garm/webapp
Gabriel Adrian Samfira 80e042ee88 Add runner rotate ability to CLI
This change adds a new "generation" field to pools, scalesets and
runners. The generation field is inherited by runners from scale sets
or pools at the time of creation.

The generation field on scalesets and pools is incremented when the
pool or scale set is updated in a way that might influence how runners
are created (flavor, image, specs, runner groups, etc).

Using this new field, we can determine if existing runners have diverged
from the settings of the pool/scale set that spawned them.

In the CLI we now have a new set of commands available for both
pools and scalesets that lists runners, with an optional --outdated
flag and a new "rotate" flag that removes all idle runners. Optionally
the --outdated flag can be passed to the rotate command to only remove
outdated runners.

Signed-off-by: Gabriel Adrian Samfira <gsamfira@cloudbasesolutions.com>
2026-02-09 00:30:57 +02:00
..
assets Fix tests 2026-02-08 00:27:47 +02:00
src Add runner rotate ability to CLI 2026-02-09 00:30:57 +02:00
static Add SPA UI for GARM 2025-08-16 09:09:13 +00:00
.env.development Add SPA UI for GARM 2025-08-16 09:09:13 +00:00
.env.example Add SPA UI for GARM 2025-08-16 09:09:13 +00:00
DEV_SETUP.md Add SPA UI for GARM 2025-08-16 09:09:13 +00:00
openapitools.json Add SPA UI for GARM 2025-08-16 09:09:13 +00:00
package-lock.json Fix tests 2026-02-08 00:27:47 +02:00
package.json Add agent mode 2026-02-08 00:27:47 +02:00
postcss.config.js Add SPA UI for GARM 2025-08-16 09:09:13 +00:00
README.md Add SPA UI for GARM 2025-08-16 09:09:13 +00:00
svelte.config.js Add SPA UI for GARM 2025-08-16 09:09:13 +00:00
swagger.yaml Add runner rotate ability to CLI 2026-02-09 00:30:57 +02:00
tailwind.config.js Add SPA UI for GARM 2025-08-16 09:09:13 +00:00
tsconfig.json Add SPA UI for GARM 2025-08-16 09:09:13 +00:00
vite.config.ts Add SPA UI for GARM 2025-08-16 09:09:13 +00:00
vitest.config.ts Add web UI tests 2025-08-21 20:36:50 +00:00

GARM SPA (SvelteKit)

This is a Single Page Application (SPA) implementation of the GARM web interface using SvelteKit.

Features

  • Lightweight: Uses SvelteKit for minimal bundle size and fast performance
  • Modern: TypeScript-first development with full type safety
  • Responsive: Mobile-first design using Tailwind CSS
  • Real-time: WebSocket integration for live updates
  • API-driven: Uses the existing GARM REST API endpoints

Quick Start

  1. Clone the repository (if not already done)
git clone https://github.com/cloudbase/garm.git
cd garm
  1. Build and test GARM with embedded webapp
# You can skip this command if you made no changes to the webapp.
make build-webui
# builds the binary, with the web UI embedded.
make build

Make sure you enable the webui in the config:

[apiserver.webui]
  enable=true
  1. Access the webapp
    • Navigate to http://localhost:9997/ui/ (or your configured fqdn and port)

Development Workflow

See the DEV_SETUP.md file.

Git Workflow

DO NOT commit the following directories:

  • webapp/node_modules/ - Dependencies (managed by package-lock.json)
  • webapp/.svelte-kit/ - Build cache and generated files
  • webapp/build/ - Production build output

These are already included in .gitignore. Only commit source files in webapp/src/ and configuration files.

API Client Generation

The webapp uses auto-generated TypeScript clients from the GARM OpenAPI spec using go generate. To regenerate the clients, mocks and everything else, run:

go generate ./...

In the root folder of the project.

Note

See DEV_SETUP.md for prerequisites, before you try to generate the files.

Asset Serving

The webapp is embedded using Go's embed package in webapp/assets/assets.go:

//go:embed all:*
var EmbeddedSPA embed.FS

This allows GARM to serve the entire webapp with zero external dependencies. The webapp assets are compiled into the Go binary at build time.

Running GARM behind a reverse proxy

In production, GARM will serve the web UI and assets from the embedded files inside the binary. The web UI also relies on the events API for real-time updates.

To have a fully working experience, you will need to configure your reverse proxy to allow websocket upgrades. For an nginx example, see the sample config in the testdata folder.

Additionally, in production you can also override the default web UI that is embedded in GARM, without updating the garm binary. To do that, build the webapp, place it in the document root of nginx and create a new location /ui config in nginx. Something like the following should work:

    # Place this before the proxy_pass location
    location ~ ^/ui(/.*)?$ {
        root /var/www/html/garm-webui/;
    }

    location / {
        proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $remote_addr;
        proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Host $http_host;

        proxy_pass http://garm_backend;
        proxy_set_header        Host    $Host;
        proxy_redirect off;
    }

This should allow you to override the default web UI embedded in GARM without updating the GARM binary.