The 30s cron consumed the need-restart flag with IsNeedRestartAndSetFalse before
calling RestartXray and only logged a failure. If RestartXray failed early (a
transient GetXrayConfig DB error) the old process kept running the old config,
the crash detector saw a running process and never retried, and the flag stayed
cleared — so an admin's saved change silently never reached the core. Move the
consume/restart/retry into ApplyPendingRestart, which re-arms the flag on
failure so the next tick retries.
RestartXray cleared isManuallyStopped unconditionally at its top, so the @30s
pending-config cron (and warp/ldap/outbound reconcile jobs) that call
RestartXray(false) resurrected an Xray the admin had deliberately stopped —
unlike the crash-detector, which honors the manual-stop flag. Skip a non-forced
restart while the stop flag is set; only an explicit forced restart clears it.
Every XrayAPI handler method returns an error when HandlerServiceClient is nil,
except RemoveUser, which dereferenced it directly. A depletion sweep runs Init
with the port ignored and, during a restart window where the fresh process's
api port is still 0, Init fails and leaves the client nil — so RemoveUser
panicked (recovered by the traffic writer, but re-thrown every poll) instead of
returning an error. Add the same nil guard the siblings have.
removeInboundTagFromRules drops a routing rule whose inboundTag list becomes
empty only if the rule has no other matcher, but routingMatcherKeys omitted
xray-core's canonical source and domains keys. A rule scoped by source or domains
(common in hand-authored or imported configs) therefore lost its whole body —
including a security-relevant block — when its single listed inbound was deleted,
instead of just having the tag trimmed. Recognize source and domains as live
matchers.
expandSegment dropped a "|" segment only when its tokens rendered the unlimited
mark, so a segment whose only token resolved to the empty string (a client with
no comment, an unlimited client's expiry date) was kept as bare decoration,
leaving a trailing "|" or a dangling emoji on every share link's remark. Drop a
token-bearing segment whenever none of its tokens produce a real value, while
still keeping pure-literal segments.
antd's Form.useWatch only reports registered fields, so while the
sniffing toggle was off the island emitted { enabled: false } upward and
replaced the full Sniffing object in form state. Saving a VLESS reverse
outbound then crashed in sniffingToWire on the missing ipsExcluded
array; the loopback outbound and the inbound sniffing tab shared the
same hole. Watch the store with preserve: true so unrendered fields
keep their values, and seed a missing value from the schema defaults
instead of an empty cast.
Two Go/TS parser parity gaps in the outbound share-link import path: parseVmess
only applied a ws link's path when the inner JSON also carried a host key, so a
generator that omits host dropped the path back to the default; and parseHysteria2
hardcoded verifyPeerCertByName to empty, ignoring the vcn param the panel emits,
so a hysteria2 outbound with a decoy SNI and a distinct cert name failed TLS
verification after import. The TS parser handles both; make the Go parser match.
Base64.decode called window.atob directly, which rejects the base64url
alphabet (- and _) and unpadded input. But the panel's own share-link emitter
uses Base64.encode(x, true) (URL-safe, unpadded), and real SIP002 links do too,
so importing a Shadowsocks link whose method:password encodes with a - or _ threw,
fell back to the raw undecoded string, and produced a wrong method and garbage
password (the vmess parser shared the same limitation). Normalize base64url and
re-pad before atob so decode round-trips every emitted link.
The panel's share-link emitters (Go and TS) carry advanced xhttp knobs as a
snake_case x_padding_bytes plus an extra=<json> payload, but the Go parser's
xhttp branch read only top-level camelCase params, so importing an xhttp link
via the outbound-subscription feature dropped xPaddingBytes, scMaxEachPostBytes
and the rest, silently reverting them to the stream defaults and producing a
non-working outbound. Mirror the TS parser: read the snake_case alias, merge the
extra JSON blob, then let explicit camelCase params win.
The Clash stream builder computed tlsSettings["pin-sha256"] from the inbound's
pinnedPeerCertSha256, but applySecurity's tls case never copied it onto the
proxy, so it was written with no reader and silently dropped. Clash subscribers
lost certificate pinning while JSON subscribers kept it. Surface pin-sha256 on
the proxy in the tls case, matching the JSON emitter.
genHy asserted stream["hysteriaSettings"].(map[string]any) without the comma-ok
form, so a hysteria inbound whose StreamSettings omit the hysteriaSettings key
(a valid, representable shape the raw generator renders fine) panicked and 500ed
the entire JSON subscription. Use comma-ok; the downstream reads already guard
each key, so a nil map degrades gracefully.
The raw share-link generators used unchecked type assertions and unguarded
array indexing: an empty Reality shortIds/serverNames array (random.Num(0)
panics), a tcp-http header with no request block or an empty request.path, a
grpc block missing its keys, empty stream settings, and a non-string Host
header all panicked mid-generation. Because getSubs loops every client's link
with no recover, one such client 500s the entire subscription for everyone. The
sibling JSON, Clash and frontend generators already guard these; make the raw
generators match with comma-ok assertions and length checks.
ResetAllTraffics and ResetInboundTraffic performed their remote-node reset HTTP
calls inside submitTrafficWrite. Each call can block up to the remote timeout,
and Reset All Traffics loops every node serially, so the single traffic-writer
goroutine was held for seconds — long enough that the concurrent 5s traffic poll
timed out submitting its own write and dropped the deltas it had already drained
from xray. Do the DB reset inside the writer, then propagate to the nodes after
it returns, matching how the mtproto quota reset is already sequenced.
ClientService.ResetAllTraffics zeroed up/down but, unlike every sibling reset
path, never restored enable=true, so clients that had been auto-disabled for
exceeding their quota stayed cut with zero usage after a reset. It also wrote
client_traffics directly on the shared DB handle instead of through the serial
traffic writer, reintroducing the cross-transaction lock-order deadlock the
writer exists to prevent. Restore enable and run the reset inside
submitTrafficWrite within one transaction.
addTrafficLocked stages the inbound and client deltas, then runs three helpers
(auto-renew, disable depleted clients, disable depleted inbounds) that are meant
to log and continue. All three reused the function-scope err that the deferred
commit/rollback inspects, so the last helper's error decided the whole tick: a
failure in disableInvalidInbounds rolled back the already-staged traffic while
AddTraffic reported success, and because xray had already advanced its counter
baseline that traffic was lost for good. Give each best-effort helper its own
error variable so only a genuine staging failure rolls the tick back.
ToggleClientEnableByEmail (Telegram bot) and SetClientEnableByEmail (LDAP sync)
resolved a single inbound via the legacy client_traffics pointer and flipped
enable only there. A client attached to several inbounds kept connecting through
the siblings' running Xray after being disabled, and the next edit could
re-enable it everywhere from a stale sibling. Route both through the
applyClientFieldByEmail fan-out (the #5039 fix path) so the whole multi-inbound
identity is toggled at once, dropping the circular Set/Toggle dependency.
AddInbound, DelInbound and UpdateInbound all flag needRestart when an inbound
routes MTProto through xray, so the egress SOCKS bridge is regenerated. Only
SetInboundEnable's local path omitted it, so toggling a routed MTProto inbound
off then on left the bridge out of the running config while the sidecar dialed
its loopback port, blackholing that inbound until an unrelated restart. Flag the
restart on the local enable path too.
The single-client Delete path removes a client's client_external_links rows,
but BulkDelete (and the DelDepleted reaper that routes through it) deleted the
record, mappings and traffic while leaving the external-link rows keyed by the
now-dead client id, so they accumulated as orphans. Delete them in the same
cleanup transaction, keyed by client id like the single path.
UpdateInbound applied a local MTProto inbound change by calling the runtime
UpdateInbound (which stops/starts the mtg sidecar or talks to it) from inside
runSerializedTx. That runs process and network I/O on the single traffic-writer
goroutine while a DB transaction is open, so a slow sidecar stalls traffic
accounting and every concurrent client mutation, and a later step failing the
transaction leaves the sidecar ahead of the rolled-back row. Move the push into
the post-commit hook, matching the xray branch. Adds a SetLocalRuntimeOverride
test seam mirroring the existing node override so the deferral is regression
tested.
Delete, DeleteByEmail and BulkDelete all pass keepTraffic to their final
cleanup transaction, but each called the per-inbound delete helper with a
hardcoded false. That helper purges the client's traffic, IP and stat rows
before the gated cleanup runs, so keepTraffic=true still destroyed all
traffic history for any client actually attached to an inbound (the pinned
test only covered a record with no inbound mappings). Thread the caller's
keepTraffic through to the per-inbound helper at all three call sites.
lockInbound acquired the global registry mutex and then blocked on the
per-inbound mutex without releasing the registry first. A slow client
operation holding one inbound's mutex (for example a bulk delete pushing to
an unreachable node) made the next waiter park on that inbound while still
holding the registry mutex, which in turn blocked lockInbound for every
other inbound — freezing client mutations panel-wide. Release the registry
mutex before taking the per-inbound lock.
AddInbound's per-client validation switch had cases for every protocol
except WireGuard, so a WireGuard client fell through to the default branch
that requires a non-empty id. WireGuard clients are keyed by their public
key and carry no id, so importing a WireGuard inbound or re-adding one to a
reconciling node was rejected with "empty client ID". Add a wireguard case
that validates the client key, mirroring addInboundClient.
The add controller binds the inbound model's id form field and never clears
it, and AddInbound persisted with GORM Save, which updates in place when the
primary key is non-zero. A client that reused an existing id (for instance by
duplicating an inbound fetched from /get and changing the port) silently
overwrote that stored row instead of creating a new inbound. Zero the id at
the top of AddInbound, matching how it already zeroes the client-stat ids.
In a mixed BulkAdjust (both a days delta and a bytes delta), a per-field
planning skip such as "unlimited expiry" or "unlimited traffic" was recorded
in the same map that gated the client_traffics write. The applied field was
already written to the inbound JSON and the clients table, but the enforcement
row was left untouched, so the depletion job cut the client on the old limit
while the panel showed the new one. Gate the traffic-row write on an actual
inbound-processing failure rather than on any planning-phase skip note.
BulkAdjust clamped a client's new traffic limit with max(total+addBytes, 0).
Because 0 is the unlimited sentinel, reducing a client's quota by more than
it had left silently granted that client unlimited traffic. The sibling
expiry branch already refuses an over-reduction; mirror it for quota so the
adjustment is skipped with a clear reason instead of crossing the sentinel.
FilterNodeSnapshot compared a node snapshot's inbound tags against the
raw selected-tag list with an exact match, while its two siblings
(SnapshotHasUnadoptedInbounds and the reconcile tagToCentral map) expand
each selected tag to both its bare node-side form and its n<id>- prefixed
central form. A panel-created node inbound is recorded in the selected
list under the central prefixed tag but reported by the node under the
bare tag, so the exact match dropped it from every snapshot and the
orphan sweep then deleted its central row one tick after creation. Expand
the allowed set with the same prefix flip the siblings use.
With format auto-detection enabled, a client whose User-Agent matched the
Clash or JSON regex was routed straight to that format handler. For a
subscription whose entries convert to neither format (an MTProto-only
subscription, for example) the handler returns an empty document and the
request ended as 404, breaking a URL that served the raw list before the
toggle. The auto-detect branches now serve the detected format only when
it produces content and otherwise continue to the raw response; the
explicit format endpoints keep answering 404 for empty documents.
TestConnection skipped the empty-from guard that Send enforces, so with
no sender and no username configured the test issued the null reverse-path
and could report success against a lenient relay while every real
notification send kept failing with the missing-sender error. Guard the
test path the same way and surface a dedicated translated message.
The save-time validator accepts any RFC 5322 address form, so a value
like '3x-ui Panel <panel(at)example.com>' passes validation, but Send and
TestConnection fed that raw string to MAIL FROM, which strict servers
reject with 501, and buildMessage mangled it into a quoted local part.
Parse the configured sender at the point of use: the envelope gets the
bare address and, when no explicit sender name is set, the display name
embedded in the setting is used for the From header.
* feat(settings): add subscription format controls
* feat(sub): auto-detect subscription formats
* fix(xray): validate balancer regexes before save
* Revert "fix(xray): validate balancer regexes before save"
This reverts commit 8a208ce71b.
* doc(endpoints): align indent spaces
* doc(settings): improve error message formatting in validateSubUserAgentRegex
- Use NewErrorf with proper formatting instead of NewError with string concatenation
- Add comment explaining the rationale for returning original pattern value
- This preserves the intentional design where empty input is stored as empty
in the DB and inherited as the runtime default at read time
---------
Co-authored-by: Tomilla <5007859+Tomilla@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Sanaei <ho3ein.sanaei@gmail.com>
* fix(frontend): add shared stable speed-tag style
Give live up/down rate tags a fixed width, centered layout, nowrap,
and tabular numerals so digit/unit changes cannot reflow the Speed column.
Ultraworked with [Sisyphus](https://github.com/code-yeongyu/oh-my-openagent)
Co-authored-by: Sisyphus <clio-agent@sisyphuslabs.ai>
* fix(frontend): stabilize InboundSpeedTag and ClientSpeedTag layout
Apply the shared speed-tag class/style to both live rate tags and lock
the behavior with a focused component test for small and large rates.
Ultraworked with [Sisyphus](https://github.com/code-yeongyu/oh-my-openagent)
Co-authored-by: Sisyphus <clio-agent@sisyphuslabs.ai>
* fix(frontend): align speed columns with stable tag width
Widen inbound/client Speed columns to match the fixed tag and apply the
same stable style to idle dash cells so active/idle swaps do not jitter.
Ultraworked with [Sisyphus](https://github.com/code-yeongyu/oh-my-openagent)
Co-authored-by: Sisyphus <clio-agent@sisyphuslabs.ai>
* fix(frontend): scope stable speed tags to table cells and fit content
---------
Co-authored-by: x06579 <x06579@ai-dashboard>
Co-authored-by: Sisyphus <clio-agent@sisyphuslabs.ai>
* feat(frontend): show client comments on mobile cards
* fix(frontend): bound mobile comment height
---------
Co-authored-by: sanmaxdev <sanmaxdev@users.noreply.github.com>
The notification/test email carried only From/To/Subject/MIME headers, and
the From header was the raw SMTP username. Two problems:
- When the SMTP login is not a bare email address (common with relays and
submission services), the From header has no valid address and strict
receivers reject the message — e.g. Gmail returns "550-5.7.1 ... Messages
missing a valid address in From: header".
- There was no Date (mandatory per RFC 5322 section 3.6) and no Message-ID,
which also raises spam score.
Add smtpFrom (sender address) and smtpFromName (display name) settings and
assemble the message with net/mail: a name-addr From ("Name" <addr>), a
Date, a Message-ID, and an RFC 2047 encoded Subject, in a deterministic
header order. From falls back to the username when smtpFrom is empty, so
existing setups keep working. Wire the settings through the model, the SMTP
send and test paths, the Email settings UI, and all 13 locale files;
regenerate the Zod/OpenAPI artifacts.
Validate smtpFrom in AllSetting.CheckValid (reject anything net/mail cannot
parse), which surfaces a bad address at configuration time and prevents CRLF
header injection; strip CR/LF in buildMessage as defense in depth. Add
buildMessage and CheckValid tests.
Object-form DNS server entries always received port: 53, because
DnsServerObjectInnerSchema defaulted the port unconditionally and the
DnsServerModal wire adapter always wrote it. Per Xray-core, encrypted
schemes must not carry a port field; a non-standard port is embedded in
the URL instead.
Default the port to 53 only for non-encrypted addresses and omit it for
the encrypted DNS schemes Xray dispatches without a port - https,
https+local, h2c, h2c+local and quic+local - both in the Zod schema and
in the modal's valuesToWire adapter. Schemes are matched
case-insensitively to mirror Xray-core's EqualFold comparison. A shared
isEncryptedDnsAddress helper backs both paths.
Fixes#5920
Co-authored-by: Matt Van Horn <455140+mvanhorn@users.noreply.github.com>
pnpm/action-setup resolved 'version: 11' to the newest 11.x, and its self-installer crashes upgrading to 11.12.0 (Cannot use 'in' operator to search for 'integrity'), failing both docs workflows at setup. Reading docs/package.json instead installs the exact packageManager pin (pnpm@11.9.0), which also keeps the workflows and the lockfile toolchain on a single source of truth.
The repo now pins Node 24 everywhere instead of mixing 22 and hardcoded workflow versions. The docs workflows read .nvmrc like the main CI already did, so the Storybook bundle in the Pages deploy builds on the same runtime as the PR gate. The docs gen:api script runs its TypeScript entry natively, dropping the experimental type-stripping flag that Node 24 makes default; the matching frontend cleanup (engines and gen:api) landed with the Storybook commit.
The repo's type-aware deprecation sweep (eslint.deprecated.config.js) reported fourteen findings; it now reports zero. Alert message becomes title and closable+onClose becomes closable.onClose; Select optionFilterProp moves into showSearch.optionFilterProp and suffixIcon becomes suffix; Drawer width becomes size; Progress trailColor becomes railColor. Behavior is unchanged apart from a few single-mode selects gaining type-to-filter, which the old prop already implied.
Running the stories under axe surfaced real panel defects, not just story cosmetics. FormField never associated its Form.Item label with the wrapped control, so no RHF form field in the panel had a programmatic label; it now generates an id and wires htmlFor. Unnamed controls get accessible names: the prompt and text modal inputs (from the modal title), the client traffic progress bar (used/limit values), the CPU and RAM threshold inputs in the notification groups (event label threaded through the extra renderer), and the JSON editor's contenteditable surface.
ConfigBlock's collapse header carried role=button around focusable action buttons; collapsible=header scopes the toggle to the label. Light theme gains contrast-safe tokens shared by the panel and Storybook: darker description, placeholder, error and success text, a darker primary button blue, and a readable gold tag, all meeting the WCAG AA 4.5:1 ratio. The infinity badge swaps a prohibited bare aria-label for role=img.
The docs site and the component workbench were entirely disconnected. The Pages deploy now builds the frontend Storybook and bundles it into the artifact under /storybook, so the live component reference ships with the documentation, and the navbar links to it. Story changes trigger a redeploy so the published workbench cannot go stale.
Storybook existed only as an undocumented local tool: 9 of 24 reusable components had stories, autodocs pages were bare prop tables, nothing built or tested the stories, and no contributor doc mentioned the workbench existed.
Every reusable component under src/components/ now has a co-located story with enriched autodocs (component descriptions plus per-prop argTypes, kept as string metadata since the repo bans line comments). Stories double as headless Chromium tests through the Storybook vitest addon, with axe accessibility checks enforced as errors and play-function interaction tests covering the modals, the RHF field bridge, the config block, and the select-all buttons. The preview now mirrors the panel's real theme DOM (body class, shared AntD theme config, seeded theme storage) so what stories render matches production.
CI and make verify gain a static Storybook build as a compile gate, and the frontend test job installs Chromium so story tests run on every PR. Contributor docs (frontend README, CONTRIBUTING, agent guides) document the workbench, the story conventions, and the Controls setup. Node engines move to 24 LTS and gen:api drops the type-stripping flags that Node 24 makes default.
Back Up's .db now restores directly into a PostgreSQL panel, so the
SQLite-side Download Migration row only duplicated it; the row stays on
PostgreSQL panels where it is the only PG-to-SQLite path. Restore
accepts .dump and .db everywhere, the backup modal texts describe the
accepted formats in all locales, and the orphaned migrationDownloadDesc
key is removed.
The SQLite panel's Restore now detects the upload by content like the
PostgreSQL panel does: migration dumps are rebuilt with RestoreSQLite,
pg_dump archives get a clear error instead of 'Invalid db file format',
and every upload passes the panel-schema pre-flight before Xray stops.
The .backup fallback survives a failed Xray start and is named in the
error, the DB pool is reopened on every error path after CloseDB, and a
failed InitDB closes the imported file before restoring the fallback so
the rename cannot hit a Windows sharing violation.
migrationModels was missing ClientGroup and ClientGlobalTraffic, so both
migration directions silently dropped client groups and global client
traffic; the model list is now extracted to allModels and a parity test
keeps the two lists from drifting again. MigrateData runs its truncate
and copy inside one transaction so a failed import rolls back instead of
leaving the destination truncated (sequences resync after commit since
setval is non-transactional). New PrepareSQLiteForMigration rejects
uploads that are not a panel database and AutoMigrates old backups so
their missing tables cannot break the row copy.
The SQLite panel's Download Migration produces a portable SQL text dump
advertised as seeding a PostgreSQL panel, but the PostgreSQL Restore only
accepted pg_dump custom archives, so the migration file was rejected with
'Invalid file' even though the upload picker asked for .dump. importDB now
sniffs the upload header: PGDMP archives keep the pg_restore path, while
raw SQLite databases (.db) and SQL text migration dumps are rebuilt,
integrity-checked, and copied into PostgreSQL with the same MigrateData
engine as 'x-ui migrate-db --dsn'. The restore picker accepts .dump/.db on
PostgreSQL and the backup modal texts describe the accepted formats in
every locale.
The per-inbound export modal only showed the joined .conf blocks for wireguard, with no way to grab the wireguard:// share links the QR modal already generates. TextModal gains an optional tabs prop (copy and download follow the active tab), and the wireguard export now offers a Config tab with the .conf blocks alongside a Links tab with the per-client wireguard:// URLs. Tab labels reuse the existing pages.clients.config / pages.clients.tabLinks locale keys. Other protocols keep the single untabbed view.
WireGuard has been first-class multi-client on the backend for a while (key generation, tunnel address allocation, attach/detach/delete all flow through the shared client apply path), but isInboundMultiUser still excluded it, so wireguard rows only offered Export Inbound / Reset Traffic / Clone / Delete. Adding it to the multi-user set surfaces Export All URLs (per-client .conf blocks), the subscription export, and the attach/detach/group/delete-all client actions, and makes wireguard inbounds valid targets in the attach-clients picker. The now-dead isWireguard guard on the inbound-info branch is dropped. The clients-page bulk attach/detach modals carried the same stale protocol set, also missing mtproto, so both now match the single-client form's inbound picker.