Commit Graph

25 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jacob Fletcher
1f4790a314 chore(examples): removes all instances of React.forwardRef (#10334)
Similar to #10331. Since React 19, refs can now be passed directly
through props without the need for `React.forwardRef`. This greatly
simplifies components types and overall syntax.
2025-01-03 18:10:46 +00:00
Jacob Fletcher
e095222a9c fix(next): does not format top-level domains within admin.preview or livePreview.url functions (#9831)
Fixes #9830. Continuation of #9755 and #9746. Instead of automatically
appending TLDs to the `admin.preview` and the `livePreview.url` URLs, we
should instead ensure that `req` is passed through these functions, so
that you can have full control over the format of this URL without
Payload imposing any of its own formatting.
2024-12-09 11:54:20 -05:00
Jacob Fletcher
f12b4dc6b0 feat(live-preview): supports relative urls for dynamic preview deployments (#9746)
When deploying to Vercel, preview deployment URLs are dynamically
generated. This breaks Live Preview within those deployments because
there is no mechanism by which we can detect and set that URL within
Payload. Although Vercel provides various environment variables at our
disposal, they provide no concrete identifier for exactly _which_ URL is
being currently previewed (you an access the same deployment from a
number of different URLs).

The fix is to support _relative_ live preview URLs, that way Payload can
prepend the application's top-level domain dynamically at render-time in
order to create a fully qualified URL. So when you visit a Vercel
preview deployment, for example, that deployment's unique URL is used to
load the iframe of the preview window, instead of the application's
root/production domain. Note: this does not fix multi-tenancy
single-domain setups, as those still require a static top-level domain
for each tenant.
2024-12-04 13:31:43 -05:00
Jacob Fletcher
3d1a0656d2 fix(live-preview): populates localized relationships in client-side live preview (#9617)
Fixes #5026. When using client-side Live Preview, switching locale would
not populate relationships in that locale, and would use the default
locale instead. This was because locale was simply not being handled.
Now, we pass the locale through the event, and use it to make localized
queries when populating those relationships.
2024-11-29 15:41:39 -05:00
Germán Jabloñski
f1eab5d5d3 chore(richtext-lexical): re-export lexical (#9229)
Co-authored-by: Alessio Gravili <alessio@gravili.de>
2024-11-18 16:27:36 -05:00
Elliot DeNolf
324af8a5f9 chore: update all githubusercontent links after branch rename 2024-11-17 16:46:23 -05:00
James Mikrut
31b32ef941 feat: deprecates getPayloadHMR in favor of simpler getPayload (#9249)
Deprecates `getPayloadHMR` and simplifies this pattern into a single
`import { getPayload } from 'payload'`.

We will still retain the exported `getPayloadHMR` but it now will throw
a deprecation warning with instructions for how to migrate.
2024-11-16 15:30:05 -05:00
Jacob Fletcher
c96fa613bc feat!: on demand rsc (#8364)
Currently, Payload renders all custom components on initial compile of
the admin panel. This is problematic for two key reasons:
1. Custom components do not receive contextual data, i.e. fields do not
receive their field data, edit views do not receive their document data,
etc.
2. Components are unnecessarily rendered before they are used

This was initially required to support React Server Components within
the Payload Admin Panel for two key reasons:
1. Fields can be dynamically rendered within arrays, blocks, etc.
2. Documents can be recursively rendered within a "drawer" UI, i.e.
relationship fields
3. Payload supports server/client component composition 

In order to achieve this, components need to be rendered on the server
and passed as "slots" to the client. Currently, the pattern for this is
to render custom server components in the "client config". Then when a
view or field is needed to be rendered, we first check the client config
for a "pre-rendered" component, otherwise render our client-side
fallback component.

But for the reasons listed above, this pattern doesn't exactly make
custom server components very useful within the Payload Admin Panel,
which is where this PR comes in. Now, instead of pre-rendering all
components on initial compile, we're able to render custom components
_on demand_, only as they are needed.

To achieve this, we've established [this
pattern](https://github.com/payloadcms/payload/pull/8481) of React
Server Functions in the Payload Admin Panel. With Server Functions, we
can iterate the Payload Config and return JSX through React's
`text/x-component` content-type. This means we're able to pass
contextual props to custom components, such as data for fields and
views.

## Breaking Changes

1. Add the following to your root layout file, typically located at
`(app)/(payload)/layout.tsx`:

    ```diff
    /* THIS FILE WAS GENERATED AUTOMATICALLY BY PAYLOAD. */
    /* DO NOT MODIFY IT BECAUSE IT COULD BE REWRITTEN AT ANY TIME. */
    + import type { ServerFunctionClient } from 'payload'

    import config from '@payload-config'
    import { RootLayout } from '@payloadcms/next/layouts'
    import { handleServerFunctions } from '@payloadcms/next/utilities'
    import React from 'react'

    import { importMap } from './admin/importMap.js'
    import './custom.scss'

    type Args = {
      children: React.ReactNode
    }

+ const serverFunctions: ServerFunctionClient = async function (args) {
    +  'use server'
    +  return handleServerFunctions({
    +    ...args,
    +    config,
    +    importMap,
    +  })
    + }

    const Layout = ({ children }: Args) => (
      <RootLayout
        config={config}
        importMap={importMap}
    +  serverFunctions={serverFunctions}
      >
        {children}
      </RootLayout>
    )

    export default Layout
    ```

2. If you were previously posting to the `/api/form-state` endpoint, it
no longer exists. Instead, you'll need to invoke the `form-state` Server
Function, which can be done through the _new_ `getFormState` utility:

    ```diff
    - import { getFormState } from '@payloadcms/ui'
    - const { state } = await getFormState({
    -   apiRoute: '',
    -   body: {
    -     // ...
    -   },
    -   serverURL: ''
    - })

    + const { getFormState } = useServerFunctions()
    +
    + const { state } = await getFormState({
    +   // ...
    + })
    ```

## Breaking Changes

```diff
- useFieldProps()
- useCellProps()
```

More details coming soon.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alessio Gravili <alessio@gravili.de>
Co-authored-by: Jarrod Flesch <jarrodmflesch@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: James <james@trbl.design>
2024-11-11 13:59:05 -05:00
Paul
6b9f178fcb fix: graphql missing options route resulting in failed cors preflight checks in production (#8987)
GraphQL currently doesn't pass CORS checks as we don't expose an OPTIONS
endpoint which is used for browser preflights.

Should also fix situations like this
https://github.com/payloadcms/payload/issues/8974
2024-11-04 14:20:09 -05:00
Jacob Fletcher
f6eb027f23 chore: repairs auto-generated file comments (#8549)
The comments injected into auto-generated files have gotten misformatted
due to linting. Here is the proper format, where both comments are
adjacent to one another:

```js
/* THIS FILE WAS GENERATED AUTOMATICALLY BY PAYLOAD. */
/* DO NOT MODIFY IT BECAUSE IT COULD BE REWRITTEN AT ANY TIME. */
```

Some comments were also written with casing issues, here's an example:

```js
/* DO NOT MODIFY it because it could be re-written at any time. */
```
2024-10-03 23:37:08 -04:00
Sasha
fa59d4c0b2 feat!: update next@15.0.0-canary.173, react@19.0.0-rc-3edc000d-20240926 (#8489)
Updates the minimal supported versions of next.js to
[`15.0.0-canary.173`](https://github.com/vercel/next.js/releases/tag/v15.0.0-canary.173)
and react to `19.0.0-rc-3edc000d-20240926`.

Adds neccessary awaits according to this breaking change
https://github.com/vercel/next.js/pull/68812

## Breaking Changes

The `params` and `searchParams` types in
`app/(payload)/admin/[[...segments]]/page.tsx` and
`app/(payload)/admin/[[...segments]]/not-found.tsx` must be changed to
promises:

```diff
- type Args = {
-   params: {
-     segments: string[]
-   }
-   searchParams: {
-     [key: string]: string | string[]
-   }
- }

+ type Args = {
+   params: Promise<{
+     segments: string[]
+   }>
+   searchParams: Promise<{
+     [key: string]: string | string[]
+   }>
+ }

```
2024-10-01 13:16:11 -04:00
Alessio Gravili
90b7b20699 feat!: beta-next (#7620)
This PR makes three major changes to the codebase:

1. [Component Paths](#component-paths)
Instead of importing custom components into your config directly, they
are now defined as file paths and rendered only when needed. That way
the Payload config will be significantly more lightweight, and ensures
that the Payload config is 100% server-only and Node-safe. Related
discussion: https://github.com/payloadcms/payload/discussions/6938

2. [Client Config](#client-config)
Deprecates the component map by merging its logic into the client
config. The main goal of this change is for performance and
simplification. There was no need to deeply iterate over the Payload
config twice, once for the component map, and another for the client
config. Instead, we can do everything in the client config one time.
This has also dramatically simplified the client side prop drilling
through the UI library. Now, all components can share the same client
config which matches the exact shape of their Payload config (with the
exception of non-serializable props and mapped custom components).

3. [Custom client component are no longer
server-rendered](#custom-client-components-are-no-longer-server-rendered)
Previously, custom components would be server-rendered, no matter if
they are server or client components. Now, only server components are
rendered on the server. Client components are automatically detected,
and simply get passed through as `MappedComponent` to be rendered fully
client-side.

## Component Paths

Instead of importing custom components into your config directly, they
are now defined as file paths and rendered only when needed. That way
the Payload config will be significantly more lightweight, and ensures
that the Payload config is 100% server-only and Node-safe. Related
discussion: https://github.com/payloadcms/payload/discussions/6938

In order to reference any custom components in the Payload config, you
now have to specify a string path to the component instead of importing
it.

Old:

```ts
import { MyComponent2} from './MyComponent2.js'

admin: {
  components: {
    Label: MyComponent2
  },
},
```

New:

```ts
admin: {
  components: {
    Label: '/collections/Posts/MyComponent2.js#MyComponent2', // <= has to be a relative path based on a baseDir configured in the Payload config - NOT relative based on the importing file
  },
},
```

### Local API within Next.js routes

Previously, if you used the Payload Local API within Next.js pages, all
the client-side modules are being added to the bundle for that specific
page, even if you only need server-side functionality.

This `/test` route, which uses the Payload local API, was previously 460
kb. It is now down to 91 kb and does not bundle the Payload client-side
admin panel anymore.

All tests done
[here](https://github.com/payloadcms/payload-3.0-demo/tree/feat/path-test)
with beta.67/PR, db-mongodb and default richtext-lexical:

**dev /admin before:**
![CleanShot 2024-07-29 at 22 49
12@2x](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/4428e766-b368-4bcf-8c18-d0187ab64f3e)

**dev /admin after:**
![CleanShot 2024-07-29 at 22 50
49@2x](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/f494c848-7247-4b02-a650-a3fab4000de6)

---

**dev /test before:**
![CleanShot 2024-07-29 at 22 56
18@2x](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/1a7e9500-b859-4761-bf63-abbcdac6f8d6)

**dev /test after:**
![CleanShot 2024-07-29 at 22 47
45@2x](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/f89aa76d-f2d5-4572-9753-2267f034a45a)

---

**build before:**
![CleanShot 2024-07-29 at 22 57
14@2x](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/5f8f7281-2a4a-40a5-a788-c30ddcdd51b5)

**build after::**
![CleanShot 2024-07-29 at 22 56
39@2x](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/ea8772fd-512f-4db0-9a81-4b014715a1b7)

### Usage of the Payload Local API / config outside of Next.js

This will make it a lot easier to use the Payload config / local API in
other, server-side contexts. Previously, you might encounter errors due
to client files (like .scss files) not being allowed to be imported.

## Client Config

Deprecates the component map by merging its logic into the client
config. The main goal of this change is for performance and
simplification. There was no need to deeply iterate over the Payload
config twice, once for the component map, and another for the client
config. Instead, we can do everything in the client config one time.
This has also dramatically simplified the client side prop drilling
through the UI library. Now, all components can share the same client
config which matches the exact shape of their Payload config (with the
exception of non-serializable props and mapped custom components).

This is breaking change. The `useComponentMap` hook no longer exists,
and most component props have changed (for the better):

```ts
const { componentMap } = useComponentMap() // old
const { config } = useConfig() // new
```

The `useConfig` hook has also changed in shape, `config` is now a
property _within_ the context obj:

```ts
const config = useConfig() // old
const { config } = useConfig() // new
```

## Custom Client Components are no longer server rendered

Previously, custom components would be server-rendered, no matter if
they are server or client components. Now, only server components are
rendered on the server. Client components are automatically detected,
and simply get passed through as `MappedComponent` to be rendered fully
client-side.

The benefit of this change:

Custom client components can now receive props. Previously, the only way
for them to receive dynamic props from a parent client component was to
use hooks, e.g. `useFieldProps()`. Now, we do have the option of passing
in props to the custom components directly, if they are client
components. This will be simpler than having to look for the correct
hook.

This makes rendering them on the client a little bit more complex, as
you now have to check if that component is a server component (=>
already has been rendered) or a client component (=> not rendered yet,
has to be rendered here). However, this added complexity has been
alleviated through the easy-to-use `<RenderMappedComponent />` helper.

This helper now also handles rendering arrays of custom components (e.g.
beforeList, beforeLogin ...), which actually makes rendering custom
components easier in some cases.

## Misc improvements

This PR includes misc, breaking changes. For example, we previously
allowed unions between components and config object for the same
property. E.g. for the custom view property, you were allowed to pass in
a custom component or an object with other properties, alongside a
custom component.

Those union types are now gone. You can now either pass an object, or a
component. The previous `{ View: MyViewComponent}` is now `{ View: {
Component: MyViewComponent} }` or `{ View: { Default: { Component:
MyViewComponent} } }`.

This dramatically simplifies the way we read & process those properties,
especially in buildComponentMap. We can now simply check for the
existence of one specific property, which always has to be a component,
instead of running cursed runtime checks on a shared union property
which could contain a component, but could also contain functions or
objects.

![CleanShot 2024-07-29 at 23 07
07@2x](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/1e75aa4c-7a4c-419f-9070-216bb7b9a5e5)

![CleanShot 2024-07-29 at 23 09
40@2x](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/b4c96450-6b7e-496c-a4f7-59126bfd0991)

- [x] I have read and understand the
[CONTRIBUTING.md](https://github.com/payloadcms/payload/blob/main/CONTRIBUTING.md)
document in this repository.

---------

Co-authored-by: PatrikKozak <patrik@payloadcms.com>
Co-authored-by: Paul <paul@payloadcms.com>
Co-authored-by: Paul Popus <paul@nouance.io>
Co-authored-by: Jacob Fletcher <jacobsfletch@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: James <james@trbl.design>
2024-08-13 12:54:33 -04:00
Jarrod Flesch
e8bed7b315 chore: call refresh after the subscription is ready, fixes CI (#7542)
LivePreview data was stale if the user entered data while the socket
connection was being established. This change ensures fresh data is
fetched after the connection is established.

This is easy to see when turning on 4G connection and in CI, where it is
especially slow.
2024-08-06 12:17:50 -04:00
Jacob Fletcher
863abc0e6b feat(next): root admin (#7276) 2024-07-23 13:44:44 -04:00
Alessio Gravili
83fd4c6622 chore: run lint and prettier on entire codebase 2024-07-11 15:27:01 -04:00
Alessio Gravili
6c99326d59 feat: replace qs with qs-esm (#6966)
qs-esm is a qs fork I created and doesn't add bloated polyfills, is
ESM-only, has a smaller bundle size and comes with types included.

qs:
https://bundlephobia.com/package/qs@6.12.1 (11kb)
https://npm.anvaka.com/#/view/2d/qs (15 dependencies)

qs-esm:
https://bundlephobia.com/package/qs-esm@7.0.0 (4.2kb)
https://npm.anvaka.com/#/view/2d/qs-esm (1 dependency)

I don't agree with the backwards philosophy of qs:
https://github.com/ljharb/qs/issues/404#issuecomment-806392831 ("more
deps is better", lower bundle size as opt-in, maximum environment
compatibility as opt-out)

qs imports waaay too many useless dependencies
2024-07-09 14:33:38 +00:00
Tylan Davis
c2022f60df feat!: updated admin panel color palette (#7011)
## Description

BREAKING CHANGE: Color values have changed and will have different
contrasts. If you use any of Payload's colors in your apps, you may need
to adjust your use of them to maintain proper styling/accessibility.

Colors palettes changed:
- `--theme-success-*`
- `--theme-error-*`
- `--theme-warning-*`
- `--color-success-*`
- `--color-error-*`
- `--color-warning-*`
- `--color-blue-*`

Updates the color palette used throughout Payload to be more consistent
between dark and light values. Contrast values are now more in line with
the `theme-elevation` contrasts. Some adjustments to the Toast
components as well to match light/dark mode better.

- [x] I have read and understand the
[CONTRIBUTING.md](https://github.com/payloadcms/payload/blob/main/CONTRIBUTING.md)
document in this repository.

## Type of change

<!-- Please delete options that are not relevant. -->

- [x] Breaking change (fix or feature that would cause existing
functionality to not work as expected)
- [x] Change to the
[templates](https://github.com/payloadcms/payload/tree/main/templates)
directory (does not affect core functionality)
- [x] Change to the
[examples](https://github.com/payloadcms/payload/tree/main/examples)
directory (does not affect core functionality)

## Checklist:

- [ ] I have added tests that prove my fix is effective or that my
feature works
- [ ] Existing test suite passes locally with my changes
- [ ] I have made corresponding changes to the documentation
2024-07-08 10:35:19 -04:00
Alessio Gravili
aef2a52cea fix: fix all ui imports in our plugins, and get rid of ui subpath exports within monorepo (#6854) 2024-06-19 14:16:31 -04:00
Jacob Fletcher
9e76c8f4e3 feat!: prebundle payload, ui, richtext-lexical (#6579)
# Breaking Changes

### New file import locations

Exports from the `payload` package have been _significantly_ cleaned up.
Now, just about everything is able to be imported from `payload`
directly, rather than an assortment of subpath exports. This means that
things like `import { buildConfig } from 'payload/config'` are now just
imported via `import { buildConfig } from 'payload'`. The mental model
is significantly simpler for developers, but you might need to update
some of your imports.

Payload now exposes only three exports:

1. `payload` - all types and server-only Payload code
2. `payload/shared` - utilities that can be used in either the browser
or in Node environments
3. `payload/node` - heavy utilities that should only be imported in Node
scripts and never be imported into bundled code like Next.js

### UI library pre-bundling

With this release, we've dramatically sped up the compile time for
Payload by pre-bundling our entire UI package for use inside of the
Payload admin itself. There are new exports that should be used within
Payload custom components:

1. `@payloadcms/ui/client` - all client components 
2. `@payloadcms/ui/server` - all server components

For all of your custom Payload admin UI components, you should be
importing from one of these two pre-compiled barrel files rather than
importing from the more deeply nested exports directly. That will keep
compile times nice and speedy, and will also make sure that the bundled
JS for your admin UI is kept small.

For example, whereas before, if you imported the Payload `Button`, you
would have imported it like this:

```ts
import { Button } from '@payloadcms/ui/elements/Button'
```

Now, you would import it like this:

```ts
import { Button } from '@payloadcms/ui/client'
```

This is a significant DX / performance optimization that we're pretty
pumped about.

However, if you are importing or re-using Payload UI components
_outside_ of the Payload admin UI, for example in your own frontend
apps, you can import from the individual component exports which will
make sure that the bundled JS is kept to a minimum in your frontend
apps. So in your own frontend, you can continue to import directly to
the components that you want to consume rather than importing from the
pre-compiled barrel files.

Individual component exports will now come with their corresponding CSS
and everything will work perfectly as-expected.

### Specific exports have changed

- `'@payloadcms/ui/templates/Default'` and
`'@payloadcms/ui/templates/Minimal`' are now exported from
`'@payloadcms/next/templates'`
- Old: `import { LogOut } from '@payloadcms/ui/icons/LogOut'` new:
`import { LogOutIcon } from '@payloadcms/ui/icons/LogOut'`

## Background info

In effort to make local dev as fast as possible, we need to import as
few files as possible so that the compiler has less to process. One way
we've achieved this in the Admin Panel was to _remove_ all .scss imports
from all components in the `@payloadcms/ui` module using a build
process. This stripped all `import './index.scss'` statements out of
each component before injecting them into `dist`. Instead, it bundles
all of the CSS into a single `main.css` file, and we import _that_ at
the root of the app.

While this concept is _still_ the right solution to the problem, this
particular approach is not viable when using these components outside
the Admin Panel, where not only does this root stylesheet not exist, but
where it would also bloat your app with unused styles. Instead, we need
to _keep_ these .scss imports in place so they are imported directly
alongside your components, as expected. Then, we need create a _new_
build step that _separately_ compiles the components _without_ their
stylesheets—this way your app can consume either as needed from the new
`client` and `server` barrel files within `@payloadcms/ui`, i.e. from
within `@payloadcms/next` and all other admin-specific packages and
plugins.

This way, all other applications will simply import using the direct
file paths, just as they did before. Except now they come with
stylesheets.

And we've gotten a pretty awesome initial compilation performance boost.

---------

Co-authored-by: James <james@trbl.design>
Co-authored-by: Alessio Gravili <alessio@gravili.de>
2024-06-17 14:25:36 -04:00
Jacob Fletcher
e603c83f55 fix(next): ssr live preview was not dispatching document save events (#6572) 2024-05-30 14:20:22 -04:00
Dan Ribbens
edfa85bcd5 feat(db-postgres)!: relationship column (#6339)
BREAKING CHANGE:

Moves `upload` field and `relationship` fields with `hasMany: false` &
`relationTo: string` from the many-to-many `_rels` join table to simple
columns. This only affects Postgres database users.

## TL;DR

We have dramatically simplified the storage of simple relationships in
relational databases to boost performance and align with more expected
relational paradigms. If you are using the beta Postgres adapter, and
you need to keep simple relationship data, you'll need to run a
migration script that we provide you.

### Background

For example, prior to this update, a collection of "posts" with a simple
`hasMany: false` and `relationTo: 'categories'` field would have a
`posts_rels` table where the category relations would be stored.

This was somewhat unnecessary as simple relations like this can be
expressed with a `category_id` column which is configured as a foreign
key. This also introduced added complexity for dealing directly with the
database if all you have are simple relations.

### Who needs to migrate

You need to migrate if you are using the beta Postgres database adapter
and any of the following applies to you.

- If you have versions enabled on any collection / global
- If you use the `upload` field 
- If you have relationship fields that are `hasMany: false` (default)
and `relationTo` to a single category ([has
one](https://payloadcms.com/docs/fields/relationship#has-one)) relations

### We have a migration for you

Even though the Postgres adapter is in beta, we've prepared a predefined
migration that will work out of the box for you to migrate from an
earlier version of the adapter to the most recent version easily.

It makes the schema changes in step with actually moving the data from
the old locations to the new before adding any null constraints and
dropping the old columns and tables.

### How to migrate

The steps to preserve your data while making this update are as follows.
These steps are the same whether you are moving from Payload v2 to v3 or
a previous version of v3 beta to the most recent v3 beta.

**Important: during these steps, don't start the dev server unless you
have `push: false` set on your Postgres adapter.**

#### Step 1 - backup

Always back up your database before performing big changes, especially
in production cases.

#### Step 2 - create a pre-update migration 
Before updating to new Payload and Postgres adapter versions, run
`payload migrate:create` without any other config changes to have a
prior snapshot of the schema from the previous adapter version

#### Step 3 - if you're migrating a dev DB, delete the dev `push` row
from your `payload_migrations` table

If you're migrating a dev database where you have the default setting to
push database changes directly to your DB, and you need to preserve data
in your development database, then you need to delete a `dev` migration
record from your database.

Connect directly to your database in any tool you'd like and delete the
dev push record from the `payload_migrations` table using the following
SQL statement:

```sql
DELETE FROM payload_migrations where batch = -1`
```

#### Step 4 - update Payload and Postgres versions to most recent

Update packages, making sure you have matching versions across all
`@payloadcms/*` and `payload` packages (including
`@payloadcms/db-postgres`)

#### Step 5 - create the predefined migration

Run the following command to create the predefined migration we've
provided:

```
payload migrate:create --file @payloadcms/db-postgres/relationships-v2-v3
```

#### Step 6 - migrate!

Run migrations with the following command: 

```
payload migrate
```

Assuming the migration worked, you can proceed to commit this change and
distribute it to be run on all other environments.

Note that if two servers connect to the same database, only one should
be running migrations to avoid transaction conflicts.

Related discussion:
https://github.com/payloadcms/payload/discussions/4163

---------

Co-authored-by: James <james@trbl.design>
Co-authored-by: PatrikKozak <patrik@payloadcms.com>
2024-05-30 14:09:11 -04:00
Jacob Fletcher
9e9111666b chore(examples/live-preview): migrates to 3.0 (#6268) 2024-05-09 15:32:46 -04:00
Jacob Fletcher
731f023c6d feat: ssr live preview (#6239) 2024-05-08 11:08:15 -04:00
Jarrod Flesch
c1081ccfe2 chore(tests): flakey drawer, tab, navigation tests (#5792) 2024-04-11 12:57:19 -04:00
James
6217c70fb5 chore: prebuilds fields and admin in ci 2024-04-05 14:13:14 -04:00