This PR updates `generateFileData` to skip applying `resizeOptions`
after updating an image if `resizeOptions.withoutEnlargement` is `true`
and the original image size is smaller than the dimensions defined in
`resizeOptions`.
This prevents unintended re-resizing of already resized images when
updating or modifying metadata without uploading a new file.
This change ensures that:
- Resizing is skipped if withoutEnlargement: true
- Resizing still occurs if withoutEnlargement: false or unset
This resolves an issue where images were being resized again
unnecessarily when updating an upload.
Fixes#12280
Converts all text and field labels into variables that can be
translated. Also generated the translations for them
So now the UI here is internationalised

I've also moved some of the generic labels into the core package since
those could be re-used elsewhere
The databases do not keep track of document order internally so when
sorting by non-unique fields such as shared `order` number values, the
returned order will be random and not consistent.
While this issue is far more noticeable on mongo it could also occur in
postgres on certain environments.
This combined with pagination can lead to the perception of duplicated
or inconsistent data.
This PR adds a second sort parameter to queries so that we always have a
fallback, `-createdAt` will be used by default or `id` if timestamps are
disabled.
I think it's easier to review this PR commit by commit, so I'll explain
it this way:
## Commits
1. [parallelize eslint script (still showing logs results in
serial)](c9ac49c12d):
Previously, `--concurrency 1` was added to the script to make the logs
more readable. However, turborepo has an option specifically for these
use cases: `--log-order=grouped` runs the tasks in parallel but outputs
them serially. As a result, the lint script is now significantly faster.
2. [run pnpm
lint:fix](9c128c276a)
The auto-fix was run, which resolved some eslint errors that were
slipped in due to the use of `no-verify`. Most of these were
`perfectionist` fixes (property ordering) and the removal of unnecessary
assertions. Starting with this PR, this won't happen again in the
future, as we'll be verifying the linter in every PR across the entire
codebase (see commit 7).
3. [fix eslint non-autofixable
errors](700f412a33)
All manual errors have been resolved except for the configuration errors
addressed in commit 5. Most were React compiler violations, which have
been disabled and commented out "TODO" for now. There's also an unused
`use no memo` and a couple of `require` errors.
4. [move react-compiler linter to eslint-config
package](4f7cb4d63a)
To simplify the eslint configuration. My concern was that there would be
a performance regression when used in non-react related packages, but
none was experienced. This is probably because it only runs on .tsx
files.
5. [remove redundant eslint config files and fix
allowDefaultProject](a94347995a)
The main feature introduced by `typescript-eslint` v8 was
`projectService`, which automatically searches each file for the closest
`tsconfig`, greatly simplifying configuration in monorepos
([source](https://typescript-eslint.io/blog/announcing-typescript-eslint-v8#project-service)).
Once I moved `projectService` to `packages/eslint-config`, all the other
configuration files could be easily removed.
I confirmed that pnpm lint still works on individual packages.
The other important change was that the pending eslint errors from
commits 2 and 3 were resolved. That is, some files were giving the
error: "[File] was not found by the project service. Consider either
including it in the tsconfig.json or including it in
allowDefaultProject." Below I copy the explanatory comment I left in the
code:
```ts
// This is necessary because `tsconfig.base.json` defines `"rootDir": "${configDir}/src"`,
// And the following files aren't in src because they aren't transpiled.
// This is typescript-eslint's way of adding files that aren't included in tsconfig.
// See: https://typescript-eslint.io/troubleshooting/typed-linting/#i-get-errors-telling-me--was-not-found-by-the-project-service-consider-either-including-it-in-the-tsconfigjson-or-including-it-in-allowdefaultproject
// The best practice is to have a tsconfig.json that covers ALL files and is used for
// typechecking (with noEmit), and a `tsconfig.build.json` that is used for the build
// (or alternatively, swc, tsup or tsdown). That's what we should ideally do, in which case
// this hardcoded list wouldn't be necessary. Note that these files don't currently go
// through ts, only through eslint.
```
6. [Differentiate errors from warnings in VScode ESLint
Rules](5914d2f48d)
There's no reason to do that. If an eslint rule isn't an error, it
should be disabled or converted to a warning.
7. [Disable skip lint, and lint over the entire repo now that it's
faster](e4b28f1360)
The GitHub action linted only the files that had changed in the PR.
While this seems like a good idea, once exceptions were introduced with
[skip lint], they opened the door to propagating more and more errors.
Often, the linter was skipped, not because someone introduced new
errors, but because they were trying to avoid those that had already
crept in, sometimes accidentally introducing new ones.
On the other hand, `pnpm lint` now runs in parallel (commit 1), so it's
not that slow. Additionally, it runs in parallel with other GitHub
actions like e2e tests, which take much longer, so it can't represent a
bottleneck in CI.
8. [fix lint in next
package](4506595f91)
Small fix missing from commit 5
9. [Merge remote-tracking branch 'origin/main' into
fix-eslint](563d4909c1)
10. [add again eslint.config.js in payload
package](78f6ffcae7)
The comment in the code explains it. Basically, after the merge from
main, the payload package runs out of memory when linting, probably
because it grew in recent PRs. That package will sooner or later
collapse for our tooling, so we may have to split it. It's already too
big.
## Future Actions
- Resolve React compiler violations, as mentioned in commit 3.
- Decouple the `tsconfig` used for typechecking and build across the
entire monorepo (as explained in point 5) to ensure ts coverage even for
files that aren't transpiled (such as scripts).
- Remove the few remaining `eslint.config.js`. I had to leave the
`richtext-lexical` and `next` ones for now. They could be moved to the
root config and scoped to their packages, as we do for example with
`templates/vercel-postgres/**`. However, I couldn't get it to work, I
don't know why.
- Make eslint in the test folder usable. Not only are we not linting
`test` in CI, but now the `pnpm eslint .` command is so large that my
computer freezes. If each suite were its own package, this would be
solved, and dynamic codegen + git hooks to modify tsconfig.base.json
wouldn't be necessary
([related](https://github.com/payloadcms/payload/pull/11984)).
⚠️ `orderable` fields will no longer be `required` and `unique`, so your
database may prompt you to accept an automatic migration if you're using
[this
feature](https://payloadcms.com/docs/configuration/collections#config-options).
Note that the `orderable` feature is still experimental, so it may still
receive breaking changes without a major upgrade or contain bugs. Use it
with caution.
___
The `orderable` fields will not have `required` and `unique` constraints
at the database schema level, in order to automatically migrate
collections that incorporate this property.
Now, when a user adds the `orderable` property to a collection or join
field, existing documents will have the order field set to undefined.
The first time you try to reorder them, the documents will be
automatically assigned an initial order, and you will be prompted to
refresh the page.
We believe this provides a better development experience than having to
manually migrate data with a script.
Additionally, it fixes a bug that occurred when using `orderable` in
conjunction with groups and tabs fields.
Closes:
- #12129
- #12331
- #12212
---------
Co-authored-by: Dan Ribbens <dan.ribbens@gmail.com>
When running the Payload admin panel on a machine with a slower CPU,
form state lags significantly and can become nearly unusable or even
crash when interacting with the document's `useAsTitle` field.
Here's an example:
https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/3535fa99-1b31-4cb6-b6a8-5eb9a36b31b7
#### Why this happens
The reason for this is that entire React component trees are
re-rendering on every keystroke of the `useAsTitle` field, twice over.
Here's a breakdown of the flow:
1. First, we dispatch form state events to the form context. Only the
components that are subscribed to form state re-render when this happens
(good).
2. Then, we sync the `useAsTitle` field to the document info provider,
which lives outside the form. Regardless of whether its children need to
be aware of the document title, all components subscribed to the
document info context will re-render (there are many, including the form
itself).
Given how far up the rendering tree the document info provider is, its
rendering footprint, and the rate of speed at which these events are
dispatched, this is resource intensive.
#### What is the fix
The fix is to isolate the document's title into it's own context. This
way only the components that are subscribed to specifically this context
will re-render as the title changes.
Here's the same test with the same CPU throttling, but no lag:
https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/c8ced9b1-b5f0-4789-8d00-a2523d833524
Previously, `hidden: true` on a virtual field that references a
relationship field didn't work. Now, this field doesn't get calculated
if there's `hidden: true` and no `showHiddenFields` was passed.
Co-authored-by: Dan Ribbens <dan.ribbens@gmail.com>
Previously the value of new tab checkbox in the link feature was not
able to be set to true by default because we were passing `false` as a
default value.
This fixes that and adds test coverage for customising that link drawer.
Prevents an accidental lockout of query preset documents. An "accidental
lockout" occurs when the user sets access control on a preset and
excludes themselves. This can happen in a variety of scenarios,
including:
- You select `specificUsers` without specifying yourself
- You select `specificRoles` without specifying a role that you are a
part of
- Etc.
#### How it works
To make this happen, we use a custom validation function that executes
access against the user's proposed changes. If those changes happen to
remove access for them, we throw a validation error and prevent that
change from ever taking place. This means that only a user with proper
access can remove another user from the preset. You cannot remove
yourself.
To do this, we create a temporary record in the database that we can
query against. We use transactions to ensure that the temporary record
is not persisted once our work is completed. Since not all Payload
projects have transactions enabled, we flag these temporary records with
the `isTemp` field.
Once created, we query the temp document to determine its permissions.
If any of the operations throw an error, this means the user can no
longer act on them, and we throw a validation error.
#### Alternative Approach
A previous approach that was explored was to add an `owner` field to the
presets collection. This way, the "owner" of the preset would be able to
completely bypass all access control, effectively eliminating the
possibility of a lockout event.
But this doesn't work for other users who may have update access. E.g.
they could still accidentally remove themselves from the read or update
operation, preventing them from accessing that preset after submitting
the form. We need a solution that works for all users, not just the
owner.
Fixes sorting by fields in relationships, e.g `sort: "author.name"` when
using `draft: true`. The existing test that includes check with `draft:
true` was accidentally passing because it used to sort by the
relationship field itself.
Fixes https://github.com/payloadcms/payload/issues/12263
This was caused by passing not needed columns to the `SELECT DISTINCT`
query, which we execute in case if we have a filter / sort by a nested
field / relationship. Since the only columns that we need to pass to the
`SELECT DISTINCT` query are: ID and field(s) specified in `sort`, we now
filter the `selectFields` variable.
This PR does two things:
- Adds a new ` --no-experimental-strip-types` flag to the playwright
test env
- This is needed since 23.6.0 automatically enables this flag by default
and it breaks e2e tests
- Bumps the tooling config files to use node 23.11.0
### What?
If an error occurs while unpublishing a document in the edit view UI,
the toast which shows the error message now displays the actual message
which is sent from the server, if available.
### Why?
Only a generic error message was shown if an unpublish operation failed.
Some errors might be solvable by the user, so that there is value in
showing the actual, actionable error message instead of a generic one.
### How?
The server response is parsed for error message if an unpublish
operation fails and displayed in the toast, instead of the generic error
message.

Adds pre-signed URLs support file downloads with the S3 adapter. Can be
enabled per-collection:
```ts
s3Storage({
collections: {
media: { signedDownloads: true }, // or { signedDownloads: { expiresIn: 3600 }} for custom expiresIn (default 7200)
},
bucket: process.env.S3_BUCKET,
config: {
credentials: {
accessKeyId: process.env.S3_ACCESS_KEY_ID,
secretAccessKey: process.env.S3_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY,
},
endpoint: process.env.S3_ENDPOINT,
forcePathStyle: process.env.S3_FORCE_PATH_STYLE === 'true',
region: process.env.S3_REGION,
},
}),
```
The main use case is when you care about the Payload access control (so
you don't want to use `disablePayloadAccessControl: true` but you don't
want your files to be served through Payload (which can affect
performance with large videos for example).
This feature instead generates a signed URL (after verifying the access
control) and redirects you directly to the S3 provider.
This is an addition to https://github.com/payloadcms/payload/pull/11382
which added pre-signed URLs for file uploads.
### What?
Extract text from the React node label in WhereBuilder
### Why?
If you have a nested field in filter options, the label would show
correctly, but the search will not work
### How
By adding an `extractTextFromReactNode` function that gets text out of
React.node label
### Code setup:
```
{
type: "collapsible",
label: "Meta",
fields: [
{
name: 'media',
type: 'relationship',
relationTo: 'media',
label: 'Ferrari',
filterOptions: () => {
return {
id: { in: ['67efdbc872ca925bc2868933'] },
}
}
},
{
name: 'media2',
type: 'relationship',
relationTo: 'media',
label: 'Williams',
filterOptions: () => {
return {
id: { in: ['67efdbc272ca925bc286891c'] },
}
}
},
],
},
```
### Before:
https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/25d4b3a2-6ac0-476b-973e-575238e916c4
### After:
https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/92346a6c-b2d1-4e08-b1e4-9ac1484f9ef3
---------
Co-authored-by: Jacob Fletcher <jacobsfletch@gmail.com>
### What?
Adds an option to open the current document in a new tab when opened in
a drawer.
### Why?
There is currently no direct way to open a document when opened in a
drawer. However, sometimes editors want to edit one or multiple
documents from relationships independently of the current edit view and
need an easy option to open these separately.
### How?
Converts the document id to a link if in drawer context.

---------
Co-authored-by: Jacob Fletcher <jacobsfletch@gmail.com>
This PR introduced https://github.com/payloadcms/payload/pull/11952
improvement for graphql schema with making fields of the `Paginated<T>`
interface non-nullable.
However, there are a few special ones - `nextPage` and `prevPage`. They
can be `null` when:
The result returned 0 docs.
The result returned `x` docs, but in the DB we don't have `x+1` doc.
Thus, `nextPage` will be `null`. The result will have `nextPage: null`.
Finally, when we query 1st page, `prevPage` is `null` as well.
<img width="873" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/04d04b13-ac26-4fc1-b421-b5f86efc9b65"
/>