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.
Migrates us to `coder/websocket` v1.8.12 rather than `nhooyr/websocket` on an older version.
Works around https://github.com/coder/websocket/issues/504 by adding an explicit test for `xerrors.Is(err, io.EOF)` where we were previously getting `io.EOF` from the netConn.
Addresses #14734.
This PR wires up `tunnel.go` to a `tailnet.Conn` via the new `/tailnet` endpoint, with all the necessary controllers such that a VPN connection can be started, stopped and inspected via the CoderVPN protocol.
fixes#14881
Our handlers for streaming logs don't read from the websocket. We don't allow the client to send us any data, but the websocket library we use requires reading from the websocket to properly handle pings and closing. Not doing so can [can cause the websocket to hang on write](https://github.com/coder/websocket/issues/405), leaking go routines which were noticed in #14881.
This fixes the issue, and in process refactors our log streaming to a encoder/decoder package which provides generic types for sending JSON over websocket.
I'd also like for us to upgrade to the latest https://github.com/coder/websocket but we should also upgrade our tailscale fork before doing so to avoid including two copies of the websocket library.