The header used to show '200+' once the user had loaded a partial set
of pages — opaque, useless for an operator who actually needs to know
'how many accounts are in the system right now'.
Server (app/cm_api.py):
- /acc/ and /user/ list responses now wrap the rows alongside a
COUNT(*) of the table: { rows: [...], total: N }. The single-row
/acc/<username> path is unchanged (still returns Acc[] with one row).
- Each list request issues both queries (the page SELECT and the COUNT)
on the same pooled connection. COUNT(*) on a 3k-row table is sub-ms;
even when the cache misses, total request latency stays well under
20ms on warm-cache MySQL.
Web client:
- web/lib/api.ts: Page<T> gains a field; getAccountsPage and
getUsersPage parse the new wrapped response.
- web/app/page.tsx + users/page.tsx: pass page.total down as
initialTotal.
- web/components/{accounts,users}-table.tsx: hold total in state, sync
it from every page fetch (initial, loadMore, sort change, force
refresh) so cm99 monitor inserts during the session bump it correctly.
Delete decrements it by 1 immediately so the header doesn't lie
between the optimistic delete and the next refresh.
- PageHead now shows '<total>' as the big number. When loaded < total,
a small zinc-400 line below reads 'Showing X of N — keep scrolling
to load more'. Once the user reaches the end, the line goes away.
No new round trips for the count: it piggybacks on the same /acc/?...
or /user/?... request that already fetches the page. The 30s cache
covers the count too — so tab switches still don't hit MySQL.
CM Bot v2 – Portainer Setup (Gitea Registry)
Brief, copy/paste-ready steps to run the published images from gitea.04080616.xyz using Portainer.
What gets deployed
cm-api(port 3000, internal-only),cm-web(Next.js dashboard, container port 3000 → hostCM_WEB_HOST_PORT),cm-telegram,cm-transfer- Container names prefixed with
CM_DEPLOY_NAME(e.g.rex-cm-telegram-bot) - Docker network:
${CM_DEPLOY_NAME}-network(bridge) - Named volume:
${CM_DEPLOY_NAME}-web-auth-datafor/data/auth(passkey JSON store)
Environment configs
Per-deployment templates live in envs/<name>/.env.example (committed). Each operator copies the example to a sibling .env (gitignored — never committed) and fills in the real secrets:
envs/
├── dev/.env.example # Local development tier (port 8010)
├── rex/.env.example # Rex deployment (port 8011)
└── siong/.env.example # Siong deployment (port 8012)
For Portainer-hosted deployments (rex/siong):
cp envs/rex/.env.example envs/rex/.env
# Fill in DB_PASSWORD, CM_AGENT_*, CM_SECURITY_PIN, TELEGRAM_BOT_TOKEN, etc.
# Then load the variables into the Portainer stack environment.
For local development, see the dev tier flow:
cp envs/dev/.env.example .env
bash scripts/dev.sh up
Key variables
| Variable | Description |
|---|---|
CM_DEPLOY_NAME |
Unique prefix for containers/network (e.g. rex-cm, siong-cm) |
CM_WEB_HOST_PORT |
Host port for the Next.js dashboard (unique per deployment; e.g. 8010/8011/8012) |
CM_AUTH_SECRET |
64-hex session signing secret (bash scripts/gen_auth_secret.sh --write) |
TELEGRAM_BOT_TOKEN |
Your Telegram bot token |
DB_HOST / DB_USER / DB_PASSWORD / DB_NAME |
Database connection |
CM_PREFIX_PATTERN |
Username prefix pattern |
CM_AGENT_ID / CM_AGENT_PASSWORD / CM_SECURITY_PIN |
Agent credentials (also used as the dashboard sign-in identity) |
CM_BOT_BASE_URL |
Bot API base URL |
One-time: add the registry in Portainer
- Portainer → Registries → Add registry → Custom.
- Name:
gitea-prod(any) - Registry URL:
gitea.04080616.xyz - Username: your Gitea username; Password: the PAT. Save.
Deploy the stack (fast path)
- Portainer → Stacks → Add stack → Web editor.
- Paste the contents of
docker-compose.ymlfrom this repo (not the override). - Load all variables from the appropriate
envs/<name>/.envinto the stack environment variables. Make sureCM_AUTH_SECRETis present (generate withbash scripts/gen_auth_secret.sh). - Click Deploy the stack. Portainer will pull
cm-<service>:<tag>fromgitea.04080616.xyz/yiekhengand start all four containers.
Migrating an existing pre-B4 stack
The Flask web (port 8000-range) was retired and replaced by the Next.js dashboard. To upgrade:
- In your stack
.env, dropCM_WEB_NEXT_HOST_PORT. SetCM_WEB_HOST_PORTto whatCM_WEB_NEXT_HOST_PORTwas (e.g. 8011/8012). AddCM_AUTH_SECRET=$(openssl rand -hex 32). - Update aaPanel
proxy_passif it pointed to the old Flask port (8001/8005) — switch it to the new one (8011/8012). - Redeploy the stack. The old
${CM_DEPLOY_NAME}-web-viewand${CM_DEPLOY_NAME}-web-nextcontainers go away; a single${CM_DEPLOY_NAME}-webtakes over.
Updating to a new image tag
- Edit the stack → change
DOCKER_IMAGE_TAG→ Update the stack. - Portainer re-pulls and recreates the services with the new tag.
Running multiple deployments on same host
Each deployment needs unique values for:
CM_DEPLOY_NAME– avoids container/network name conflictsCM_WEB_HOST_PORT– avoids port conflicts
Common issues
- Pull denied: PAT missing
read:packageor wrong username/PAT in the registry entry. - Port already allocated: check
CM_WEB_HOST_PORTis unique across deployments. - No port bindings applied: ensure network driver stays
bridge(nothostormacvlan).
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