Ben Potter 5bc668aa4d feat: add 1password module under bpmct namespace (#824)
Adds a 1Password module under the `bpmct` namespace.

## What it does

Installs the [1Password CLI](https://developer.1password.com/docs/cli/)
(`op`) into Coder workspaces at startup. Two auth paths:

- **Service account token** — set `service_account_token` and
`OP_SERVICE_ACCOUNT_TOKEN` is injected automatically. Fully headless.
- **Personal account** — set `account_address`, `account_email`,
`account_secret_key` to pre-register the account. User runs `op signin`
in their terminal.

Optionally installs the [1Password VS Code
extension](https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=1Password.op-vscode)
(`1Password.op-vscode`) for code-server and VS Code with
`install_vscode_extension = true`.

Supports `pre_install_script` and `post_install_script` for custom
orchestration.

## What's included

- `registry/bpmct/` — new namespace (Ben Potter, community)
- `registry/bpmct/modules/1password/` — the module (`main.tf`, `run.sh`,
`README.md`)
- `.icons/1password.svg` — 1Password logo from Simple Icons

## Tested

Spun up a dev Coder instance, pushed the template with a real 1Password
service account token, created a workspace, and confirmed:

- `op` CLI installs and authenticates
- `op vault list` returns vaults
- `1Password.op-vscode` extension installs in code-server

---------

Co-authored-by: DevCats <christofer@coder.com>
2026-04-01 18:38:27 +00:00
2026-01-08 12:11:02 -06:00
2025-06-02 18:42:27 -05:00
2025-11-27 12:00:04 +05:00
2025-08-27 21:02:24 -05:00
2025-04-07 09:36:43 -04:00

Coder Registry

Registry SiteCoder OSSCoder DocsOfficial Discord

Health

Coder Registry is a community-driven platform for extending your Coder workspaces. Publish reusable Terraform as Coder Modules for users all over the world.

Note

The Coder Registry repo will be updated to support Coder Templates in the coming weeks. You can currently find all official templates in the official coder/coder repo, under the examples/templates directory.

Overview

Coder is built on HashiCorp's open-source Terraform language to provide developers an easy, declarative way to define the infrastructure for their remote development environments. Coder-flavored versions of Terraform allow you to mix in reusable Terraform snippets to add integrations with other popular development tools, such as JetBrains, Cursor, or Visual Studio Code.

Simply add the correct import snippet, along with any data dependencies, and your workspace can start using the new functionality immediately.

Coder Agent Bar

More information about Coder Modules can be found here, while more information about Coder Templates can be found here.

Getting started

The easiest way to discover new modules and templates is by visiting the official Coder Registry website. The website is a full mirror of the Coder Registry repo, and it is where .tar versions of the various resources can be downloaded from, for use within your Coder deployment.

Note that while Coder has a baseline set of requirements for allowing an external PR to be published, Coder cannot vouch for the validity or functionality of a resource until that resource has been flagged with the verified status. All modules under the Coder namespace are automatically verified.

Getting started with modules

To get started with a module, navigate to that module's page in either the registry site, or the main repo:

In both cases, the main README contains a Terraform snippet for integrating the module into your workspace. The snippet for Cursor looks like this:

module "cursor" {
  count    = data.coder_workspace.me.start_count
  source   = "registry.coder.com/coder/cursor/coder"
  version  = "1.0.19"
  agent_id = coder_agent.main.id
}

Simply include that snippet inside your Coder template, defining any data dependencies referenced, and the next time you create a new workspace, the functionality will be ready for you to use.

Contributing

We are always accepting new contributions. Please see our contributing guide for more information.

For Maintainers

Guidelines for maintainers reviewing PRs and managing releases. See the maintainer guide for more information.

Languages
HCL 51.6%
TypeScript 21.7%
Shell 20.3%
Go 4.2%
JavaScript 1.1%
Other 0.9%