The role moves around based on current availability.
@tractorcow has done most of the last releases,
but a separate team (headed by @dhensby) will be
responsible for 3.x releases.
There's not really much point to declaring a release maintainer,
unless there's disagreements in the core team where we need
an arbitrator. So far those conflicts have been resolved
on individual tickets (e.g. what should go into a release),
and the process for that seems to work well.
* API Replace existing Email and Mailer classes with SwiftMailer powered email system
* DOCS New Email docs
* Initial feedback from Damian
* Making Mailer an interface
* Templates relocated
* Round of feedback
* More robust approach to plain parts
* Revert changes to TestMailer
The "repositories" key makes "composer update" ridiculously slow with the amount of tags and branches we have in core,
so unfortunately we can't rely on it. I've also removed the thinkapp-based instructions about working with git,
since it's now fairly widespread knowledge, and better documented elsewhere.
Note that I've chosen to rename the "origin" remote to "upstream" in order to keep in line with
the contribution documentation on help.github.com (even if it's a bit more clumsy to explain upfront)
Now that Mandrill has become a paid part of Campaign Monitor it makes sense for us to recommend the free alternative SparkPost.
The package I've linked to is by the same author as the original Mandrill package.
Created a generic DataObject FormFactory interface that can be substituted in place of getCMSFields. Different FormFactories can depend on different kinds of context, such as
'Record' or 'Controller' - it's the responsibility of the code calling the factory to interpret and
supply this context.
The expected use-case is that rather than overriding getCMSFields(), developers can
change CMS UIs by manipulating the FormFactory associated with the given DataObject.
This is an experimental UI and may change before 4.0 stable is released.
API Remove DataObject::validateModelDefinitions, and move to DataObjectSchema
API Remove deprecated 3.0 syntax for addSelect()
API made DataList::createDataObject public
API Move component parsing logic to DataObjectSchema
API Remove support for triangular has_many / belongs_many relationships
SCSS linting now uses the node-based sass-lint tool, since we’re
shifting away from CodeClimate.
This has the benefit of not requiring a ruby gem on dev tools -
everything is provided as npm dev dependencies.
This was also necessary to run the linting inside travis.
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.
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.
This has been made obsolete, since those files are all included in the main bundle (see bundle-lib.js).
They should not be referenced individually (e.g. through Requirements::block() or Requirements::javascript()).
Responsibility for finding and referencing images and fonts is now
given to webpack. All the url references are now relative to the
component scss file, and point to font & images files in src/, rather
than assuming someone else will place them in dist.
This makes the source more modular, and makes it easier to, for
example, inline images are data URIs, or create a new build script that
builds several modules for a project in a single pass.
Workaround for bad font path in bundle.css:
ExtactTextPlugin didn’t work as well with a subfolder reference in the
filename. This is just a short-term fix and could probably be improved
to put bundle.css back in the styles subfolder.
Webpack handles images & fonts:
Responsibility for finding and referencing images and fonts is now
given to webpack. All the url references are now relative to the
component scss file, and point to font & images files in src/, rather
than assuming someone else will place them in dist.
This makes the source more modular, and makes it easier to, for
example, inline images are data URIs, or create a new build script that
builds several modules for a project in a single pass.
Clarify docs on spriting and webfonts:
We've decided to remove sprity since it comes with hundreds of dependencies,
and needs compilation within the "npm install" - dragging out the already overweight
install process, and making the resulting node_modules/ folder less portable between systems.
The bundle is generated by running “webpack” directly - gulp is no
longer needed as an intermediary. The resulting config is a lot shorter,
although more configuration is pushed into lib.js.
Modules are shared between javascript files as global variables.
Although this global state pollution is a bit messy, I don’t think it’s
practically any worse than the previous state, and it highlights the
heavy coupling between the different packages we have in place.
Reducing the width of the coupling between the core javascript and
add-on modules would probably be a better way of dealing with this than
replacing global variables with some other kind of global state.
The web pack execution seems roughly twice as fast - if I clear out my
framework/client/dist/js folder, it takes 13.3s to rebuild. However,
it’s not rebuilding other files inside dist, only the bundle files.
CSS files are now included from javascript and incorporated into
bundle.css by the webpack. Although the style-loader is helpful in some
dev workflows (it allows live reload), it introduces a flash of
unstyled content which makes it inappropriate for production.
Instead ExtractTextPlugin is used to write all the aggregated CSS
into a single bundle.css file. A style-loader-based configuration could
be introduced for dev environments, if we make use of the webpack live
reloader in the future.
Note that the following features have been removed as they don't appear to be
necessary when using Webpack:
- UMD module generation
- thirdparty dist file copying
LeftAndMain.js deps: Without it, ssui.core.js gets loaded too late,
which leads e.g. to buttons being initialised without this added behaviour.
API Remove DataList::applyFilterContext(), superseded by DataList::createSearchFilter()
API SearchFilter::getSupportedModifiers() added to support supported modifier inspection
Standardise template locations
Move CMSSettingsController class to SiteConfig module
Fix CMSMenu behaviour for namespaced admin sections
Split classes into one per file
Manual fixes and cleanup
API Introduce HTMLFragment as casting helper for HTMLText with shortcodes disabled
API Introduce DBField::CDATA for XML file value encoding
API RSSFeed now casts from the underlying model rather than by override
API Introduce CustomMethods::getExtraMethodConfig() to allow metadata to be queried
BUG Remove _call hack from VirtualPage
API Remove FormField::$dontEscape
API Introduce HTMLReadonlyField for non-editable readonly HTML
API FormField::Field() now returns string in many cases rather than DBField instance.
API Remove redundant *_val methods from ViewableData
API ViewableData::obj() no longer has a $forceReturnObject parameter as it always returns an object
BUG Fix issue with ViewableData caching incorrect field values after being modified.
API Remove deprecated DB class methods
API Enforce plain text left/right formfield titles
It was getting a bit lost halfway down the contributing/code instructions,
in between the detailed git instructions.
Also reordered the docs TOC for that folder by renaming the files.
Also created a contributing/coding_conventions landing page separately from the PHP ones, since we now need to account for JS and CSS conventions as well