The agents-access role previously granted chat permissions at user
scope, but chats are org-scoped objects. Rego skips user-level perms
when org_owner is set, making the grants invisible. Handler-level
band-aids used synthetic non-org-scoped objects as a workaround.
- Migrates agents-access from users.rbac_roles (site-level) to
organization_members.roles (org-scoped) via DB migration
- Redefines agents-access as a predefined org-scoped builtin role
alongside organization-admin, organization-auditor, etc., with
Member permissions granting chat create/read/update
- Excludes ResourceChat from OrgMemberPermissions so org membership
alone no longer grants chat access
- Fixes handler Authorize checks to use org-scoped objects with
semantically correct actions (ActionUpdate for message/tool operations)
- Grants org admins the ability to assign agents-access
Closes#24250
Fixes CODAGT-174
Note: this does not update the "Usage" endpoints. Tracked by CODAGT-161.
> 🤖
- Add `chat-access` built-in role granting chat CRUD at User scope
- Exclude `ResourceChat` from member, org member, and org service
account `allPermsExcept` calls
- Allow system, owner, and user-admin to assign the new role
- Migration auto-assigns role to users who have ever created a chat
- Update RBAC test matrix: `memberMe` denied, `chatAccessUser` allowed
**Breaking change**: Members without `chat-access` lose chat creation
ability. Migration covers existing chat creators. Members who have never
created a chat do not get this role automatically applied.
> 🤖 This PR was created by a Coder Agent and reviewed by me.
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.
The file cache was caching the `Unauthorized` errors if a user without
the right perms opened the file first. So all future opens would fail.
Now the cache always opens with a subject that can read files. And authz
is checked on the Acquire per user.
* chore: create type for unique role names
Using `string` was confusing when something should be combined with
org context, and when not to. Naming this new name, "RoleIdentifier"
Removes our pseudo rbac resources like `WorkspaceApplicationConnect` in favor of additional verbs like `ssh`. This is to make more intuitive permissions for building custom roles.
The source of truth is now `policy.go`
Just moved `rbac.Action` -> `policy.Action`. This is for the stacked PR to not have circular dependencies when doing autogen. Without this, the autogen can produce broken golang code, which prevents the autogen from compiling.
So just avoiding circular dependencies. Doing this in it's own PR to reduce LoC diffs in the primary PR, since this has 0 functional changes.
* chore: merge authorization contexts
Instead of 2 auth contexts from apikey and dbauthz, merge them to
just use dbauthz. It is annoying to have two.
* fixup authorization reference
* chore: add /v2 to import module path
go mod requires semantic versioning with versions greater than 1.x
This was a mechanical update by running:
```
go install github.com/marwan-at-work/mod/cmd/mod@latest
mod upgrade
```
Migrate generated files to import /v2
* Fix gen
feat: Add initial AuthzQuerier implementation
- Adds package database/dbauthz that adds a database.Store implementation where each method goes through AuthZ checks
- Implements all database.Store methods on AuthzQuerier
- Updates and fixes unit tests where required
- Updates coderd initialization to use AuthzQuerier if codersdk.ExperimentAuthzQuerier is enabled
* chore: Implement standard rbac.Subject to be reused everywhere
An rbac subject is created in multiple spots because of the way we
expand roles, scopes, etc. This difference in use creates a list
of arguments which is unwieldy.
Use of the expander interface lets us conform to a single subject
in every case
* feat: Member roles are implied and never exlpicitly added
* Rename "GetAllUserRoles" to "GetAuthorizationRoles"
* feat: Add migration to remove implied roles
* rename user auth role middleware
Abstracting coderd into an interface added misdirection because
the interface was never intended to be fulfilled outside of a single
implementation.
This lifts the abstraction, and attaches all handlers to a root struct
named `*coderd.API`.