Build Parameters
A template can prompt the user for additional information when creating workspaces with parameters.
The user can set parameters in the dashboard UI and CLI.
You'll likely want to hardcode certain template properties for workspaces, such as security group. But you can let developers specify other properties with parameters like instance size, geographical location, repository URL, etc.
This example lets a developer choose a Docker host for the workspace:
data "coder_parameter" "docker_host" {
name = "Region"
description = "Which region would you like to deploy to?"
icon = "/emojis/1f30f.png"
type = "string"
default = "tcp://100.94.74.63:2375"
option {
name = "Pittsburgh, USA"
value = "tcp://100.94.74.63:2375"
icon = "/emojis/1f1fa-1f1f8.png"
}
option {
name = "Helsinki, Finland"
value = "tcp://100.117.102.81:2375"
icon = "/emojis/1f1eb-1f1ee.png"
}
option {
name = "Sydney, Australia"
value = "tcp://100.127.2.1:2375"
icon = "/emojis/1f1e6-1f1f9.png"
}
}
From there, a template can refer to a parameter's value:
provider "docker" {
host = data.coder_parameter.docker_host.value
}
Types
A Coder parameter can have one of these types:
string
bool
number
list(string)
To specify a default value for a parameter with the list(string)
type, use a
JSON array and the Terraform
jsonencode
function. For example:
data "coder_parameter" "security_groups" {
name = "Security groups"
icon = "/icon/aws.png"
type = "list(string)"
description = "Select appropriate security groups."
mutable = true
default = jsonencode([
"Web Server Security Group",
"Database Security Group",
"Backend Security Group"
])
}
Options
A string
parameter can provide a set of options to limit the user's choices:
data "coder_parameter" "docker_host" {
name = "Region"
description = "Which region would you like to deploy to?"
type = "string"
default = "tcp://100.94.74.63:2375"
option {
name = "Pittsburgh, USA"
value = "tcp://100.94.74.63:2375"
icon = "/emojis/1f1fa-1f1f8.png"
}
option {
name = "Helsinki, Finland"
value = "tcp://100.117.102.81:2375"
icon = "/emojis/1f1eb-1f1ee.png"
}
option {
name = "Sydney, Australia"
value = "tcp://100.127.2.1:2375"
icon = "/emojis/1f1e6-1f1f9.png"
}
}
Incompatibility in Parameter Options for Workspace Builds
When creating Coder templates, authors have the flexibility to modify parameter options associated with rich parameters. Such modifications can involve adding, substituting, or removing a parameter option. It's important to note that making these changes can lead to discrepancies in parameter values utilized by ongoing workspace builds.
Consequently, workspace users will be prompted to select the new value from a pop-up window or by using the command-line interface. While this additional interactive step might seem like an interruption, it serves a crucial purpose. It prevents workspace users from becoming trapped with outdated template versions, ensuring they can smoothly update their workspace without any hindrances.
Example:
- Bob creates a workspace using the
python-dev
template. This template has a parameterimage_tag
, and Bob selects1.12
. - Later, the template author Alice is notified of a critical vulnerability in a
package installed in the
python-dev
template, which affects the image tag1.12
. - Alice remediates this vulnerability, and pushes an updated template version
that replaces option
1.12
with1.13
for theimage_tag
parameter. She then notifies all users of that template to update their workspace immediately. - Bob saves their work, and selects the
Update
option in the UI. As their workspace uses the now-invalid option1.12
, for theimage_tag
parameter, they are prompted to select a new value forimage_tag
.
Required and optional parameters
A parameter is required if it doesn't have the default
property. The user
must provide a value to this parameter before creating a workspace:
data "coder_parameter" "account_name" {
name = "Account name"
description = "Cloud account name"
mutable = true
}
If a parameter contains the default
property, Coder will use this value if the
user does not specify any:
data "coder_parameter" "base_image" {
name = "Base image"
description = "Base machine image to download"
default = "ubuntu:latest"
}
Admins can also set the default
property to an empty value so that the
parameter field can remain empty:
data "coder_parameter" "dotfiles_url" {
name = "dotfiles URL"
description = "Git repository with dotfiles"
mutable = true
default = ""
}
Mutability
Immutable parameters can only be set in these situations:
- Creating a workspace for the first time.
- Updating a workspace to a new template version. This sets the initial value for required parameters.
The idea is to prevent users from modifying fragile or persistent workspace resources like volumes, regions, and so on.
Example:
data "coder_parameter" "region" {
name = "Region"
description = "Region where the workspace is hosted"
mutable = false
default = "us-east-1"
}
You can modify a parameter's mutable
attribute state anytime. In case of
emergency, you can temporarily allow for changing immutable parameters to fix an
operational issue, but it is not advised to overuse this opportunity.
Ephemeral parameters
Ephemeral parameters are introduced to users in order to model specific behaviors in a Coder workspace, such as reverting to a previous image, restoring from a volume snapshot, or building a project without using cache. These parameters are only settable when starting, updating, or restarting a workspace and do not persist after the workspace is stopped.
Since these parameters are ephemeral in nature, subsequent builds proceed in the standard manner:
data "coder_parameter" "force_rebuild" {
name = "force_rebuild"
type = "bool"
description = "Rebuild the Docker image rather than use the cached one."
mutable = true
default = false
ephemeral = true
}
Validating parameters
Coder supports rich parameters with multiple validation modes: min, max, monotonic numbers, and regular expressions.
Number
You can limit a number
parameter to min
and max
boundaries.
You can also specify its monotonicity as increasing
or decreasing
to verify
the current and new values. Use the monotonic
attribute for resources that
can't be shrunk or grown without implications, like disk volume size.
data "coder_parameter" "instances" {
name = "Instances"
type = "number"
description = "Number of compute instances"
validation {
min = 1
max = 8
monotonic = "increasing"
}
}
It is possible to override the default error
message for a number
parameter,
along with its associated min
and/or max
properties. The following message
placeholders are available {min}
, {max}
, and {value}
.
data "coder_parameter" "instances" {
name = "Instances"
type = "number"
description = "Number of compute instances"
validation {
min = 1
max = 4
error = "Sorry, we can't provision too many instances - maximum limit: {max}, wanted: {value}."
}
}
NOTE: as of
terraform-provider-coder
v0.19.0,
options
can be specified in number
parameters; this also works with
validations such as monotonic
.
String
You can validate a string
parameter to match a regular expression. The regex
property requires a corresponding error
property.
data "coder_parameter" "project_id" {
name = "Project ID"
description = "Alpha-numeric project ID"
validation {
regex = "^[a-z0-9]+$"
error = "Unfortunately, this isn't a valid project ID"
}
}
Create Autofill
When the template doesn't specify default values, Coder may still autofill parameters.
- Coder will look for URL query parameters with form
param.<name>=<value>
. This feature enables platform teams to create pre-filled template creation links. - Coder will populate recently used parameter key-value pairs for the user.
This feature helps reduce repetition when filling common parameters such as
dotfiles_url
orregion
.