The current vendored gitgraph.js is no longer maintained and is
difficult to understand, fix and maintain.
This PR completely rewrites its logic - hopefully in a clearer fashion
and easier to maintain.
It also includes @silverwind's improvements of coloring the commit dots
and preventing the flash of incorrect content.
Further changes to contemplate in future will be abstracting out of the
flows to an object, storing the involved commit references on the flows
etc. However, this is probably a required step for this.
Replaces #12131Fixes#11981 (part 3)
Signed-off-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net>
- move "vendor" files to js/vendor and less/vendor
- move swagger to js/standalone (meant for standalone pages)
- move gitgraph to features and streamline its loading
- add linting configs to webpack dependencies in make
- set ignored files for eslint/stylelint directly in their configs
Co-authored-by: Lunny Xiao <xiaolunwen@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: zeripath <art27@cantab.net>
Co-authored-by: Antoine GIRARD <sapk@users.noreply.github.com>
because the CSS was lazy-loaded the rules in arc-green did not win.
included the css file in the main bundle to fix. the black dots can not
be fixed via CSS because they are drawn in a `<canvas>` element
unfortunately.
* move semantic.dropdown.custom.js to webpack
Also disabled a annoying linter rule which insisted that imports can not
contain a file extension.
Fixes: https://github.com/go-gitea/gitea/issues/8971
* reorganize web_src files and rebuild
* restart ci
- moved gitgraph.js to web_src and made it importable and es6-compatible
- created new webpack chunk for gitgraph
- enabled CSS loader in webpack
- enabled async/await syntax via regenerator-runtime
- added script to ensure webpack chunks are loaded correctly
- disable terser's comment extraction to prevent .LICENCE files
gitgraph.js has many issues:
1. it is incompatible with ES6 because of strict-mode violations
1. it does not export anything
1. it's css has weird styles like for `body`
1. it is not available on npm
I fixed points 1-3 in our version so it's now loadable in webpack. We should eventually consider alternatives.