This adds a new `tests-e2e-turbo` CI step that runs our e2e test suite
against turbo. This will ensure that we can guarantee full support for
turbopack.
Our CI runners are already at capacity, so the turbo steps will only run
if the `tests-e2e-turbo` label is set on the PR.
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)).
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
Lexical tests comprise almost half of the collections in the fields
suite, and are starting to become complex to manage.
They are sometimes related to other auxiliary collections, so
refactoring one test sometimes breaks another, seemingly unrelated one.
In addition, the fields suite is very large, taking a long time to
compile. This will make it faster.
Some ideas for future refactorings:
- 3 main collections: defaultFeatures, fully featured, and legacy.
Legacy is the current one that has multiple editors and could later be
migrated to the first two.
- Avoid collections with more than 1 editor.
- Create reseed buttons to restore the editor to certain states, to
avoid a proliferation of collections and documents.
- Reduce the complexity of the three auxiliary collections (text, array,
upload), which are rarely or never used and have many fields designed
for tests in the fields suite.
Trying to understand why bug #12002 arose, I found that both the `sort`
and `hooks` test suites are not running in CI.
I'm adding those 2 suites to the array, though later we should find a
way to automate this so it doesn't happen again. Manually rewriting all
test suites in the GitHub action is error-prone. It's very easy to
forget to add it when creating a new test suite
Bumps the github_actions group with 1 update in the / directory:
[supercharge/mongodb-github-action](https://github.com/supercharge/mongodb-github-action).
Bumps the github_actions group with 1 update in the /.github/workflows
directory:
[supercharge/mongodb-github-action](https://github.com/supercharge/mongodb-github-action).
Updates `supercharge/mongodb-github-action` from 1.11.0 to 1.12.0
<details>
<summary>Release notes</summary>
<p><em>Sourced from <a
href="https://github.com/supercharge/mongodb-github-action/releases">supercharge/mongodb-github-action's
releases</a>.</em></p>
<blockquote>
<h2>1.12.0</h2>
<p>Release 1.12.0</p>
</blockquote>
</details>
<details>
<summary>Changelog</summary>
<p><em>Sourced from <a
href="https://github.com/supercharge/mongodb-github-action/blob/main/CHANGELOG.md">supercharge/mongodb-github-action's
changelog</a>.</em></p>
<blockquote>
<h2><a
href="https://github.com/superchargejs/mongodb-github-action/compare/v1.11.0...v1.12.0">1.12.0</a>
- 2025-01-05</h2>
<h3>Added</h3>
<ul>
<li>added <code>mongodb-image</code> input: this option allows you to
define a custom Docker container image. It uses <code>mongo</code> by
default, but you may specify an image from a different registry than
Docker hub. Please check the Readme for details.</li>
</ul>
<h3>Updated</h3>
<ul>
<li>bump dependencies</li>
</ul>
</blockquote>
</details>
<details>
<summary>Commits</summary>
<ul>
<li><a
href="90004df786"><code>90004df</code></a>
bump node and mongodb versions</li>
<li><a
href="b5fa058527"><code>b5fa058</code></a>
bump version to 1.12.0 in readme</li>
<li><a
href="369a992ac4"><code>369a992</code></a>
update changelog</li>
<li><a
href="08d5bf96ab"><code>08d5bf9</code></a>
bump deps</li>
<li><a
href="cbbc6f8110"><code>cbbc6f8</code></a>
Merge pull request <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/supercharge/mongodb-github-action/issues/64">#64</a>
from Sam-Bate-ITV/feature/alternative_image</li>
<li><a
href="6131e7ff86"><code>6131e7f</code></a>
wording</li>
<li><a
href="1f93cb7bb1"><code>1f93cb7</code></a>
change README based on PR review</li>
<li><a
href="812452b9eb"><code>812452b</code></a>
use docker hub for CI</li>
<li><a
href="4639b459cd"><code>4639b45</code></a>
apply suggested change</li>
<li><a
href="2ae9a450cf"><code>2ae9a45</code></a>
<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/supercharge/mongodb-github-action/issues/62">#62</a>:
add option for specifying image</li>
<li>See full diff in <a
href="https://github.com/supercharge/mongodb-github-action/compare/1.11.0...1.12.0">compare
view</a></li>
</ul>
</details>
<br />
Updates `supercharge/mongodb-github-action` from 1.11.0 to 1.12.0
<details>
<summary>Release notes</summary>
<p><em>Sourced from <a
href="https://github.com/supercharge/mongodb-github-action/releases">supercharge/mongodb-github-action's
releases</a>.</em></p>
<blockquote>
<h2>1.12.0</h2>
<p>Release 1.12.0</p>
</blockquote>
</details>
<details>
<summary>Changelog</summary>
<p><em>Sourced from <a
href="https://github.com/supercharge/mongodb-github-action/blob/main/CHANGELOG.md">supercharge/mongodb-github-action's
changelog</a>.</em></p>
<blockquote>
<h2><a
href="https://github.com/superchargejs/mongodb-github-action/compare/v1.11.0...v1.12.0">1.12.0</a>
- 2025-01-05</h2>
<h3>Added</h3>
<ul>
<li>added <code>mongodb-image</code> input: this option allows you to
define a custom Docker container image. It uses <code>mongo</code> by
default, but you may specify an image from a different registry than
Docker hub. Please check the Readme for details.</li>
</ul>
<h3>Updated</h3>
<ul>
<li>bump dependencies</li>
</ul>
</blockquote>
</details>
<details>
<summary>Commits</summary>
<ul>
<li><a
href="90004df786"><code>90004df</code></a>
bump node and mongodb versions</li>
<li><a
href="b5fa058527"><code>b5fa058</code></a>
bump version to 1.12.0 in readme</li>
<li><a
href="369a992ac4"><code>369a992</code></a>
update changelog</li>
<li><a
href="08d5bf96ab"><code>08d5bf9</code></a>
bump deps</li>
<li><a
href="cbbc6f8110"><code>cbbc6f8</code></a>
Merge pull request <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/supercharge/mongodb-github-action/issues/64">#64</a>
from Sam-Bate-ITV/feature/alternative_image</li>
<li><a
href="6131e7ff86"><code>6131e7f</code></a>
wording</li>
<li><a
href="1f93cb7bb1"><code>1f93cb7</code></a>
change README based on PR review</li>
<li><a
href="812452b9eb"><code>812452b</code></a>
use docker hub for CI</li>
<li><a
href="4639b459cd"><code>4639b45</code></a>
apply suggested change</li>
<li><a
href="2ae9a450cf"><code>2ae9a45</code></a>
<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/supercharge/mongodb-github-action/issues/62">#62</a>:
add option for specifying image</li>
<li>See full diff in <a
href="https://github.com/supercharge/mongodb-github-action/compare/1.11.0...1.12.0">compare
view</a></li>
</ul>
</details>
<br />
You can trigger a rebase of this PR by commenting `@dependabot rebase`.
[//]: # (dependabot-automerge-start)
[//]: # (dependabot-automerge-end)
---
<details>
<summary>Dependabot commands and options</summary>
<br />
You can trigger Dependabot actions by commenting on this PR:
- `@dependabot rebase` will rebase this PR
- `@dependabot recreate` will recreate this PR, overwriting any edits
that have been made to it
- `@dependabot merge` will merge this PR after your CI passes on it
- `@dependabot squash and merge` will squash and merge this PR after
your CI passes on it
- `@dependabot cancel merge` will cancel a previously requested merge
and block automerging
- `@dependabot reopen` will reopen this PR if it is closed
- `@dependabot close` will close this PR and stop Dependabot recreating
it. You can achieve the same result by closing it manually
- `@dependabot show <dependency name> ignore conditions` will show all
of the ignore conditions of the specified dependency
- `@dependabot ignore <dependency name> major version` will close this
group update PR and stop Dependabot creating any more for the specific
dependency's major version (unless you unignore this specific
dependency's major version or upgrade to it yourself)
- `@dependabot ignore <dependency name> minor version` will close this
group update PR and stop Dependabot creating any more for the specific
dependency's minor version (unless you unignore this specific
dependency's minor version or upgrade to it yourself)
- `@dependabot ignore <dependency name>` will close this group update PR
and stop Dependabot creating any more for the specific dependency
(unless you unignore this specific dependency or upgrade to it yourself)
- `@dependabot unignore <dependency name>` will remove all of the ignore
conditions of the specified dependency
- `@dependabot unignore <dependency name> <ignore condition>` will
remove the ignore condition of the specified dependency and ignore
conditions
</details>
> **Note**
> Automatic rebases have been disabled on this pull request as it has
been open for over 30 days.
Signed-off-by: dependabot[bot] <support@github.com>
Co-authored-by: dependabot[bot] <49699333+dependabot[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Query Presets allow you to save and share filters, columns, and sort
orders for your collections. This is useful for reusing common or
complex filtering patterns and column configurations across your team.
Query Presets are defined on the fly by the users of your app, rather
than being hard coded into the Payload Config.
Here's a screen recording demonstrating the general workflow as it
relates to the list view. Query Presets are not exclusive to the admin
panel, however, as they could be useful in a number of other contexts
and environments.
https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/1fe1155e-ae78-4f59-9138-af352762a1d5
Each Query Preset is saved as a new record in the database under the
`payload-query-presets` collection. This will effectively make them
CRUDable and allows for an endless number of preset configurations. As
you make changes to filters, columns, limit, etc. you can choose to save
them as a new record and optionally share them with others.
Normal document-level access control will determine who can read,
update, and delete these records. Payload provides a set of sensible
defaults here, such as "only me", "everyone", and "specific users", but
you can also extend your own set of access rules on top of this, such as
"by role", etc. Access control is customizable at the operation-level,
for example you can set this to "everyone" can read, but "only me" can
update.
To enable the Query Presets within a particular collection, set
`enableQueryPresets` on that collection's config.
Here's an example:
```ts
{
// ...
enableQueryPresets: true
}
```
Once enabled, a new set of controls will appear within the list view of
the admin panel. This is where you can select and manage query presets.
General settings for Query Presets are configured under the root
`queryPresets` property. This is where you can customize the labels,
apply custom access control rules, etc.
Here's an example of how you might augment the access control properties
with your own custom rule to achieve RBAC:
```ts
{
// ...
queryPresets: {
constraints: {
read: [
{
label: 'Specific Roles',
value: 'specificRoles',
fields: [roles],
access: ({ req: { user } }) => ({
'access.update.roles': {
in: [user?.roles],
},
}),
},
],
}
}
}
```
Related: #4193 and #3092
---------
Co-authored-by: Dan Ribbens <dan.ribbens@gmail.com>
Consolidates all bulk edit related tests into a single, dedicated suite.
Currently, bulk edit tests are dispersed throughout the Admin > General
and the Versions test suites, which are considerably bloated for their
own purposes. This made them very hard to locate, mentally digest, and
add on new tests. Going forward, many more tests specifically for bulk
edit will need to be written. This gives us a simple, isolated place for
that.
With this change are also a few improvements to the tests themselves to
make them more predictable and efficient.
Implements a form state task queue. This will prevent onChange handlers
within the form component from processing unnecessarily often, sometimes
long after the user has stopped making changes. This leads to a
potentially huge number of network requests if those changes were made
slower than the debounce rate. This is especially noticeable on slow
networks.
Does so through a new `useQueue` hook. This hook maintains a stack of
events that need processing but only processes the final event to
arrive. Every time a new event is pushed to the stack, the currently
running process is aborted (if any), and that event becomes the next in
the queue. This results in a shocking reduction in the time it takes
between final change to form state and the final network response, from
~1.5 minutes to ~3 seconds (depending on the scenario, see below).
This likely fixes a number of existing open issues. I will link those
issues here once they are identified and verifiably fixed.
Before:
I'm typing slowly here to ensure my changes aren't debounce by the form.
There are a total of 60 characters typed, triggering 58 network requests
and taking around 1.5 minutes to complete after the final change was
made.
https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/49ba0790-a8f8-4390-8421-87453ff8b650
After:
Here there are a total of 69 characters typed, triggering 11 network
requests and taking only about 3 seconds to complete after the final
change was made.
https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/447f8303-0957-41bd-bb2d-9e1151ed9ec3
- Adds support for numeric canary versions ie. `3.28.0-canary.0`,
subsequent prereleases will increment accordingly (like Next.js)
- _Our old way of doing canary releases_ is still available but will now
be tagged as `internal` ex. `3.28.0-internal.shorthash`
- Releases are triggered via workflow dispatch in Actions. Triggers off
of main will be released as `canary`, all others will be `internal`.
Imports https://github.com/payloadcms/payload-admin-bar into the Payload
monorepo. This package will now be regularly maintained directly
alongside all Payload packages and now includes its own test suite.
A few changes minor have been made between v1.0.7 and latest:
1. The package name has changed from `payload-admin-bar` to
`@payloadcms/admin-bar`.
```diff
- import { PayloadAdminBar } from 'payload-admin-bar'
+ import { PayloadAdminBar } from '@payloadcms/admin-bar'
```
2. The `collection` prop has been renamed to `collectionSlug`
3. The `authCollection` prop has been renamed to `authCollectionSlug`
Here's a screenshot of the admin bar in use within the Website Template:
<img width="1057" alt="Screenshot 2025-03-05 at 1 20 04 PM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/2597a8fd-da75-4b2f-8979-4fc8132999e8"
/>
---------
Co-authored-by: Kalon Robson <kalon.robson@outlook.com>
Adds new plugin-import-export initial version.
Allows for direct download and creation of downloadable collection data
stored to a json or csv uses the access control of the user creating the
request to make the file.
config options:
```ts
/**
* Collections to include the Import/Export controls in
* Defaults to all collections
*/
collections?: string[]
/**
* Enable to force the export to run synchronously
*/
disableJobsQueue?: boolean
/**
* This function takes the default export collection configured in the plugin and allows you to override it by modifying and returning it
* @param collection
* @returns collection
*/
overrideExportCollection?: (collection: CollectionOverride) => CollectionOverride
// payload.config.ts:
plugins: [
importExportPlugin({
collections: ['pages', 'users'],
overrideExportCollection: (collection) => {
collection.admin.group = 'System'
collection.upload.staticDir = path.resolve(dirname, 'uploads')
return collection
},
disableJobsQueue: true,
}),
],
```
---------
Co-authored-by: Jessica Chowdhury <jessica@trbl.design>
Co-authored-by: Kendell Joseph <kendelljoseph@gmail.com>
Adding usage of `ScribeMD/docker-cache` to cache the mongodb image.
We utilize the
[supercharge/mongodb-github-action](https://github.com/supercharge/mongodb-github-action)
for pulling and starting our mongo image. This would at times cause `You
have reached your unauthenticated pull rate limit` errors because of how
many jobs our CI spins up at one time.
If you have multiple blocks that are used in multiple places, this can quickly blow up the size of your Payload Config. This will incur a performance hit, as more data is
1. sent to the client (=> bloated `ClientConfig` and large initial html) and
2. processed on the server (permissions are calculated every single time you navigate to a page - this iterates through all blocks you have defined, even if they're duplicative)
This can be optimized by defining your block **once** in your Payload Config, and just referencing the block slug whenever it's used, instead of passing the entire block config. To do this, the block can be defined in the `blocks` array of the Payload Config. The slug can then be passed to the `blockReferences` array in the Blocks Field - the `blocks` array has to be empty for compatibility reasons.
```ts
import { buildConfig } from 'payload'
import { lexicalEditor, BlocksFeature } from '@payloadcms/richtext-lexical'
// Payload Config
const config = buildConfig({
// Define the block once
blocks: [
{
slug: 'TextBlock',
fields: [
{
name: 'text',
type: 'text',
},
],
},
],
collections: [
{
slug: 'collection1',
fields: [
{
name: 'content',
type: 'blocks',
// Reference the block by slug
blockReferences: ['TextBlock'],
blocks: [], // Required to be empty, for compatibility reasons
},
],
},
{
slug: 'collection2',
fields: [
{
name: 'editor',
type: 'richText',
editor: lexicalEditor({
BlocksFeature({
// Same reference can be reused anywhere, even in the lexical editor, without incurred performance hit
blocks: ['TextBlock'],
})
})
},
],
},
],
})
```
## v4.0 Plans
In 4.0, we will remove the `blockReferences` property, and allow string block references to be passed directly to the blocks `property`. Essentially, we'd remove the `blocks` property and rename `blockReferences` to `blocks`.
The reason we opted to a new property in this PR is to avoid breaking changes. Allowing strings to be passed to the `blocks` property will prevent plugins that iterate through fields / blocks from compiling.
## PR Changes
- Testing: This PR introduces a plugin that automatically converts blocks to block references. This is done in the fields__blocks test suite, to run our existing test suite using block references.
- Block References support: Most changes are similar. Everywhere we iterate through blocks, we have to now do the following:
1. Check if `field.blockReferences` is provided. If so, only iterate through that.
2. Check if the block is an object (= actual block), or string
3. If it's a string, pull the actual block from the Payload Config or from `payload.blocks`.
The exception is config sanitization and block type generations. This PR optimizes them so that each block is only handled once, instead of every time the block is referenced.
## Benchmarks
60 Block fields, each block field having the same 600 Blocks.
### Before:
**Initial HTML:** 195 kB
**Generated types:** takes 11 minutes, 461,209 lines
https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/11d49a4e-5414-4579-8050-e6346e552f56
### After:
**Initial HTML:** 73.6 kB
**Generated types:** takes 2 seconds, 35,810 lines
https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/3eab1a99-6c29-489d-add5-698df67780a3
### After Permissions Optimization (follow-up PR)
Initial HTML: 73.6 kB
https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/a909202e-45a8-4bf6-9a38-8c85813f1312
## Future Plans
1. This PR does not yet deduplicate block references during permissions calculation. We'll optimize that in a separate PR, as this one is already large enough
2. The same optimization can be done to deduplicate fields. One common use-case would be link field groups that may be referenced in multiple entities, outside of blocks. We might explore adding a new `fieldReferences` property, that allows you to reference those same `config.blocks`.
Having the `scripts` dir re-use all packages from the top-level was
getting quite unwieldy. Created new `tools` directory that is part of
the workspace. Packages are exported with the `@tools` package
namespace.
Fixes an issue where if a checkbox field was in the first position of a
collection, and you tried to filter on it via the List view, the page
would crash.
Improves the admin e2e test splitting by grouping them by type with
semantic names as opposed to numerically. This will provide much needed
clarity to exactly _where_ new admin tests should be written and help to
quickly distinguish the areas of failure within the CI overview.
Updates the plugin template and adds it to the monorepo
Includes:
* Integration testing setup
* Adding custom client / server components via a plugin
* The same building setup that we use for our plugins in the monorepo
* `create-payload-app` dynamically configures the project based on the
name:`dev/tsconfig.json`, `src/index.ts`, `dev/payload.config.ts`
For example, from project name: `payload-plugin-cool`
`src/index.ts`:
```ts
export type PayloadPluginCoolConfig = {
/**
* List of collections to add a custom field
*/
collections?: Partial<Record<CollectionSlug, true>>
disabled?: boolean
}
export const payloadPluginCool =
(pluginOptions: PayloadPluginCoolConfig) =>
/// ...
```
`dev/tsconfig.json`:
```json
{
"extends": "../tsconfig.json",
"exclude": [],
"include": [
"**/*.ts",
"**/*.tsx",
"../src/**/*.ts",
"../src/**/*.tsx",
"next.config.mjs",
".next/types/**/*.ts"
],
"compilerOptions": {
"baseUrl": "./",
"paths": {
"@payload-config": [
"./payload.config.ts"
],
"payload-plugin-cool": [
"../src/index.ts"
],
"payload-plugin-cool/client": [
"../src/exports/client.ts"
],
"payload-plugin-cool/rsc": [
"../src/exports/rsc.ts"
]
},
"noEmit": true
}
}
```
`./dev/payload.config.ts`
```
import { payloadPluginCool } from 'payload-plugin-cool'
///
plugins: [
payloadPluginCool({
collections: {
posts: true,
},
}),
],
```
Example of published plugin
https://www.npmjs.com/package/payload-plugin-cool
In PR #9930 we added `overrideAccess: false` to the find operation and
failed to pass the user. This caused
https://github.com/payloadcms/payload/issues/9974 where any access
control causes the edit view to error.
The fix was to pass the user through.
This change also adds Join Field e2e tests to the CI pipeline which was
previously missing and would have caught the error.
The post-release-templates workflow gets triggered whenever we create a
github release. It is fed the git tag. A script is then run to update
the templates' migrations and lockfile (if applicable).
There was a scenario where despite the packages already being published
to npm a few minutes prior, this process would error out saying that the
latest version was not available.
This PR adds a script that polls for 5 minutes against npm to wait for
the newly published version to resolve and match the git release tag.
As field tests grow in size, they need to be moved out of the greater
fields test spec and into their own standalone files for readability,
maintainability, and speed. This way they we can write field tests in a
more isolated environment, and they can run in parallel in CI.
Adds the missing tests to the `needs:` dependency array for `all-green`
step in CI so that all-green doesn't pass if these tests fail or are in
progress
```
- build-templates
- tests-types
- tests-type-generation
```
As proposed here
https://github.com/payloadcms/payload/pull/9782#issuecomment-2522090135
with additional testing of our types we can be more sure that we don't
break them between updates.
This PR already adds types testing for most Local API methods
6beb921c2e/test/types/types.spec.ts
but new tests for types can be easily added, either to that same file or
you can create `types.spec.ts` in any other test folder.
The new test folder uses `strict: true` to ensure our types do not break
with it.
---------
Co-authored-by: Tom Mrazauskas <tom@mrazauskas.de>
The runner image `ubuntu-latest` image will be switching from Ubuntu
22.04 to Ubuntu 24.04 as specified in
https://github.com/actions/runner-images/issues/10636.
> Rollout will begin on December 5th and will complete on January 17th,
2025.
Breaking changes
Ubuntu 24.04 is ready to be the default version for the "ubuntu-latest"
label in GitHub Actions and Azure DevOps.
This PR moves us to explicitly use `ubuntu-24.04` to ensure
compatibility and to allow explicit upgrades in the future.