Networking
Coder's network topology has three types of nodes: workspaces, coder servers, and users.
The coder server must have an inbound address reachable by users and workspaces, but otherwise, all topologies just work with Coder.
When possible, we establish direct connections between users and workspaces. Direct connections are as fast as connecting to the workspace outside of Coder. When NAT traversal fails, connections are relayed through the coder server. All user <-> workspace connections are end-to-end encrypted.
Tailscale's open source backs our networking logic.
coder server
Workspaces connect to the coder server via the server's external address, set
via ACCESS_URL
. There must not be a NAT
between workspaces and coder server.
Users connect to the coder server's dashboard and API through its ACCESS_URL
as well. There must not be a NAT between users and the coder server.
Template admins can overwrite the site-wide access URL at the template level by
leveraging the url
argument when
defining the Coder provider:
provider "coder" {
url = "https://coder.namespace.svc.cluster.local"
}
This is useful when debugging connectivity issues between the workspace agent and the Coder server.
Web Apps
The coder servers relays dashboard-initiated connections between the user and the workspace. Web terminal <-> workspace connections are an exception and may be direct.
In general, port forwarded web apps are faster than dashboard-accessed web apps.
🌎 Geo-distribution
Direct connections
Direct connections are a straight line between the user and workspace, so there is no special geo-distribution configuration. To speed up direct connections, move the user and workspace closer together.
If a direct connection is not available (e.g. client or server is behind NAT), Coder will use a relayed connection. By default, Coder uses Google's public STUN server, but this can be disabled or changed for offline deployments.
Relayed connections
By default, your Coder server also runs a built-in DERP relay which can be used for both public and offline deployments.
However, Tailscale has graciously allowed us to use
their global DERP relays.
You can launch coder server
with Tailscale's DERPs like so:
$ coder server --derp-config-url https://controlplane.tailscale.com/derpmap/default
Custom Relays
If you want lower latency than what Tailscale offers or want additional DERP relays for offline deployments, you may run custom DERP servers. Refer to Tailscale's documentation to learn how to set them up.
After you have custom DERP servers, you can launch Coder with them like so:
# derpmap.json
{
"Regions": {
"1": {
"RegionID": 1,
"RegionCode": "myderp",
"RegionName": "My DERP",
"Nodes": [
{
"Name": "1",
"RegionID": 1,
"HostName": "your-hostname.com"
}
]
}
}
}
$ coder server --derp-config-path derpmap.json
Dashboard connections
The dashboard (and web apps opened through the dashboard) are served from the coder server, so they can only be geo-distributed with High Availability mode in our Enterprise Edition. Reach out to Sales to learn more.
Browser-only connections Enterprise
Some Coder deployments require that all access is through the browser to comply
with security policies. In these cases, pass the --browser-only
flag to
coder server
or set CODER_BROWSER_ONLY=true
.
With browser-only connections, developers can only connect to their workspaces via the web terminal and web IDEs.
Troubleshooting
The coder ping -v <workspace>
will ping a workspace and return debug logs for
the connection. We recommend running this command and inspecting the output when
debugging SSH connections to a workspace. For example:
$ coder ping -v my-workspace
2023-06-21 17:50:22.412 [debu] wgengine: ping(fd7a:115c:a1e0:49d6:b259:b7ac:b1b2:48f4): sending disco ping to [cFYPo] ...
pong from my-workspace proxied via DERP(Denver) in 90ms
2023-06-21 17:50:22.503 [debu] wgengine: magicsock: closing connection to derp-13 (conn-close), age 5s
2023-06-21 17:50:22.503 [debu] wgengine: magicsock: 0 active derp conns
2023-06-21 17:50:22.504 [debu] wgengine: wg: [v2] Routine: receive incoming v6 - stopped
2023-06-21 17:50:22.504 [debu] wgengine: wg: [v2] Device closed
The coder speedtest <workspace>
command measures user <-> workspace
throughput. E.g.:
$ coder speedtest dev
29ms via coder
Starting a 5s download test...
INTERVAL TRANSFER BANDWIDTH
0.00-1.00 sec 630.7840 MBits 630.7404 Mbits/sec
1.00-2.00 sec 913.9200 MBits 913.8106 Mbits/sec
2.00-3.00 sec 943.1040 MBits 943.0399 Mbits/sec
3.00-4.00 sec 933.3760 MBits 933.2143 Mbits/sec
4.00-5.00 sec 848.8960 MBits 848.7019 Mbits/sec
5.00-5.02 sec 13.5680 MBits 828.8189 Mbits/sec
----------------------------------------------------
0.00-5.02 sec 4283.6480 MBits 853.8217 Mbits/sec