Two operator-visible changes on /alerts:
1. Polling drops from 15s to 5s and gains a checkbox in the table
header to turn live monitoring on/off. Choice is persisted in
localStorage so it survives full-page navigations. The toggle
state is woven into the htmx hx-trigger predicate, so flipping
the checkbox just sets the flag and the next tick (or the
absence of one) honours it — no attribute juggling, no
htmx.process re-init. The dot dims to 0.3 opacity when paused
so operators can see at a glance that they're looking at a
stale view.
2. Severity dropdown options pick up the same oklch tints used by
the row dots / left borders / kind chips. The kind column shows
only the kind text, so without a colour cue the dropdown
mentioned a concept (severity) that the table itself didn't
render. Now the colours bridge the gap.
Note on <option> styling: Chrome and Firefox honour inline color:
on options; Safari ignores it. Acceptable degradation — falls back
to plain text, which is what we had.
The alerts list is the one screen where staleness is genuinely
harmful — an operator can be looking at an Open tab that's already
been resolved by another admin or auto-resolved by the engine, and
take action on a row that no longer exists.
Add an htmx poll on just the table panel:
hx-get same URL with current querystring (filters preserved)
hx-trigger every 15s, only when document is visible (no idle CPU)
hx-select #alerts-table — pull this element out of the response
hx-swap outerHTML
Polling lives on the table div, not the page root, so the filter
strip and header don't flash on each tick. Header gains a small
'live ●' label so the polling is discoverable.
RefreshURL is r.URL.RequestURI() on the server side — keeps any
status/severity/host_id/q params intact across refreshes.
Other screens (dashboard, hosts, jobs) deliberately stay manual-
refresh per the project's anti-flicker stance.