Files
restic-manager/internal/server/ui/funcs.go
T
steve e6729a5a3d P1-26: live job log viewer + WS browser fan-out hub
Closes the P1-21 remainder.

internal/server/ws/jobhub.go — new JobHub. Per-job_id set of
subscribers; each gets a 64-deep buffered channel with a writer
goroutine. Broadcast is non-blocking: if a subscriber is slow,
its channel fills and messages are dropped for that subscriber
only — the agent's read loop is never blocked by a stuck browser.

The agent dispatchAgentMessage path mirrors job.started /
job.progress / log.stream / job.finished envelopes onto the hub
in addition to its existing persistence work. The wire shape is
the same end-to-end, so client-side JS switches on env.type the
same way Go code does.

GET /api/jobs/{id}/stream is the browser endpoint. Auth via
session cookie (HTTP layer); upgrade; subscribe; pump until
context closes.

GET /jobs/{id} renders the live log page. Three states (queued/
running/succeeded/failed) drive the header pill, the progress
bar block, the failure summary panel, and the action button
(Cancel job while running, Back to host afterwards). Already-
persisted log lines are server-rendered on initial load; new
lines arrive over the WS and append to #log-stream. Auto-scrolls
unless the user scrolls up (a "⇢ Follow" pill re-attaches).
On job.finished the page reloads after 600ms to pick up the
final-state header rendered server-side.

POST /hosts/{id}/run-backup now sets HX-Redirect → /jobs/{job_id}
on success so HTMX lands the operator straight on the live log.
For non-HTMX callers (curl / plain form post) it 303s to the
same target.

store.ListJobLogs returns persisted log lines for initial render
on page load.

Browser-verified end-to-end: enrol → run a real backup against a
sibling restic/rest-server → live progress + 11 log lines stream
in → succeeded pill + final stats land after page reload.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-01 21:45:56 +01:00

175 lines
4.2 KiB
Go

package ui
import (
"fmt"
"html/template"
"strconv"
"strings"
"time"
)
// funcMap returns the template functions every page can call.
// Kept small on purpose: anything fancier belongs in the handler,
// which can pre-compute and pass primitives into the view.
func funcMap() template.FuncMap {
return template.FuncMap{
"bytes": formatBytes,
"relTime": formatRelTime,
"comma": formatComma,
"deref": derefStr,
"timeNotZero": func(t *time.Time) bool { return t != nil && !t.IsZero() },
"joinDot": func(parts []string) string { return strings.Join(parts, " · ") },
"absTime": func(t time.Time) string {
if t.IsZero() {
return "—"
}
return t.Format("2006-01-02 15:04:05")
},
"derefInt": func(p *int) int {
if p == nil {
return 0
}
return *p
},
"sub": func(a, b int) int { return a - b },
}
}
// formatBytes renders a byte count as a short human string —
// "412 GB", "3.7 TB", "8.4 GB". Single decimal place for sub-1000
// values, none above. Returns "—" for zero so the dashboard's
// "never run" rows read clean.
func formatBytes(n int64) template.HTML {
if n == 0 {
return template.HTML(`<span class="text-ink-fade">—</span>`)
}
const (
kb = 1000
mb = 1000 * kb
gb = 1000 * mb
tb = 1000 * gb
)
var (
val float64
unit string
)
switch {
case n >= tb:
val, unit = float64(n)/float64(tb), "TB"
case n >= gb:
val, unit = float64(n)/float64(gb), "GB"
case n >= mb:
val, unit = float64(n)/float64(mb), "MB"
case n >= kb:
val, unit = float64(n)/float64(kb), "kB"
default:
return template.HTML(fmt.Sprintf(`%d <span class="text-ink-mute text-[11px]">B</span>`, n))
}
num := strconv.FormatFloat(val, 'f', -1, 64)
if val < 100 && !strings.Contains(num, ".") {
num += ".0"
} else if val < 100 && strings.Contains(num, ".") {
// One decimal max, e.g. "3.7" not "3.74".
idx := strings.Index(num, ".")
if len(num) > idx+2 {
num = num[:idx+2]
}
} else {
// Above 100, no decimals — "412" not "412.4".
if idx := strings.Index(num, "."); idx > 0 {
num = num[:idx]
}
}
return template.HTML(fmt.Sprintf(`%s <span class="text-ink-mute text-[11px]">%s</span>`, num, unit))
}
// formatRelTime renders a time as a short relative string like
// "3m ago" / "2d ago" / "5w ago". Future times render as
// "in 5m"-style. Accepts *time.Time or time.Time so templates can
// pass either without fighting Go's lack of an address-of operator.
// Anything else returns "—".
func formatRelTime(v any) string {
var t time.Time
switch x := v.(type) {
case time.Time:
t = x
case *time.Time:
if x == nil {
return "—"
}
t = *x
default:
return "—"
}
if t.IsZero() {
return "—"
}
d := time.Since(t)
suffix := "ago"
if d < 0 {
d = -d
suffix = "from now"
}
switch {
case d < time.Minute:
return fmt.Sprintf("%ds %s", int(d.Seconds()), suffix)
case d < time.Hour:
return fmt.Sprintf("%dm %s", int(d.Minutes()), suffix)
case d < 24*time.Hour:
return fmt.Sprintf("%dh %s", int(d.Hours()), suffix)
case d < 7*24*time.Hour:
return fmt.Sprintf("%dd %s", int(d.Hours()/24), suffix)
default:
return fmt.Sprintf("%dw %s", int(d.Hours()/(24*7)), suffix)
}
}
// formatComma renders 1847 as "1,847". Used for snapshot counts and
// any other count that benefits from grouping at this scale.
// Accepts int / int64 / int32 — anything else returns "—".
func formatComma(v any) string {
var n int64
switch x := v.(type) {
case int:
n = int64(x)
case int32:
n = int64(x)
case int64:
n = x
default:
return "—"
}
s := strconv.FormatInt(n, 10)
if n < 1000 && n > -1000 {
return s
}
// Hand-rolled grouping; Go has no builtin and we don't want a
// dep for this. Negative numbers handled by stripping the sign,
// grouping, then putting it back.
neg := false
if s[0] == '-' {
neg = true
s = s[1:]
}
var b strings.Builder
for i, c := range s {
if i > 0 && (len(s)-i)%3 == 0 {
b.WriteByte(',')
}
b.WriteRune(c)
}
if neg {
return "-" + b.String()
}
return b.String()
}
// derefStr returns the string a pointer points to, or "" if nil.
// Avoids "<nil>" appearing in templates that hit a missing FK.
func derefStr(p *string) string {
if p == nil {
return ""
}
return *p
}