Welcome to mirror list, hosted at ThFree Co, Russian Federation.

github.com/MHSanaei/3x-ui.git - Unnamed repository; edit this file 'description' to name the repository.
summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
AgeCommit message (Collapse)Author
2026-04-23iplimit: dont count idle db-only ips toward the per-client limitpwnnex
after #4083 the staleness window is 30 minutes, which still lets an ip that stopped connecting a few minutes ago sit in the db blob and keep the protected slot on the ascending sort. the ip that is actually connecting right now gets classified as excess and sent to fail2ban, and never lands in inbound_client_ips.ips so the panel doesnt show it until you clear the log by hand. only count ips observed in the current scan toward the limit. db-only entries stay in the blob for display but dont participate in the ban decision. live subset still uses the "protect oldest, ban newcomer" rule. closes #4091. followup to #4077.
2026-04-22Fix IP Limit continuous ban loop from stale DB entries (#4077)pwnnex
After 60abeaa flipped the excess-IP selector to "oldest wins, newest loses" (to protect the original/current connections), the per-client IP table in `inbound_client_ips.ips` never evicted IPs that stopped connecting. Their stored timestamp stayed ancient, so on every subsequent run they counted as the "oldest protected" slot(s) and whichever IP was actually using the config now was classified as "new excess" and re-banned via fail2ban. This is exactly the #4077 scenario: two IPs connect once and get recorded, the ban lifts after the configured duration, the lone legitimate IP that reconnects gets banned again, and again, and again — a permanent 3xipl.log loop with no real abuser anywhere. Fix: when merging the persisted `old` list with the freshly observed `new` log lines, drop entries whose last-seen timestamp is older than `ipStaleAfterSeconds` (30 minutes). A client that's actually still active refreshes its timestamp any time xray emits a new `accepted` line for a fresh TCP, so the cutoff is far above even idle streaming sessions; a client that's genuinely gone falls out of the table in bounded time and frees its slot. Extracted the merge into `mergeClientIps` so it can be exercised by unit tests without spinning up the full DB-backed job. Tests cover: - stale old entry is dropped (the #4077 regression) - fresh old entries are still carried forward (access-log rotation is still backed by the persisted table) - newer timestamp wins when the same IP appears in both lists - a clock-skewed old `new` entry can't resurrect a stale IP - a zero cutoff never over-evicts Closes #4077