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funcode2.0/README.md

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This is a [Next.js](https://nextjs.org) project bootstrapped with [`create-next-app`](https://nextjs.org/docs/app/api-reference/cli/create-next-app).
## Getting Started
First, run the development server:
```bash
npm run dev
# or
yarn dev
# or
pnpm dev
# or
bun dev
```
Open [http://localhost:3000](http://localhost:3000) with your browser to see the result.
You can start editing the page by modifying `app/page.tsx`. The page auto-updates as you edit the file.
This project uses [`next/font`](https://nextjs.org/docs/app/building-your-application/optimizing/fonts) to automatically optimize and load [Geist](https://vercel.com/font), a new font family for Vercel.
## Learn More
To learn more about Next.js, take a look at the following resources:
- [Next.js Documentation](https://nextjs.org/docs) - learn about Next.js features and API.
- [Learn Next.js](https://nextjs.org/learn) - an interactive Next.js tutorial.
You can check out [the Next.js GitHub repository](https://github.com/vercel/next.js) - your feedback and contributions are welcome!
## Deploy on Vercel
The easiest way to deploy your Next.js app is to use the [Vercel Platform](https://vercel.com/new?utm_medium=default-template&filter=next.js&utm_source=create-next-app&utm_campaign=create-next-app-readme) from the creators of Next.js.
Check out our [Next.js deployment documentation](https://nextjs.org/docs/app/building-your-application/deploying) for more details.
## Queue / Ticketing demo (WebSocket + JWT)
This repository contains a minimal demo of a queue system for high-concurrency ticket sales. Key ideas:
- When an event reaches a concurrency threshold (e.g. 100 users), the server enables a queue for that event.
- Users connect via WebSocket (Socket.IO). When queueing is active they are placed in a FIFO queue.
- The server grants access (issues a signed JWT) to up to CONCURRENT_ACTIVE users (default 50) at a time.
- The JWT is valid for a short period (default 15 minutes). When it expires the server revokes access and grants the next users in queue.
- The client uses the JWT to authenticate purchase API calls.
Files added in this demo:
- `app/api/socketio/route.js` — Next.js App Router API route that initializes the Socket.IO server, in-memory queue logic and JWT issuance (demo only).
- `.env.example` — example environment variables for the queue system.
- `app/page.tsx` — client UI (Next.js) that connects via Socket.IO and displays queue position, estimated wait, and purchase button.
Important notes and limitations:
- The server implementation in `server/index.js` is an in-memory demo. For production use a shared, persistent store (Redis) for queue/locks and a robust MySQL schema if you need persistence.
- Add authentication, rate-limiting, and persistent sessions before using in production.
Running locally
1. Copy `.env.example` to `.env` and adjust values (especially `JWT_SECRET`).
2. Install dependencies (already included in package.json):
```powershell
pnpm install
```
3. Start the Next.js dev server:
```powershell
pnpm dev
```
4. Open `http://localhost:3000` - the page will automatically initialize the Socket.IO server via API call to `/api/socketio`, then connect to it on port 4000.
Next steps / improvements
- Move queue state to Redis (ZSET) to support multiple server instances.
- Persist issued tokens and sessions in DB to support revocation and auditing.
- Add server-side validation of the JWT on purchase endpoints.
- Add tests around queue promotion logic and token expiration.