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Workspace

What is a workspace?

A workspace is the main organizational unit within the platform.
It contains all of your projects, instances, team members, and related resources.
Every instance belongs to a workspace, and all actions you perform happen in the context of the workspace you’ve selected.

From the workspace switcher at the top of the sidebar, you can select which workspace you’re currently viewing.
Once selected, all sidebar options and displayed data are relevant to that workspace.

workspaces

You can belong to multiple workspaces, each with its own settings, permissions, and resources.


Viewing and managing workspaces

You can view all of your workspaces from the Workspaces Overview section, accessible through the main menu.
This list shows key details for each workspace, including its name, unique handle, creation date, the creator, and your role.
If you have many workspaces, the list uses pagination to make navigation easier.

From this overview, you can:

  • Enter a workspace by clicking its name (this takes you to its dashboard).
  • Access workspace settings via a shortcut button.
  • Create new workspaces if your role allows it.
  • Edit, leave, or deactivate existing workspaces.

If you are logged in but don’t belong to any workspace, you’ll see a No Workspace screen.
From there, you can create a new workspace. The sidebar will be disabled until you have at least one workspace.


Creating a workspace

To create a workspace, click the Create Workspace button from the overview.
A simple form will ask you to provide a name (up to 200 characters).
The platform will automatically generate:

  • A workspace handle (a short, unique, human-readable identifier)
  • A creation date and time
  • The email of the creator

When you successfully create a workspace:

  • You’ll receive a confirmation message.
  • An email notification will be sent to you.
  • You’ll be redirected back to the workspace list or previous screen.

The workspace dashboard

Each workspace has its own dashboard — a central hub showing high-level information about that workspace.
When you log in, you’re taken directly to the dashboard of the workspace you most recently used.

The dashboard may include:

  • Instance creation widget – A quick way to launch new instances.
  • Balance widget – Displays your available balance with shortcuts to deposit funds or view billing history.
  • Team members widget – Shows who’s in the workspace and lets you manage the team (if you have the right permissions).
  • Documentation widget – Links to helpful guides and resources.
  • Projects section – Shows your most active projects with shortcuts to instances and project settings.
  • Instances section – Summarizes your most active instances, whether bare metal or virtual.

Instance creation

The Instance Creation widget provides a streamlined onboarding process for starting new resources.
It displays a short description and a Create Instance button that takes you to the instance creation page.


Managing workspace balance

The Balance widget shows your workspace’s available funds.
You can add more funds using the Deposit button or view your full transaction history via the Billing History link.
Keeping a positive balance ensures your instances keep running without interruption.


Viewing and managing team members

The Team Members widget lists all people in your workspace.
If your role permits, you can invite new members or open the full team list from here.


Accessing documentation

The Documentation widget links to platform resources that help you make the most out of your workspace.
These guides explain how to use features effectively and integrate them into your workflows.


Projects overview

In the Projects section of the dashboard, you can see up to five of your most active projects.
For each project, you’ll see its name, color, and shortcuts to instances and project settings.
You can also navigate to a full list of projects or create a new one.


Instances overview

The Instances section summarizes your most active instances, showing up to ten at a time.
Two types of instances may appear here:

  • Bare Metal Instances – Display product name, type, region, GPU, CPU, RAM, and storage details.
  • Virtual Instances – Display product name, type, region, GPU specs, vCPUs, memory, bandwidth, and NVMe storage.

From here, you can quickly access instance details, view all instances, or add new ones.