The old picker was a row of 5 frequency pills (One-off / Daily / Weekly /
Monthly / Yearly) followed by a separate detail panel — common cases
needed several clicks (interval, weekday list, etc.) and the visual
hierarchy didn't show what was selected at a glance.
New design — a vertical radio list with seven first-fire-aware presets
plus a Custom… expander:
○ Don't repeat (one-off)
○ Every day
○ Every weekday (Mon – Fri)
○ Every weekend (Sat – Sun)
○ Every week on Wed (matches start)
○ Every month on day 13 (matches start)
○ Every year on May 13 (matches start)
○ Custom… ▼ expands
Custom… reveals the existing power-user controls (frequency dropdown,
interval input, weekday picker, day-of-month, end-condition) without
crowding the common path. Toggling between presets and custom is
lossless — the spec is the source of truth.
New helpers in `lib/recurrence.ts`:
- `presetToSpec(id, firstFire)` — canonical RecurrenceSpec for each
preset (round-trippable).
- `matchPreset(spec, firstFire)` — reverse mapping; returns "custom"
for anything that doesn't fit a shortcut, so the picker auto-flips
into expanded mode for non-preset specs.
- `presetDescriptors(firstFire)` — list of preset id/label/hint with
first-fire-aware copy ("Every week on Wed", "May 13", etc).
Wired into both:
- reminder-wizard/when-form-client.tsx (creating)
- reminder-edit/edit-when-form.tsx (editing a section in place)
Tests (+4, 134 web + 26 bot = 160 total green):
- recurrence.test.ts gains a "preset shortcuts" suite covering:
* presetToSpec → canonical spec for each id
* round-trip via matchPreset
* matchPreset returns "custom" for non-shortcut specs
(interval > 1, weekly Mon/Wed/Fri, end=after, monthly on a
different day-of-month than the first fire)
* presetDescriptors labels are first-fire-aware
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
cm WhatsApp Reminder Bot
Self-hosted WhatsApp reminder bot. Pairs multiple WhatsApp accounts via Telegram-delivered QR codes and sends scheduled reminders to groups.
Status
Plan 1 complete. Foundation, DB schema, and Telegram-driven WhatsApp pairing are working end-to-end. Reminder scheduling, the web dashboard, and production deploy are upcoming plans (docs/superpowers/plans/).
What's working today:
- Single-operator Telegram bot with a whitelist + audit log of every command.
- BotFather-style menu navigation:
/menuopens a single message that edits in place as you navigate. - Pair a new WhatsApp account with
/menu→ 📡 Pair New → reply with a label. QR is delivered to Telegram and refreshed in place as it expires. - Browse paired accounts with 📒 Accounts. Tap an account → see groups, send a test text message, or unpair.
- Group sync runs at pairing and on every Baileys
groups.upsert/groups.updateevent, plus a manual 🔄 Refresh button. Removed groups are pruned automatically. - Auto-reconnect on transient drops; restart-survival via Baileys
useMultiFileAuthState(no QR rescan needed across container restarts as long as WhatsApp hasn't logged the device out).
Host requirements
Only Docker. No host Node, pnpm, or any other language toolchain — everything runs in containers via the long-lived tools service.
Architecture in one paragraph
Two app containers and one external dependency. bot (Node.js) holds the live Baileys WhatsApp sessions, the grammy Telegram bot, and (in plan 2) a pg-boss scheduler. web (Next.js, plan 3) is stateless UI + API. tools is a long-running Node 22 + pnpm sidecar used for installs/tests/typechecks/migrations so the host doesn't need a Node toolchain. Postgres lives external at 192.168.0.210 in a wabot database. All cross-service communication goes through Postgres (LISTEN/NOTIFY for events, table writes for state).
Full design spec: docs/superpowers/specs/2026-05-03-whatsapp-bot-design.md
Quick start (dev)
Prerequisites: Docker, the wabot database + waBot role on 192.168.0.210 (with a pg_hba.conf line permitting 192.168.0.0/24), and a Telegram bot token from @BotFather.
# 1. Configure env
cp envs/.env.example .env.development
# edit .env.development: real DATABASE_URL, TELEGRAM_BOT_TOKEN, your TG user ID
scripts/gen_auth_secret.sh --write
# 2. Bring up the tools container, install deps
NO_SUDO=1 scripts/dev.sh up
NO_SUDO=1 scripts/dev.sh pnpm install
# 3. Apply migrations and seed your operator row
NO_SUDO=1 scripts/db.sh migrate
NO_SUDO=1 scripts/db.sh seed
# 4. Watch the bot service
NO_SUDO=1 scripts/dev.sh logs bot
In Telegram, message your dev bot /menu, tap 📡 Pair New, reply with a label, scan the QR.
NO_SUDO=1 is the right setting if your user is in the docker group (the default for this repo). Drop it if you need sudo docker.
Layout
apps/bot/— Node service: Baileys WhatsApp + grammy Telegram + (later) pg-boss schedulerapps/web/— Next.js dashboard (plan 3)packages/db/— Drizzle schema and migrationspackages/shared/— cross-app helpers (rrule, media paths, timezones)docs/superpowers/specs/— design specs and manual test runbooksdocs/superpowers/plans/— implementation plansdocker/— Dockerfiles (tools.Dockerfile,bot.Dockerfile,web.Dockerfileplaceholder)scripts/—dev.sh,db.sh,gen_auth_secret.sh, plus stubs for plans 2/4
Scripts
All pnpm/tsx/drizzle-kit invocations run inside the tools container, so no host Node is needed.
| Script | Purpose |
|---|---|
scripts/dev.sh up|down|logs|status|build|exec|pnpm|shell|restart-bot |
Stack lifecycle and tools-container shell |
scripts/db.sh migrate|generate|studio|seed|reset |
Drizzle migration helper |
scripts/gen_auth_secret.sh [--write] |
Generate AUTH_SECRET (host-only, no Node needed) |
scripts/publish.sh |
Push to Gitea registry — implemented in plan 4 |
scripts/link-account.sh |
CLI pairing without Telegram — implemented in plan 2 |
Set NO_SUDO=1 if your user is in the docker group (recommended).
Next plan
docs/superpowers/plans/<next-date>-reminder-scheduling.md — pg-boss, reminder CRUD via Telegram, fire-reminder handler, sender (text/image/video), retry policy, run history.