Futures
Hundreds of contracts settled in USDT or BTC
TradFi
Gold
Trade global traditional assets with USDT in one place
Options
Hot
Trade European-style vanilla options
Unified Account
Maximize your capital efficiency
Demo Trading
Futures Kickoff
Get prepared for your futures trading
Futures Events
Participate in events to win generous rewards
Demo Trading
Use virtual funds to experience risk-free trading
Launch
CandyDrop
Collect candies to earn airdrops
Launchpool
Quick staking, earn potential new tokens
HODLer Airdrop
Hold GT and get massive airdrops for free
Launchpad
Be early to the next big token project
Alpha Points
Trade on-chain assets and enjoy airdrop rewards!
Futures Points
Earn futures points and claim airdrop rewards
Investment
Simple Earn
Earn interests with idle tokens
Auto-Invest
Auto-invest on a regular basis
Dual Investment
Buy low and sell high to take profits from price fluctuations
Soft Staking
Earn rewards with flexible staking
Crypto Loan
0 Fees
Pledge one crypto to borrow another
Lending Center
One-stop lending hub
VIP Wealth Hub
Customized wealth management empowers your assets growth
Private Wealth Management
Customized asset management to grow your digital assets
Quant Fund
Top asset management team helps you profit without hassle
Staking
Stake cryptos to earn in PoS products
Smart Leverage
New
No forced liquidation before maturity, worry-free leveraged gains
GUSD Minting
Use USDT/USDC to mint GUSD for treasury-level yields
Last night, all proxy nodes went down simultaneously.
Three concurrent issues: Xray log permission errors on VPS causing process crashes, local Clash configuration files corrupted, and Japanese node IP suspected to be blocked. The result was—completely losing connection with Claude Code.
It was then that I realized one thing: I find it very difficult to troubleshoot problems "naked" on my own.
For the past half year, almost all technical decisions were made through AI conversations. Reading logs, modifying configurations, checking documentation, writing scripts—all done with AI and Claude Code throughout. Suddenly disconnected, it’s not even a matter of "inconvenience," but genuinely not knowing where to start.
In the end, I temporarily went online by borrowing a friend's proxy subscription, using Claude Code.
Fixing my own infrastructure: identifying the root causes of three concurrent failures, restoring permissions, recovering configurations from backups, and doing full disk snapshots on Vultr to migrate and change IP. Four PM2 processes, nine cron jobs, all code and data restored as-is, and a new IP—revived fully.
After fixing everything, I did something I should have done long ago: I created an offline self-rescue package.
Running a small local model, with an emergency manual (failure scenarios + troubleshooting commands + protocol parameters). When offline, the local model reads the manual and guides step-by-step troubleshooting. Zero cost, no internet needed.
A thought: if you rely heavily on AI CLI for daily work, your proxy/network access layer is your "AI lifeline." It also needs high-availability design—automatic failover between primary and backup nodes, offline fallback plans, emergency manuals.
The same principle as deploying production services, but this time, the service that’s down is your own brain.