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()
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.
Used in iframe, so can't be rolled into other code.
Moved in admin/ since that's easier for now with Webpack entry points,
and we'll move all JS/CSS into admin/ anyway soon.
There's not a lot of benefit in packaging these separately in terms of initial CMS load size,
so let's simplify the setup. They'll eventually become lazy loaded chunks in a React-based setup
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.
This caught us out recently where code did a strict type check for `myVar === undefined`.
The var was defined as `let myVar;`, without a value - so the check returned false (it's `null`).
To avoid this situation, we've decided to enforce declarations with values.
Note that preference should be given to single, immutable assignments via const where possible.
See http://eslint.org/docs/rules/init-declarations
Allows actions to make decisions based on the form payload.
For example, a "delete" button can pass the currently edited record ID to its API endpoint.
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
Convert form and Textfield styles to use Bootstrap
Split out btn styles a bit more clearly defined (BEM)
Toolbar modifier to improve spacing for smaller screens
Use bootstrap spacer styles .m-t-1 (margin-top-1 x spacer) instead of custom spacer
Added a few typography helpers
Tab styles continued although they are hidden (used on AssetAdmin editor panel)
* Swap out .Actions class for bootstrap .btn-toolbar
* Converted all south toolbars to use new toolbar component styles, content and preview styles for scrollbars adjusted where required
This should be separated out to a common FormField class,
but for now we're only using TextField. Can be solved
properly at the same time as switching form fields to
react-bootstrap.
Required for readonly field value alignment in the "campaigns" edit form.
Better than no feedback at all while campaigns are loading.
Not using spinner.gif because a loading animation is already presented when the section is loaded (via PJAX).
Not translating the "Loading..." text because its temporary.
We're not using it for any other props passed to ReactJS components,
so there's no reason to do it here. Props are immutable by convention.
While it would be nice to enforce this, its too common to pass through
function objects which aren't supported by IE's Object.freeze().
IE isn't following the spec on how to handle Object.freeze(function() {}).
See https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Object/freeze#Notes
> In ES6, a non-object argument will be treated as if it was a frozen ordinary object, simply return it.
MS docs on https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/subscriptions/downloads/ff806186(v=vs.94).aspx
> If the object argument is not an object, a TypeError exception is thrown.