This commit moves the stylesheets under the archive bundle in
the Django pipeline to being compiled by webpack instead. It
also removes a remaining call to a portico stylesheet that no
longer exists.
This commit transitions landing-page.css from the Django pipeline
to being compiled by webpack as landing-page.scss under the
'landing-page' and 'integration' bundles.
This commit transitions all styles in app.css in the Django pipeline
to being compiled by webpack in an app-styles bundle, and renames the
various files to now be processed as SCSS.
To implement this transition, we move the old CSS file refernces in
settings.py and replace them with a bundle declared in
`webpack.assets.json` and includedn in the index.html template
Tweaked by tabbott to keep the list of files in `app.css` in
`webpack.assets.json`, and to preserve the ordering from the old
`settings.py`.
This is done because the current column-left and column-right were
actually just floating left and right and making use of float-left
and float-right makes more sense. This also helps with the upcoming
public archives feature which will try to include portico content
with main app content.
We haven't seen significant traffic from the legacy desktop app in
over a year, and users using it get a warning to upgrade since last
summer, so it's probably OK to stop providing special fonts for it.
Combines, both portico js and css into one bundle. This for now solve
the issue of an empty js bundle being generated by webpack for the
portico-styles stylesheet.
It's actually "subscription" and "message" (neither is plural).
While we're at it, we should also remove the "pointer" event type,
since that's of generally low interest.
static/styles/scss/portico.scss is now compiled by webpack
and supports SCSS syntax.
Changed the server-side templates to render the portico-styles
bundle instead of directly requiring the portico stylesheet. This
allows webpack to handle stylesheet compilation and minification.
We use the mini-css-extract-plugin to extract out css from the
includes in webpack and let webpacks production mode handle
minification. Currently we're not able to use it for dev mode
because it does not support HMR so we use style-loader instead.
Once the plugin supports HMR we can go on to use it for both
dev and prod.
The downside of this is that when reloading pages in the development
environment, there's an annoying flash of unstyled content :(.
It is now possible to make a change in any of the styles included
by static/styles/scss/portico.scss and see the code reload live
in the browser. This is because style-loader which we currently
use has the module.accept code built-in.
We started doing this for install docs in de2a2d0df, because `latest`
wasn't suitable and because I didn't know about readthedocs's `stable`
feature. The result has been that even with a checklist item, we
don't reliably update the link.
Instead, use the special `stable` version identifier on readthedocs to
link automatically to the highest version it knows about.
Tweaked by tabbott to add a test and fix a super subtle issue with the
relative_settings_link variable having been set once the first time a
/help article was rendered.
A common path is a new user goes to realm_uri, which redirects to
realm_uri/login, and clicks the google auth button thinking it is a
registration button.
This commit just changes the wording on the page they land on to be
friendlier for that use case.
Apparently, essentially every one of our landing pages extending
portico.html had two copies of portico.css included in their head
section; one from porticocustomhead (or the super of customhead) and
the other directly included.
Clean this up by removing all these duplicate inclusions of the
portico stylesheet.
We use the attrs property provided by render_bundle function of
django-webpack-loader to add `nonce="<csp_nonce_val_here>" to
js scripts being rendered by webpack.