4. Add `C:\msys64\ucrt64\bin` to your Windows `PATH`.
5. Verify with `gcc --version` in a fresh terminal.
After either, `go build ./...` and `go run .` work normally.
> Why MinGW-w64 over MSVC: `mattn/go-sqlite3` officially supports GCC, builds are faster on Windows, and the toolchain doesn't lock you into a Visual Studio install. If you already have Visual Studio Build Tools installed it works too — just make sure `CC=cl` is **not** set in your environment.
The Linux SQLite cross-build from Windows (or vice versa) needs an extra cross-compiler — out of scope here; build natively on the target OS.
## First-time setup
```bash
git clone https://github.com/MHSanaei/3x-ui.git
cd 3x-ui
cp .env.example .env
mkdir x-ui
go mod download
cd frontend
npm install
npm run build
cd ..
```
`.env.example` ships with sane defaults that point the database, logs, and xray binary at the local `x-ui/` folder so nothing escapes the project directory:
```
XUI_DEBUG=true
XUI_DB_FOLDER=x-ui
XUI_LOG_FOLDER=x-ui
XUI_BIN_FOLDER=x-ui
```
You need to drop the xray binary (`xray-windows-amd64.exe` on Windows, `xray-linux-amd64` on Linux, etc.) plus the matching `geoip.dat` / `geosite.dat` files into `x-ui/`. The easiest source is a [released Xray-core build](https://github.com/XTLS/Xray-core/releases). On Windows you also want `wintun.dll` if you plan to test TUN inbounds.
## Running
```bash
go run .
```
Open [http://localhost:2053](http://localhost:2053) and log in with `admin` / `admin`. You will be prompted to change the credentials on first login.
### Inside VS Code
The repo ships a launch profile in `.vscode/launch.json` (gitignored — copy from the snippet below if it is missing):
```jsonc
{
"version": "0.2.0",
"configurations": [
{
"name": "Run 3x-ui (Debug)",
"type": "go",
"request": "launch",
"mode": "auto",
"program": "${workspaceFolder}",
"cwd": "${workspaceFolder}",
"env": {
"XUI_DEBUG": "true",
"XUI_DB_FOLDER": "x-ui",
"XUI_LOG_FOLDER": "x-ui",
"XUI_BIN_FOLDER": "x-ui"
},
"console": "integratedTerminal"
}
]
}
```
## Working on the frontend
The panel UI is a Vue 3 + Ant Design Vue 4 app under `frontend/`. A few things worth knowing before you dive in.
### Architecture in one paragraph
It's a **multi-page app**, not a SPA. Every panel route (`/panel`, `/panel/inbounds`, `/panel/clients`, `/panel/xray`, `/panel/settings`, `/panel/sub`, `/panel/api-docs`, plus `login`) has its own HTML entry under `frontend/*.html` and its own bootstrap in `src/entries/<page>.js`. Vite builds them into `web/dist/`, and the Go binary embeds that directory at compile time with `embed.FS`. Each navigation triggers a real document load — but each page's bundle is small, so it stays snappy. There's no Vue Router and no central store; Vuex/Pinia were rejected as overkill for the panel's surface area.
### State and data flow
- **No global store.** State lives where it's used. Cross-page data (settings, current user, theme) is re-fetched on each page load — the backend is on the same box and responses are cheap.
- **Composables** in `src/composables/` carry reactive logic worth sharing inside a page (theme switching, status polling, node lists). Reach for one before adding a new global.
- **Domain classes** in `src/models/` (`Inbound`, `DBInbound`, `Outbound`, `Status`, …) own the protocol-specific logic — link generation, settings JSON shape, TLS/Reality stream handling. The Vue components stay dumb; they ask the model "what's my link?" and render the answer.
- **HTTP** goes through `src/utils/index.js`'s `HttpUtil`, which is a thin Axios wrapper with CSRF, response toast handling, and a `silent: true` opt-out for bulk operations that would otherwise spam toasts.
### i18n
Locale strings live in `web/translation/<locale>.json`, not under `frontend/`. The Go side embeds the same JSON and serves it to both backend templates and `vue-i18n`. When you add a new English key, add it to **every** non-English locale too — missing keys don't fail the build, they just render the raw key in the UI.
### Two dev workflows
| When you want… | Use |
|----------------|-----|
| To iterate on UI tweaks fast | `cd frontend && npm run dev` (Vite on `:5173`, proxies `/panel/*` and `/api/*` to the Go panel on `:2053`). Start the Go panel first. |
| To test what users actually see | `cd frontend && npm run build`, then `go run .`. The Go binary serves the built bundle either embedded (release mode) or from disk (debug mode). |
The Vite dev proxy auto-rewrites the sidebar's production-style links (`/panel`, `/panel/inbounds`, `/panel/clients`, etc.) to the matching Vite-served HTML, so the navigation feels identical to prod without round-tripping through Go. The route allowlist lives in `MIGRATED_ROUTES` in `vite.config.js` — if you add a new page, register it there too.
> **`XUI_DEBUG=true` gotcha** — in debug mode the panel serves HTML out of the embedded FS (frozen at the last `go build` / `go run`) but JS/CSS off disk. Re-running `npm run build` without restarting Go leaves the embedded HTML pointing at the *old* hashed asset names → blank page with 404s in the browser console. Always restart `go run .` after a frontend rebuild.
### Adding a new page
1. Create `frontend/<page>.html` (copy an existing one and adjust the title + the imported entry).
3. Create the page component under `src/pages/<page>/<Page>.vue` (kebab-case folder, PascalCase component).
4. Register the entry in `rollupOptions.input` inside `vite.config.js`.
5. If the page is reachable from the sidebar at `/panel/<route>`, add `<route>` to `MIGRATED_ROUTES` so dev-mode navigation works.
6. Wire a Go controller route that calls `serveDistPage(c, "<page>.html")` to serve the embedded HTML in prod.
### Conventions
- **Ant Design Vue** is the only UI kit — no Tailwind, no shadcn. A previous attempt to migrate was rolled back as ugly + bloated. Small targeted UX tweaks beat sweeping rewrites; if a section *really* needs new visual language, raise it first.
- **Composition API** (`<scriptsetup>`) everywhere. Options API survives only in components nobody has touched yet.
- **No `//` line comments** in committed JS/Vue. HTML `<!-- ... -->` is fine for template structure. Identifiers should carry the meaning; if you need a comment to explain *what* code does, rename the variable. Comments are for the *why* and only when surprising.
- **Persian / Arabic users matter.** RTL is supported via `ConfigProvider` + `dir="rtl"`. When you write Persian text in toasts or labels, keep prose clean — isolate code/identifiers on their own lines so the RTL reading flows.
- **Don't break links.** Share-link generation has two paths: the **inbounds page** (`InboundsPage.vue` → `checkFallback()`) and the **clients page** (`/panel/api/clients/subLinks/:subId` → backend `GetSubs`). Exercise both whenever you touch URL generation, fallback projection, or TLS handling.
| `XUI_DB_FOLDER` | platform default | Where `x-ui.db` lives |
| `XUI_LOG_FOLDER` | platform default | Where `3xui.log` lives |
| `XUI_BIN_FOLDER` | `bin` | Where the xray binary + geo files + xray `config.json` live |
| `XUI_DB_TYPE` | `sqlite` | Set to `postgres` to use PostgreSQL via `XUI_DB_DSN` |
| `XUI_DB_DSN` | — | PostgreSQL DSN when `XUI_DB_TYPE=postgres` |
## Issues and discussion
- Bug reports and feature requests: [GitHub Issues](https://github.com/MHSanaei/3x-ui/issues)
- General questions and ideas: [GitHub Discussions](https://github.com/MHSanaei/3x-ui/discussions)
Before filing a bug, please include your OS, Go version, panel version (`/panel/api/server/status` or the dashboard footer), and the relevant excerpt from `x-ui/3xui.log`.