Solves https://github.com/coder/coder/issues/15096
This is a slight rework/refactor of the earlier PRs from @dannykopping
and @Emyrk:
- https://github.com/coder/coder/pull/15669
- https://github.com/coder/coder/pull/15684
- https://github.com/coder/coder/pull/17596
Rather than having a per-app CORS behaviour setting and additionally a
template level setting for ports, this PR adds a single template level
CORS behaviour setting that is then used by all apps/ports for
workspaces created from that template.
The main changes are in `proxy.go` and `request.go` to:
a) get the CORS behaviour setting from the template
b) have `HandleSubdomain` bypass the CORS middleware handler if the
selected behaviour is `passthru`
c) in `proxyWorkspaceApp`, do not modify the response if the selected
behaviour is `passthru`
<!-- This is an auto-generated comment: release notes by coderabbit.ai
-->
## Summary by CodeRabbit
* **New Features**
* Added support for configuring CORS behavior ("simple" or "passthru")
at the template level for all shared ports.
* Introduced a new "CORS Behavior" setting in the template creation and
settings forms.
* API endpoints and responses now include the optional `cors_behavior`
property for templates.
* Workspace apps and proxy now honor the specified CORS behavior,
enabling conditional CORS middleware application.
* Enhanced workspace app tests with comprehensive scenarios covering
CORS behaviors and authentication states.
* **Bug Fixes**
* None.
* **Documentation**
* Updated API and admin documentation to describe the new
`cors_behavior` property and its usage.
* Added examples and schema references for CORS behavior in relevant API
docs.
* **Tests**
* Extended automated tests to cover different CORS behavior scenarios
for templates and workspace apps.
* **Chores**
* Updated audit logging to track changes to the `cors_behavior` field on
templates.
<!-- end of auto-generated comment: release notes by coderabbit.ai -->
---------
Signed-off-by: Callum Styan <callumstyan@gmail.com>
- 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>
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.
Apptest requires a port without a listening server to test failure
cases. This port was chosen and had a chance of actually being
provisioned. To prevent this accident, a port <1k is chosen,
since those will never be allocated.
* fix: allow ports in wildcard url configuration
This just forwards the port to the ui that generates urls.
Our existing parsing + regex already supported ports for
subdomain app requests.
- Adds a new query BatchUpdateLastUsedAt
- Adds calls to BatchUpdateLastUsedAt in app stats handler upon flush
- Passes a stats flush channel to apptest setup scaffolding and updates unit tests to assert modifications to LastUsedAt.
* 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
The problem is that the headers get doubled up (not overwritten) and
browsers do not like multiple values for the allowed origin even though
it appears the spec allows for it.
We could prefer the application's headers instead of ours but since we
control OPTIONS I think preferring ours will by the more consistent
experience and also aligns with the original RFC.