Removes the coder_secret Terraform integration: the data.coder_secret
consumption path through provisionerdserver → provisioner.proto →
provisioner/terraform, the dynamic-parameter secret-requirement
validation, and the workspace-update / resolve-autostart surfaces that
depended on it. This is being done due to a product/feature direction
change (see PLAT-243). User-secret CRUD (DB, REST, CLI, UI, telemetry, audit)
and the agent-manifest secret-injection path are untouched.
The provisionerd API is bumped from v1.17 to v1.18 rather than rolled
back: v1.17 shipped in v2.33.x, so user_secrets field numbers are
reserved and the changelog documents both versions.
Generated with assistance from Coder Agents.
Closes https://github.com/coder/coder/issues/13112
**Breaking Change**: Removed status code `StatusNotModified` when no
diffs occur in a patch. Now the patch is always applied and a template
is always returned.
Adds structured `secret_requirements` to dynamic parameter responses and
enforces missing required secrets during workspace start.
Stop, delete, and tag rendering paths skip secret requirement
enforcement so unmet secrets do not prevent cleanup. The SDK, generated
API docs/types, and backend render/resolver/wsbuilder tests are updated
for the new contract.
Relates to https://github.com/coder/internal/issues/1252
When a workspace with a TaskID hits its deadline, use
BuildReasonTaskAutoPause instead of BuildReasonAutostop. This allows
downstream systems to distinguish between regular autostop and task
workspace pauses.
Created by Mux using Opus 4.5.
This PR adds some metrics to help identify job enqueue rates and
latencies. This work was initiated as a way to help reduce the cost of
the observation/measurement itself for autostart scaletests, which
impacts our ability to identify/reason about the load caused by
autostart. See: https://github.com/coder/internal/issues/1209
I've extended the metrics here to account for regular user initiated
builds, prebuilds, autostarts, etc. IMO there is still the question here
of whether we want to include or need the `transition` label, which is
only present on workspace builds. Including it does lead to an increase
in cardinality, and in the case of the histogram (when not using native
histograms) that's at least a few extra series for every bucket. We
could remove the transition label there but keep it on the counter.
Additionally, the histogram is currently observing latencies for other
jobs, such as template builds/version imports, those do not have a
transition type associated with them.
Tested briefly in a workspace, can see metric values like the following:
-
`coderd_workspace_builds_enqueued_total{build_reason="autostart",provisioner_type="terraform",status="success",transition="start"}
1`
-
`coderd_provisioner_job_queue_wait_seconds_bucket{build_reason="autostart",job_type="workspace_build",provisioner_type="terraform",transition="start",le="0.025"}
1`
---------
Signed-off-by: Callum Styan <callumstyan@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
AI agents report status via patchWorkspaceAgentAppStatus, but this wasn't
extending workspace deadlines. This prevented proper task auto-pause behavior,
causing tasks to pause mid-execution when there were no human connections.
Now we call ActivityBumpWorkspace when agents report status, using the same
logic as SSH/IDE connections. We bump when transitioning to or from the working
state.
Closescoder/internal#1251
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.
Provisioner steps broken into smaller granular actions.
Changes:
- `ExtractArchive` moved to `init` request (was in `configure`)
- Writing `tfstate` moved to `plan` (was in `configure`)
- Moved most plan/apply outputs to `GraphComplete`
We recently made a change to the `wsbuilder` to handle task related
logic. Our test coverage for the lifecycle executor didn't handle this
scenario and so we missed that it had insufficient permissions.
This PR adds `Update` and `Read` permissions for `Task`s in the
lifecycle executor, as well as an autostart/autostop test tailored to
task workspaces to verify the change.
---
Anthropic's Claude Sonnet 4.5 Thinking was involved in writing the tests
This test still flakes occasionally, see
https://github.com/coder/internal/issues/954#issuecomment-3237154735
The cause appears to be related to the assignment of `time.Now()` as the
`LastSeenAt` time when creating a provisioner which can flake with the
calculated scheduled next autostart and the code to set then
`require.Eventually` the updated provisioner LastSeenAt.
Instead we should simply calculate all time values for the stale portion
of the test based on the provisioners LastSeenAt value to avoid such
issues.
Signed-off-by: Callum Styan <callumstyan@gmail.com>
The flake here had two causes:
1. related to usage of time.Now() in MustWaitForProvisionersAvailable
and
2. the fact that UpdateProvisionerLastSeenAt can not use a time that is
further in the past than the current LastSeenAt time
Previously the test here was calling
`coderdtest.MustWaitForProvisionersAvailable` which was using `time.Now`
rather than the next tick time like the real `hasProvisionersAvailable`
function does. Additionally, when using `UpdateProvisionerLastSeenAt`
the underlying db query enforces that the time we're trying to set
`LastSeenAt` to cannot be older than the current value.
I was able to reliably reproduce the flake by executing both the
`UpdateProvisionerLastSeenAt` call and `tickCh <- next` in their own
goroutines, the former with a small sleep to reliably ensure we'd
trigger the autobuild before we set the `LastSeenAt` time. That's when I
also noticed that `coderdtest.MustWaitForProvisionersAvailable` was
using `time.Now` instead of the tick time. When I updated that function
to take in a tick time + added a 2nd call to
`UpdateProvisionerLastSeenAt` to set an original non-stale time, we
could then never get the test to pass because the later call to set the
stale time would not actually modify `LastSeenAt`. On top of that,
calling the provisioner daemons closer in the middle of the function
doesn't really do anything of value in this test.
**The fix for the flake is to keep the go routines, ensuring there would
be a flake if there was not a relevant fix, but to include the fix which
is to ensure that we explicitly wait for the provisioner to be stale
before passing the time to `tickCh`.**
---------
Signed-off-by: Callum Styan <callumstyan@gmail.com>
## Description
This PR ensures that prebuilt workspaces are properly excluded from the
lifecycle executor and treated as a separate class of workspaces, fully
managed by the prebuild reconciliation loop.
It introduces two lifecycle guarantees:
* When a prebuilt workspace is created (i.e., when the workspace build
completes), all lifecycle-related fields are unset, ensuring the
workspace does not participate in TTL, autostop, autostart, dormancy, or
auto-deletion logic.
* When a prebuilt workspace is claimed, it transitions into a regular
user workspace. At this point, all lifecycle fields are correctly
populated according to template-level configurations, allowing the
workspace to be managed by the lifecycle executor as expected.
## Changes
* Prebuilt workspaces now have all lifecycle-relevant fields unset
during creation
* When a prebuild is claimed:
* Lifecycle fields are set based on template and workspace level
configurations. This ensures a clean transition into the standard
workspace lifecycle flow.
* Updated lifecycle-related SQL update queries to explicitly exclude
prebuilt workspaces.
## Relates
Related issue: https://github.com/coder/coder/issues/18898
To reduce the scope of this PR and make the review process more
manageable, the original implementation has been split into the
following focused PRs:
* https://github.com/coder/coder/pull/19259
* https://github.com/coder/coder/pull/19263
* https://github.com/coder/coder/pull/19264
* https://github.com/coder/coder/pull/19265
These PRs should be considered in conjunction with this one to
understand the complete set of lifecycle separation changes for prebuilt
workspaces.
PProf labels segment the code into groups for determing the source of
cpu/memory profiles. Since the web server and background jobs share a
lot of the same code (eg wsbuilder), it helps to know if the load is
user induced, or background job based.
- Adds a query for counting managed agent workspace builds between two
timestamps
- The "Actual" field in the feature entitlement for managed agents is
now populated with the value read from the database
- The wsbuilder package now validates AI agent usage against the limit
when a license is installed
Closescoder/internal#777
## Description
This PR updates the lifecycle executor to explicitly exclude prebuilt
workspaces from being considered for lifecycle operations such as
`autostart`, `autostop`, `dormancy`, `default TTL` and `failure TTL`.
Prebuilt workspaces (i.e., those owned by the prebuild system user) are
handled separately by the prebuild reconciliation loop. Including them
in the lifecycle executor could lead to unintended behavior such as
incorrect scheduling or state transitions.
## Changes
* Updated the lifecycle executor query
`GetWorkspacesEligibleForTransition` to exclude workspaces with
`owner_id = 'c42fdf75-3097-471c-8c33-fb52454d81c0'` (prebuilds).
* Added tests to verify prebuilt workspaces are not considered in:
* Autostop
* Autostart
* Default TTL
* Dormancy
* Failure TTL
Fixes: https://github.com/coder/coder/issues/18740
Related to: https://github.com/coder/coder/issues/18658
`wsbuilder` hits the file cache when running validation. This solution is imperfect, but by first sorting workspaces by their template version id, the cache hit rate should improve.
# What does this do?
This does parameter validation for dynamic parameters in `wsbuilder`. All input parameters are validated in `coder/coder` before being sent to terraform.
The heart of this PR is [`ResolveParameters`](https://github.com/coder/coder/blob/b65001e89c0577199a8e470c138c51e91cf2350c/coderd/dynamicparameters/resolver.go#L30-L30).
# What else changes?
`wsbuilder` now needs to load the terraform files into memory to succeed. This does add a larger memory requirement to workspace builds.
# Future work
- Sort autostart handling workspaces by template version id. So workspaces with the same template version only load the terraform files once from the db, and store them in the cache.
Fixes https://github.com/coder/coder/issues/17840
NOTE: calling this out as a breaking change so that it is highly visible
in the changelog.
* CLI: Modifies `coder update` to stop the workspace if already running.
* UI: Modifies "update" button to always stop the workspace if already
running.
Dynamic params skip parameter validation in coder/coder.
This is because conditional parameters cannot be validated
with the static parameters in the database.
- 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>
Fixes https://github.com/coder/coder/issues/9775
When a workspace's TTL is removed, and the workspace is running, the
deadline is removed from the workspace.
This also modifies the frontend to not show a confirmation dialog when
the change is to remove autostop.
- 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
When Coder is ran in High Availability mode, each Coder instance has a
lifecycle executor. These lifecycle executors are all trying to do the
same work, and whilst transactions saves us from this causing an issue,
we are still doing extra work that could be prevented.
This PR adds a `TryAcquireLock` call for each attempted workspace
transition, meaning two Coder instances shouldn't duplicate effort.
Relates to https://github.com/coder/coder/issues/15082
Further to https://github.com/coder/coder/pull/15429, this reduces the
amount of false-positives returned by the 'is eligible for autostart'
part of the query. We achieve this by calculating the 'next start at'
time of the workspace, storing it in the database, and using it in our
`GetWorkspacesEligibleForTransition` query.
The prior implementation of the 'is eligible for autostart' query would
return _all_ workspaces that at some point in the future _might_ be
eligible for autostart. This now ensures we only return workspaces that
_should_ be eligible for autostart.
We also now pass `currentTick` instead of `t` to the
`GetWorkspacesEligibleForTransition` query as otherwise we'll have one
round of workspaces that are skipped by `isEligibleForTransition` due to
`currentTick` being a truncated version of `t`.
- Refactors `checkProvisioners` into `db2sdk.MatchedProvisioners`
- Adds a separate RBAC subject just for reading provisioner daemons
- Adds matched provisioners information to additional endpoints relating to
workspace builds and templates
-Updates existing unit tests for above endpoints
-Adds API endpoint for matched provisioners of template dry-run job
-Updates CLI to show warning when creating/starting/stopping/deleting
workspaces for which no provisoners are available
---------
Co-authored-by: Danny Kopping <danny@coder.com>
- 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
Before db_metrics were all or nothing. Now `InTx` metrics are always recorded, and query metrics are opt in.
Adds instrumentation & logging around serialization failures in the database.
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.