Code Server (Vs code online)
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@atrilahiji If you run the backup cleaner command (see the backup page in the cloudron admin panel) it runs fine after that - though I have backups disabled on my code-server app as I constantly reinstall it for testing different features
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@dswd Is this vs code online ? There are some attempts at https://forum.cloudron.io/topic/1709/code-server-vs-code-online/ but yours looks quite complete as well. I will move this discussion there if they are the same.
As for appstore submission, currently only only we are able to do it. We changed our model to one where where we pretty much maintain all the app packages. If you have a docker image, then others can clone your repo and then install using
cloudron install --image <image>
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Does this have any sort of auth built in? Might be worth looking into the proxyAuth addon.
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I have packaged a new app: A Visual Studio Code version that runs in the browser.
Here is the code: https://git.cloudron.io/dswd/vscode-app
The app works and already runs on my instance, but there are no tests yet.
I would like to submit the app to the appstore (for others to test and use) but currently I have a problem with the docker repository. Apparently I can only submit apps that are hosted on the Cloudron repo but I don't know how to push there.
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The posts appear out of order, sorry about that For some reason, NodeBB has no way to merge two topics together... Oh well.
@dswd said in Code Server (Vs code online):
@girish Should I move the code back to my repo or should it stay on the cloudron git, or do you want to take over maintenance to make it an official app? How do you do this normally?
It can stay on Cloudron git. I will have a look once I have some time and move/fork it into the cloudron namespace. I will then give you maintainer status in that repo, so you can push directly. Only limitation is that you have to let us know whenever you want to push a new release to appstore. We hope to get this part automated in our CI/CD at some point (though, we are not working on this right now, so no ETA yet).
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@atrilahiji said in Code Server (Vs code online):
Does this have any sort of auth built in? Might be worth looking into the proxyAuth addon.
Yes code server comes with a simple passwort auth. You can disable it and roll your own if you want to. It is not super helpful to integrate it with Cloudron LDAP as all users share one IDE but you can have a single password if you want to.
I will have a look into optional proxyAuth, however.
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@murgero said in Code Server (Vs code online):
@dswd - would we be able to merge our projects together so there is not 2 vastly different builds floating about?
I am sorry, I was not aware of your app since it was not on the app store. Otherwise I would have used it and maybe sent a PR.
We should compare our approaches and select the best parts of each. Where is your code located? -
@atrilahiji
I added optional proxyAuth to the image. If SSO is enabled, the password in the vscode app is disabled. -
@murgero
I checked your image. It seems to install lots of packages that are not needed for code server (e.g. Apache and PHP). Also it adds some plugins that I don't think are required (sendmail, mysql and redis).
I suggest using my image as base because it seems more minimal. Can you test it and check if there is any functionality missing that I could add? -
@dswd I can respect the opinion, but I use the addons mentioned as well as the adding different IDEs/SDKs (PS, PHP, Go, Rust, R-Lang, etc etc etc ) as users can't install linux packages on an app once it's installed. I also have build-tools to compile code, and I don't think apache is still there (I ended up choosing to use code-servers built-in proxy instead. So if apache is still being installed I will probably remove it in the future. Sendmail is used for testing and sending email from compiled apps, redis is kept for apps that would require it, and mysql (and other DBs) are thrown in because compiled apps may need a test DB to connect to.
It's kinda bloated when you first look at it, but users cannot modify what linux packages are installed and they cannot modify what cloudron addons are installed once code-server is installed.
That said, yes, technically speaking code-server doesn't need all this, but it's barely an IDE without the ability to actually use the code you write in it. So I included all the popular ones.
Minimal in this case I don't believe works. Sure yours takes up less space but my package includes more features. In this case, I think keeping our apps separated for now is the best course of action.
This is not to say I don't like what you did. There is something to be said about a minimal-first approach to building an app. I think - let's keep building our packages separate and we can talk to @girish / @nebulon about how to add both (potentially) to the app store. Maybe just labeled differently so the admins can choose how they like to build.
And if we do go that route I would like to work together to make the login process the same on both apps - to help make it seamless to the end-users.
What do you think? I am also open to suggestions.
Edit: I hope none of this comes off as negative towards your package. That is not my intent. It's clear you and I both have a want/need/passion for code-server to be on the store. I am just genuinely excited to have this conversation with someone other than myself.
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@murgero
I can see your point. You are providing those dependencies to users just in case they need them (and because you need them). I agree, not being able to install packages is kind of a problem. However, a lot of software (e.g. nodejs, rust and php) can be installed into the user space.
I decided against putting in more dependencies because I don't want to monitor so many dependencies for security issues and push new releases every other day.
I too think it would be best to keep the versions separate as you require those dependencies.
Oh and no, your comment does not come off as negative (hope mine doesn't either). We just have different approaches. -
@murgero
I think I found a way to get around the read-only root and install additional software. I added a script that will fetch and install a minimal Linux and chroot into it:chroot-alpine
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Inside it you can install additional software as you like. You can also use the same method to run Ubuntu instead of Alpine Linux but that will use much more storage.