The authz recorder is causing a lot of memory to be allocated, and is a
memory leak for websocket connections.
This change makes it opt-in on a per request basis (ontop of `isDev`).
To get the authz headers, use `Copy as cURL` on chrome and append the
header `x-authz-checks=true`.
Necessary for the frontend to be able to paginate easily. Cursor
pagination is good for fetching all events, but doesn't play very well
when a pagination component gets involved.
Adds support for `?offset=x` to the existing endpoint. The cursor-based
pagination (`?after_id=x`) is still supported. The two pagination modes
are mutually exclusive, and are documented as such. If both are
supplied, the request will be rejected.
Also adds a `total` property to the response that contains the full
count of items matching the filter. We already have indices in place so
I don't think this will impact performance (or we can revisit it before
GA).
Adds a new document for our ongoing efforts achieving 10k user scale. The content is caveated as work in progress, but represents what we have tested so far.
closes: https://github.com/coder/internal/issues/1025
## Description
Add missing provisionerd metrics to Prometheus documentation:
* `coderd_provisionerd_num_daemons`: The number of provisioner daemons.
* `coderd_provisionerd_workspace_build_timings_seconds`: The time taken
for a workspace to build.
Related to internal thread:
https://codercom.slack.com/archives/C07GRNNRW03/p1760642020583019
## Description
Follow-up from: https://github.com/coder/coder/pull/20305 to include a
note about `coder_workspace_tags` being cumulative and a new step to
validate the status of the prebuild provisioners.
Fix steps formatting.
## Description
Update the Prebuilds troubleshooting page to include a new section,
“Preventing prebuild queue contention (recommended)”, outlining a
best-practice configuration to prevent prebuild jobs from overwhelming
the provisioner queue.
This setup introduces a dedicated prebuild provisioner pool and has been
successfully tested internally in dogfood:
https://github.com/coder/dogfood/pull/201
Closes: https://github.com/coder/coder/issues/20241
This PR adds troubleshooting steps to guide Coder operators when they
suspect that prebuilds might have overwhelmed their deployments.
Closes https://github.com/coder/coder/issues/19490
---------
Co-authored-by: Susana Ferreira <susana@coder.com>
# Add API key allow_list for resource-scoped tokens
This PR adds support for API key allow lists, enabling tokens to be scoped to specific resources. The implementation:
1. Adds a new `allow_list` field to the `CreateTokenRequest` struct, allowing clients to specify resource-specific scopes when creating API tokens
2. Implements `APIAllowListTarget` type to represent resource targets in the format `<type>:<id>` with support for wildcards
3. Adds validation and normalization logic for allow lists to handle wildcards and deduplication
4. Integrates with RBAC by creating an `APIKeyEffectiveScope` that merges API key scopes with allow list restrictions
5. Updates API documentation and TypeScript types to reflect the new functionality
This feature enables creating tokens that are limited to specific resources (like workspaces or templates) by ID, making it possible to create more granular API tokens with limited access.
# Add API Key Scope Wildcards
This PR adds wildcard API key scopes (`resource:*`) for all RBAC resources to ensure every resource has a matching wildcard value. It also adds all individual `resource:action` scopes to the API documentation and TypeScript definitions.
The changes include:
- Adding a new database migration (000377) that adds wildcard API key scopes
- Updating the API documentation to include all available scopes
- Enhancing the scope generation scripts to include all resource wildcards
- Updating the TypeScript definitions to match the expanded scope list
These changes make creating API keys with comprehensive permissions for specific resource types easier.
Relates to https://github.com/coder/internal/issues/934
This PR provides a mechanism to filter provisioner jobs according to who
initiated the job.
This will be used to find pending prebuild jobs when prebuilds have
overwhelmed the provisioner job queue. They can then be canceled.
If prebuilds are overwhelming provisioners, the following steps will be
taken:
```bash
# pause prebuild reconciliation to limit provisioner queue pollution:
coder prebuilds pause
# cancel pending provisioner jobs to clear the queue
coder provisioner jobs list --initiator="prebuilds" --status="pending" | jq ... | xargs -n1 -I{} coder provisioner jobs cancel {}
# push a fixed template and wait for the import to complete
coder templates push ... # push a fixed template
# resume prebuild reconciliation
coder prebuilds resume
```
This interface differs somewhat from what was specified in the issue,
but still provides a mechanism that addresses the issue. The original
proposal was made by myself and this simpler implementation makes sense.
I might add a `--search` parameter in a follow-up if there is appetite
for it.
Potential follow ups:
* Support for this usage: `coder provisioner jobs list --search
"initiator:prebuilds status:pending"`
* Adding the same parameters to `coder provisioner jobs cancel` as a
convenience feature so that operators don't have to pipe through `jq`
and `xargs`
Audit Log entries can be deleted safely (with appropriate caveats), but
we don't specifically call this out in the docs.
---------
Signed-off-by: Danny Kopping <danny@coder.com>
---------
Co-authored-by: blink-so[bot] <211532188+blink-so[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Ben Potter <ben@coder.com>
Co-authored-by: Atif Ali <atif@coder.com>
# Add Composite API Key Scopes
This PR adds high-level composite API key scopes to simplify token creation with common permission sets:
- `coder:workspaces.create` - Create and update workspaces
- `coder:workspaces.operate` - Read and update workspaces
- `coder:workspaces.delete` - Read and delete workspaces
- `coder:workspaces.access` - Read, SSH, and connect to workspace applications
- `coder:templates.build` - Read templates and create/read files
- `coder:templates.author` - Full template management with insights
- `coder:apikeys.manage_self` - Manage your own API keys
These composite scopes are persisted in the database and expanded during authorization, providing a more intuitive way to grant permissions compared to the granular resource:action scopes.
Builds upon https://github.com/coder/coder/pull/19970
I got kinda carried away when I saw the extra stuff we could add in
here, so I went ahead and added it:
* User ID
* Organization IDs
* Roles
This technically duplicates functionality from `coder users show` but I
figure folks may find it useful.
# Canonicalize API Key Scopes
This PR introduces canonical API key scopes with a `coder:` namespace prefix to avoid collisions with low-level resource:action names. It:
1. Renames special API key scopes in the database:
- `all` → `coder:all`
- `application_connect` → `coder:application_connect`
2. Adds support for a new `scopes` field in the API key creation request, allowing multiple scopes to be specified while maintaining backward compatibility with the singular `scope` field.
3. Updates the API documentation to reflect these changes, including the new endpoint for listing public API key scopes.
4. Ensures backward compatibility by mapping between legacy and canonical scope names in relevant code paths.
# Add support for low-level API key scopes
This PR adds support for fine-grained API key scopes based on RBAC resource:action pairs. It includes:
1. A new endpoint `/api/v2/auth/scopes` to list all public low-level API key scopes
2. Generated constants in the SDK for all public scopes
3. Tests to verify scope validation during token creation
4. Updated API documentation to reflect the expanded scope options
The implementation allows users to create API keys with specific permissions like `workspace:read` or `template:use` instead of only the legacy `all` or `application_connect` scopes.
Fixes#19847
This addresses a long-standing gripe of mine: to get your logged in
username you would have to do
```bash
coder whoami | awk '{print $9}'
```
This allows you to do:
```
coder whoami -o json | jq -r '.username'
```
or
```
coder whoami -f table -c username
```
I ended up on the Coder Desktop docs page and thought half of it had disappeared, though it was actually tucked away behind a second page. This PR adds a next steps section to the first page that links there, as it seems very easy to miss right now.
Solves #15575
Adds OAuth access token revocation when unlinking external auth
provider. Due to revocation not being consistently implemented by
providers this is only best effort attempt. Unsuccessful revocation
won't influence link removal.