* fix bin folder and workflows as far its possible
cleanup of dockerfile
changed paths of scripts
add lock file
fix working directory for workflows
fix windows bin
fix travis (is travis used anyway?)
fix package refs
remove pnpm-lock file in root as these conflicts with the docker volume setup
optimize comments
use install again
refactor prod image call to run
fix --workspace can only be used inside a workspace
correct comment
try fix pipeline
try fix pipeline for upgrade-from-latest-release
install all deps
smaller adjustments
save
update dockerfile
remove workspace command
fix run test command
start repair latest release workflow
start repair latest release workflow
start repair latest release workflow
further repairs
* remove test plugin from docker compose
* Added plugin live view.
* Implemented PoC for managing plugins with live-plugin-manager
* Add migration for plugins installed in node_modules and load plugins on start
* Create installed_plugins.json even if no plugin is installed
* Reload plugins and hooks after all (un)installs are done
* Add installed_plugins.json to gitignore
* Only write plugins to json file in Dockerfile
* Install live-plugin-manager
* Also persist plugin version
* Do not call hooks during migration of plugins
* Fix install of plugins in Dockerfile
* Revert Dockerfile changes
* Fixed package-lock.json
---------
Co-authored-by: SamTV12345 <40429738+samtv12345@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Hossein M <marzban98@gmail.com>
These files cause problems with Docker images and read-only
directories/mounts, and they have dubious value (any install-time
setup should instead be done at startup).
Advantages of a top-level `package.json`:
* It prevents npm from printing benign warnings about missing
`package.json` whenever a plugin is installed.
* Semantically, it is "the right thing to do" if plugins are to be
installed in the top-level directory. This avoids violating
assumptions various tools make about `package.json`, which makes
it more likely that we can easily switch to a new version of npm
or to an npm alternative.
Disadvantages of a top-level `package.json`:
* Including a dependency of `ep_etherpad-lite@file:src` in the
top-level `package.json`, which is required to keep npm from
deleting the `node_modules/ep_etherpad-lite` symlink each time a
package is installed, drastically slows down plugin installation
because npm recursively walks the ep_etherpad-lite dependencies.
* npm has a horrible dependency hoisting behavior: It moves
dependencies from `src/node_modules/` to the top-level
`node_modules/` directory when possible. This causes numerous
mysterious problems, such as silent failures in `npm outdated` and
`npm update`, and it breaks plugins that do
`require('ep_etherpad-lite/node_modules/foo')`.
Right now, with npm v6.x, eliminating the disadvantages is far more
valuable than keeping the advantages. (This might change with npm
v7.x.)
For a long time there was no top-level `package.json` and it worked
fairly well, although users were often confused by npm's benign
warnings. The top-level `package.json` was added because we needed a
place to put ESLint config for the stuff in `bin/` and `tests/`, and
we wanted the advantages listed above. Unfortunately we were unaware
of the disadvantages at the time. The `bin/` and `tests/` directories
were moved under `src/` so we no longer need the top-level
`package.json` for ESLint.
An alternative to a top-level `package.json`: Create
`plugins/package.json` and install all plugins in `plugins/`. If
`plugins/package.json` has a dependency of
`ep_etherpad-lite@file:../src` then plugin installation will still be
slow (npm will still recursively walk the dependencies in
`src/package.json`) but it should avoid npm's nasty dependency
hoisting behavior. To avoid slow plugin installation we could create a
lightweight `etherpad-pluginlib` package that Etherpad plugins would
use to indirectly access Etherpad's internals. As an added bonus, this
intermediate package could become an adaptor that provides a stable
interface to plugins even when Etherpad core rapidly evolves.
- Tests pass ✅
- Added openapi-backend hook
- Generating OpenAPI v3 definitions for each API version
- Definitions served /api/openapi.json /api/{version}/openapi.json
By leveraging the templating mechanism in `settings.json`, this change allows a
Docker client to run a prebuilt image and change some basic configuration
settings, like the instance name or, more importantly, the database
coordinates.
By default, the image runs witho no administrative user enabled. If a value is
given to ADMIN_PASSWORD, the `admin` user will be activated.
Also closes https://github.com/ether/etherpad-lite/issues/3623
---
Modified by muxator to support conditional user activation at runtime.