J. Scott Miller 7bde763b66 feat: add workspace build transition to provisioner job list (#24131)
Closes #16332

Previously `coder provisioner jobs list` showed no indication of what a workspace
build job was doing (i.e., start, stop, or delete). This adds
`workspace_build_transition` to the provisioner job metadata, exposed in
both the REST API and CLI. Template and workspace name columns were also
added, both available via `-c`.

```
$ coder provisioner jobs list -c id,type,status,"workspace build transition"
ID                                    TYPE                     STATUS     WORKSPACE BUILD TRANSITION
95f35545-a59f-4900-813d-80b8c8fd7a33  template_version_import  succeeded
0a903bbe-cef5-4e72-9e62-f7e7b4dfbb7a  workspace_build          succeeded  start
```
2026-04-10 09:50:11 -05:00
2022-04-04 11:55:06 -05:00

Coder Logo Light Coder Logo Dark

Self-Hosted Cloud Development Environments

Coder Banner Light Coder Banner Dark

Quickstart | Docs | Why Coder | Premium

discord release godoc Go Report Card OpenSSF Best Practices OpenSSF Scorecard license

Coder enables organizations to set up development environments in their public or private cloud infrastructure. Cloud development environments are defined with Terraform, connected through a secure high-speed Wireguard® tunnel, and automatically shut down when not used to save on costs. Coder gives engineering teams the flexibility to use the cloud for workloads most beneficial to them.

  • Define cloud development environments in Terraform
    • EC2 VMs, Kubernetes Pods, Docker Containers, etc.
  • Automatically shutdown idle resources to save on costs
  • Onboard developers in seconds instead of days

Coder Hero Image

Quickstart

The most convenient way to try Coder is to install it on your local machine and experiment with provisioning cloud development environments using Docker (works on Linux, macOS, and Windows).

# First, install Coder
curl -L https://coder.com/install.sh | sh

# Start the Coder server (caches data in ~/.cache/coder)
coder server

# Navigate to http://localhost:3000 to create your initial user,
# create a Docker template and provision a workspace

Install

The easiest way to install Coder is to use our install script for Linux and macOS. For Windows, use the latest ..._installer.exe file from GitHub Releases.

curl -L https://coder.com/install.sh | sh

You can run the install script with --dry-run to see the commands that will be used to install without executing them. Run the install script with --help for additional flags.

See install for additional methods.

Once installed, you can start a production deployment with a single command:

# Automatically sets up an external access URL on *.try.coder.app
coder server

# Requires a PostgreSQL instance (version 13 or higher) and external access URL
coder server --postgres-url <url> --access-url <url>

Use coder --help to get a list of flags and environment variables. Use our install guides for a complete walkthrough.

Documentation

Browse our docs here or visit a specific section below:

  • Templates: Templates are written in Terraform and describe the infrastructure for workspaces
  • Workspaces: Workspaces contain the IDEs, dependencies, and configuration information needed for software development
  • IDEs: Connect your existing editor to a workspace
  • Administration: Learn how to operate Coder
  • Premium: Learn about our paid features built for large teams

Support

Feel free to open an issue if you have questions, run into bugs, or have a feature request.

Join our Discord to provide feedback on in-progress features and chat with the community using Coder!

Integrations

We are always working on new integrations. Please feel free to open an issue and ask for an integration. Contributions are welcome in any official or community repositories.

Official

Community

Contributing

We are always happy to see new contributors to Coder. If you are new to the Coder codebase, we have a guide on how to get started. We'd love to see your contributions!

Hiring

Apply here if you're interested in joining our team.

Languages
Go 74.6%
TypeScript 23.1%
Shell 0.9%
HCL 0.4%
PLpgSQL 0.3%
Other 0.2%