random names. Two words is not enough to avoid flakes.
We have a `testutil.GetRandomName` function that appends a monotonically
increasing integer, but this alternative function that uses hyphens
doesn't add that integer. This PR fixes that by just
`testutil.GetRandomName`
This PR ensures that waits on channels will time out according to the
test context, rather than waiting indefinitely. This should alleviate
the panic seen in https://github.com/coder/internal/issues/645 and, if
the deadlock recurs, allow the test to be retried automatically in CI.
Closes https://github.com/coder/vscode-coder/issues/447
Closes https://github.com/coder/jetbrains-coder/issues/543
Closes https://github.com/coder/coder-jetbrains-toolbox/issues/21
This PR adds Coder Connect support to `coder ssh --stdio`.
When connecting to a workspace, if `--force-new-tunnel` is not passed, the CLI will first do a DNS lookup for `<agent>.<workspace>.<owner>.<hostname-suffix>`. If an IP address is returned, and it's within the Coder service prefix, the CLI will not create a new tailnet connection to the workspace, and instead dial the SSH server running on port 22 on the workspace directly over TCP.
This allows IDE extensions to use the Coder Connect tunnel, without requiring any modifications to the extensions themselves.
Additionally, `using_coder_connect` is added to the `sshNetworkStats` file, which the VS Code extension (and maybe Jetbrains?) will be able to read, and indicate to the user that they are using Coder Connect.
One advantage of this approach is that running `coder ssh --stdio` on an offline workspace with Coder Connect enabled will have the CLI wait for the workspace to build, the agent to connect (and optionally, for the startup scripts to finish), before finally connecting using the Coder Connect tunnel.
As a result, `coder ssh --stdio` has the overhead of looking up the workspace and agent, and checking if they are running. On my device, this meant `coder ssh --stdio <workspace>` was approximately a second slower than just connecting to the workspace directly using `ssh <workspace>.coder` (I would assume anyone serious about their Coder Connect usage would know to just do the latter anyway).
To ensure this doesn't come at a significant performance cost, I've also benchmarked this PR.
<details>
<summary>Benchmark</summary>
## Methodology
All tests were completed on `dev.coder.com`, where a Linux workspace running in AWS `us-west1` was created.
The machine running Coder Desktop (the 'client') was a Windows VM running in the same AWS region and VPC as the workspace.
To test the performance of specifically the SSH connection, a port was forwarded between the client and workspace using:
```
ssh -p 22 -L7001:localhost:7001 <host>
```
where `host` was either an alias for an SSH ProxyCommand that called `coder ssh`, or a Coder Connect hostname.
For latency, [`tcping`](https://www.elifulkerson.com/projects/tcping.php) was used against the forwarded port:
```
tcping -n 100 localhost 7001
```
For throughput, [`iperf3`](https://iperf.fr/iperf-download.php) was used:
```
iperf3 -c localhost -p 7001
```
where an `iperf3` server was running on the workspace on port 7001.
## Test Cases
### Testcase 1: `coder ssh` `ProxyCommand` that bicopies from Coder Connect
This case tests the implementation in this PR, such that we can write a config like:
```
Host codercliconnect
ProxyCommand /path/to/coder ssh --stdio workspace
```
With Coder Connect enabled, `ssh -p 22 -L7001:localhost:7001 codercliconnect` will use the Coder Connect tunnel. The results were as follows:
**Throughput, 10 tests, back to back:**
- Average throughput across all tests: 788.20 Mbits/sec
- Minimum average throughput: 731 Mbits/sec
- Maximum average throughput: 871 Mbits/sec
- Standard Deviation: 38.88 Mbits/sec
**Latency, 100 RTTs:**
- Average: 0.369ms
- Minimum: 0.290ms
- Maximum: 0.473ms
### Testcase 2: `ssh` dialing Coder Connect directly without a `ProxyCommand`
This is what we assume to be the 'best' way to use Coder Connect
**Throughput, 10 tests, back to back:**
- Average throughput across all tests: 789.50 Mbits/sec
- Minimum average throughput: 708 Mbits/sec
- Maximum average throughput: 839 Mbits/sec
- Standard Deviation: 39.98 Mbits/sec
**Latency, 100 RTTs:**
- Average: 0.369ms
- Minimum: 0.267ms
- Maximum: 0.440ms
### Testcase 3: `coder ssh` `ProxyCommand` that creates its own Tailnet connection in-process
This is what normally happens when you run `coder ssh`:
**Throughput, 10 tests, back to back:**
- Average throughput across all tests: 610.20 Mbits/sec
- Minimum average throughput: 569 Mbits/sec
- Maximum average throughput: 664 Mbits/sec
- Standard Deviation: 27.29 Mbits/sec
**Latency, 100 RTTs:**
- Average: 0.335ms
- Minimum: 0.262ms
- Maximum: 0.452ms
## Analysis
Performing a two-tailed, unpaired t-test against the throughput of testcases 1 and 2, we find a P value of `0.9450`. This suggests the difference between the data sets is not statistically significant. In other words, there is a 94.5% chance that the difference between the data sets is due to chance.
## Conclusion
From the t-test, and by comparison to the status quo (regular `coder ssh`, which uses gvisor, and is noticeably slower), I think it's safe to say any impact on throughput or latency by the `ProxyCommand` performing a bicopy against Coder Connect is negligible. Users are very much unlikely to run into performance issues as a result of using Coder Connect via `coder ssh`, as implemented in this PR.
Less scientifically, I ran these same tests on my home network with my Sydney workspace, and both throughput and latency were consistent across testcases 1 and 2.
</details>
Addresses https://github.com/coder/internal/issues/322.
This PR starts caching Terraform providers used by `TestProvision` in
`provisioner/terraform/provision_test.go`. The goal is to improve the
reliability of this test by cutting down on the number of network calls
to external services. It leverages GitHub Actions cache, which [on depot
runners is persisted for 14 days by
default](https://depot.dev/docs/github-actions/overview#cache-retention-policy).
Other than the aforementioned `TestProvision`, I couldn't find any other
tests which depend on external terraform providers.
Adds a `coder exp mcp` command which will start a local MCP server
listening on stdio with the following capabilities:
* Show logged in user (`coder whoami`)
* List workspaces (`coder list`)
* List templates (`coder templates list`)
* Start a workspace (`coder start`)
* Stop a workspace (`coder stop`)
* Fetch a single workspace (no direct CLI analogue)
* Execute a command inside a workspace (`coder exp rpty`)
* Report the status of a task (currently a no-op, pending task support)
This can be tested as follows:
```
# Start a local Coder server.
./scripts/develop.sh
# Start a workspace. Currently, creating workspaces is not supported.
./scripts/coder-dev.sh create -t docker --yes
# Add the MCP to your Claude config.
claude mcp add coder ./scripts/coder-dev.sh exp mcp
# Tell Claude to do something Coder-related. You may need to nudge it to use the tools.
claude 'start a docker workspace and tell me what version of python is installed'
```
- Update go.mod to use Go 1.24.1
- Update GitHub Actions setup-go action to use Go 1.24.1
- Fix linting issues with golangci-lint by:
- Updating to golangci-lint v1.57.1 (more compatible with Go 1.24.1)
🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.ai/code)
Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
---------
Co-authored-by: Claude <claude@anthropic.com>
This change adds support for workspace app auditing.
To avoid audit log spam, we introduce the concept of app audit sessions.
An audit session is unique per workspace app, user, ip, user agent and
http status code. The sessions are stored in a separate table from audit
logs to allow use-case specific optimizations. Sessions are ephemeral
and the table does not function as a log.
The logic for auditing is placed in the DBTokenProvider for workspace
apps so that wsproxies are included.
This is the final change affecting the API fo #15139.
Updates #15139
This PR:
- Reduces test parallelism on Windows in CI
- Unifies wait intervals on Windows with Linux and macOS. Previously we
had custom intervals for Windows to reduce test flakiness on smaller CI
workers, but we don't run tests on small CI workers anymore. Due to how
our CI file is defined, forks run tests on small CI machines, but I'm
not sure if the different intervals actually help or whether that's a
heuristic that happened to fix issues on a particular day and was it
ever reevaluated. I propose we make the change and if someone complains,
revert it.
In particular, reduced test parallelism seems to actually help: I was
able to run Windows tests 5 times in a row without flakes. Not sure if
that's going to fix the problem long term, but it seems worth trying.
- Adds `testutil.GoleakOptions` and consolidates existing options to
this location
- Pre-emptively adds required ignore for this Dependabot PR to pass CI
https://github.com/coder/coder/pull/16066
Refactors our use of `slogtest` to instantiate a "standard logger" across most of our tests. This standard logger incorporates https://github.com/coder/slog/pull/217 to also ignore database query canceled errors by default, which are a source of low-severity flakes.
Any test that has set non-default `slogtest.Options` is left alone. In particular, `coderdtest` defaults to ignoring all errors. We might consider revisiting that decision now that we have better tools to target the really common flaky Error logs on shutdown.
- Assert rbac in fake notifications enqueuer
- Move fake notifications enqueuer to separate notificationstest package
- Update dbauthz rbac policy to allow provisionerd and autostart to create and read notification messages
- Update tests as required
Joins in fields like `username`, `avatar_url`, `organization_name`,
`template_name` to `workspaces` via a **view**.
The view must be maintained moving forward, but this prevents needing to
add RBAC permissions to fetch related workspace fields.
Fixes#13910
Adds testutil.GetRandomName that replaces namesgenerator.GetRandomName but instead appends a monotonically increasing integer instead of a number between 1 and 10.
Adds support to Coordination to call SetAllPeersLost() when it is closed. This ensure that when we disconnect from a Coordinator, we set all peers lost.
This covers CoderSDK (CLI client) and Agent. Next PR will cover MultiAgent (notably, `wsproxy`).