- Removed custom form reducers in favour of redux-form (updateField(), addForm(), etc)
- Storing 'state' in schema reducer to avoid a separate forms reducer tree (no longer needed for other use cases). This means 'state' is only the "initial state", any form edits will be handled by redux-form internally in the 'reduxForm' reducer namespace
- Removed componentWillUnmount() from <Form> since there's no more reducer state to clean up (removed formReducer.js), and redux-form handles that internally
- Removed isFetching state from <FormBuilder> since there's now a props.submitting coming from redux-form
- Improved passing of "clicked button" (submittingAction), using component state rather than reducer and passing it into action handlers (no need for components to inspect it any other way)
- Hacky duplication of this.submittingAction and this.state.submittingAction to avoid re-render of <FormBuilder> *during* a submission (see https://github.com/erikras/redux-form/issues/1944)
- Inlined handleSubmit() XHR (rather than using a redux action). There's other ways for form consumers to listen to form evens (e.g. onSubmitSuccess passed through <FormBuilder> into reduxForm()).
- Adapting checkbox/radio fields to redux-forms
Need to send onChange event with values rather than the original event,
see http://redux-form.com/6.1.1/docs/api/Field.md/#-input-onchange-eventorvalue-function-
- Using reduxForm() within render() causes DOM to get thrown away,
and has weird side effects like https://github.com/erikras/redux-form/issues/1944.
See https://github.com/erikras/redux-form/issues/603#issuecomment-176397728
- Refactored <FormBuilderLoader> as a separate container component which connects to redux and redux-form. This keeps the <FormBuilder> component dependency free and easy to test. It'll also be an advantage if we switch to a GraphQL backed component, in which case the async loading routines will look very different from the current <FormBuilderLoader> implementation
- Refactoring out the redux-form dependency from FormBuilder to make it more testable (through baseFormComponent and baseFieldComponent)
- Passing through 'form' to allow custom identifiers (which is important because currently the schema "id" contains the record identifier, making the form identifier non-deterministic - which means you can't use it with the redux-form selector API)
The URL to request the schema representation is the unique identifier.
We can't default to $request->getURL() since that's different for form submissions.
The schema.schema_url key is redundant, since the identifier is already contained on the top level 'id' key.
Keeping schema_url in a schema itself makes it less portable, particularly once we transition into
generic schemas which are not reliant on a particular record context (that's only contained in the schema_url)
This also fixes the issue of form schemas not refreshing after submit,
e.g. when form fields are added or removed.
NEW: Add SilverStripe\ORM\UnexpectedDataException class.
This change provides more graceful handling of the case where a
ChangeSetItem is referencing a no-longer-existing class.
The new exception, SilverStripe\ORM\UnexpectedDataException, is
intended to be available for throwing whenever we have unexpected data
in the database.
It can be trapped by the relevant UIs and more graceful errors than
HTTP 500s can be provided.
The props.tag default was set directly on props,
but the component used it from props.data.tag,
hence the default was ineffective.
Since empty arrays for props.data override nested React defaults,
there's no built-in way to enforce this default.
Hardcoding a default felt viable here, since the component allows overrides via props.
We can't use our own "id" values here, since react-bootstrap requires internal consistency
between tab containers and tab panes through its own auto-generated identifiers
This doesn’t have much impact on resulting JS size, but it will
hopefully make merge conflicts much less frequent.
The CSS growth is a little higher (6.5% increase in size) but is not
material.
If this materially reduces the number of merge conflicts we have, by
letting the git merge tools resolve some dist file mergers, I think it
would be worth it.
Some example changes in file size:
bundle.js 290K -> 301K
vendor.js 1,325K -> 1,321K
bundle.css 628K -> 669K
* Rename bundles (prep for webpack optimisation)
This might or might not reduce the overall repo size,
because git can combine similar chunks in the newly generated files
* Optimise webpack build time
Consolidates bundles, since a separation of bundle-framework.js vs. bundle-legacy.js
vs. bundle-lib.js no longer makes sense - they're all loaded upfront anyway,
since we'll be introducing more react-powered logic alongside the "legacy" JavaScript.
By consolidating into fewer bundles, we give the optimisation scripts (UglifyJS)
more options to reduce the overall file size.
The main motivation for a vendor.js is to shorten rebuild times:
Most active development is happening in files required through bundle.js.
This commit drastically reduces the rebuild time for those changes (15s to 4s).
* Panel/tab-panel and alerts spacing, button padding consistency and alignment
* Reports panel spacing adjustments
* ReportAdmin panel and toolbar spacing
* Comment change
* Fix formatting help toggle link
* Use standard line-heights and padding for buttons
* Add base panel styles
* Update to .panel styles and .toolbar spacing
* Remove legacy styles, linting fixes
* Toolbar--content to have consistent styles throughout
* Add panel and toolbar styles to areas missing them
* Replace values with variables
* Layout overrides for tabs and panels with padding
* Adjust JQueryUI button spacing to match other UI buttons
* Remove custom ReportAdmin styles
Update values to variables and modify panel and tab-panel spacing
* Remove text color override
* Remove double (.m-t-1) spacing from campaign panel
* Profile page remove legacy JLayout
* Remove legacy spacing
* Removed Layout from page so !important not needed
* Improve use of variables
* Add missing closing bracket, minor linting fixes
* Linting fixes
* Remove css importants
* Add temp fix for file upload within gridfield
Tidy structure of css
* css build
* Spacing bug fixed for campaign list alert
* Added Created field to File/Image editor
* switch default input value to null
Fix react errors and added a field description
* API Use new DBField::getSchemaValue()
The ‘npm run lint’ command will be used to run listing on Travis, which
can also be used on local dev environments. These can also be used with
editor plugins to highlight errors immediately.
The intention is that this can be used in place of codeclimate. The
benefits are that we use a single toolchain in both CI and local dev,
which is not entirely the case at the moment.
Note the sass-lint is provided by “sudo gem install scss_lint”. It’s
possible that we can move to a node-based sass-lint; I can’t recall
what the motivation for using the scss_lint gem was - I think it was
mainly that we had the AirBNB styleguide already implemented as a linter
config.
Code was assuming that FRAMEWORK_DIR would always have a value. If it
doesn’t (because you’re running a test instance of a naked framework)
This caused URLs to be treated as root relative, which creates some
duplicate-inclusion bugs.
The use of ltrim() works, but is a bit clumsy. A more flexible approach
to including front-end assets of given modules would be preferable;
ideally something that also let you keep your code outside of the
web root.
When rewriting the i18n.js file from ES5 to ES6, the detectLocale()
call in the constructor was missed - meaning the lang files were loaded by the browser,
but never actually used.
The 'admin' module will be split off from 'framework',
where 'framework' only provides (mostly) frontend-agnostic PHP classes.
For example, HTMLEditorField.php has a TinyMCEConfig.php driver,
but doesn't come with its own JS includes.
Multiple entry points can't result in a single bundle.css with a fixed filename, see
https://github.com/webpack/extract-text-webpack-plugin/issues/179
Until that's resolved, it's easier to keep the 'css' task separate in Webpack,
and have a single entry point for all CSS (bundle.scss).
Also partially reverting "Moved frontend assets into admin/ "module"",
which moved too many files: debug.css and install.css need to remain
as framework (not admin) deps. Split out into a separate `framework-css` Webpack
task in preparation for splitting off the module.
The JavaScript i18n functionality in SilverStripe is used in the CMS as well as form field implementations.
Form fields used to include their own JavaScript for usage outside of CMS. This now requires custom build tooling in a project.
Hence there's no need for an i18n shim (i18nx.js), since the CMS always uses i18n support.
We've removed the ability to directly reference JS and CSS files
for form fields and other SilverStripe features in favour of a common bundle built by Webpack.
The logical next step is to make the framework module free of frontend dependencies,
which should simplify its operation, and avoid another time intensive "npm install" on a module.