Currently, we globally enable both DOM and Node.js types. While this mostly works, it can cause conflicts - particularly with `fetch`. For example, TypeScript may incorrectly allow browser-only properties (like `cache`) and reject valid Node.js ones like `dispatcher`. This PR disables DOM types for server-only packages like payload, ensuring Node-specific typings are applied. This caught a few instances of incorrect fetch usage that were previously masked by overlapping DOM types. This is not a perfect solution - packages that contain both server and client code (like richtext-lexical or next) will still suffer from this issue. However, it's an improvement in cases where we can cleanly separate server and client types, like for the `payload` package which is server-only. ## Use-case This change enables https://github.com/payloadcms/payload/pull/12622 to explore using node-native fetch + `dispatcher`, instead of `node-fetch` + `agent`. Currently, it will incorrectly report that `dispatcher` is not a valid property for node-native fetch
Payload Drizzle Adapter
The Drizzle package is used by db-postgres and db-sqlite for shared functionality of SQL databases. It is not meant to be used directly in Payload projects.