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This change updates the OpenDC web UI to not rely on Sass for
stylesheets. CSS in combination with PostCSS has become powerful enough
for our use-cases as indicated by the small differences between the CSS
and SCSS versions of our files.
By switching to CSS, we can make use of Turbopack to build the project,
which is a re-implementation of Webppack in Rust and is able to build
projects much faster.
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This change updates the web UI and API to support unauthenticated user
access. Such functionality is helpful when there is just a single user
that wants to try OpenDC.
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This change updates the web interface in React to be compatible with the
new API written in Kotlin. Several changes have been made in the new API
to ensure consistency.
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This change updates the OpenDC frontend to perform mutations of the
topology done in Sagas through the React Query cache, so that non-Saga
parts of the application also have their topology queries updated.
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This change is a rewrite of the existing OpenDC frontend in order to
migrate to the PatternFly 4 design framework.
PatternFly is used by Red Hat for various computing related services such
as OpenShift, Red Hat Virtualization and Cockpit. Since their design
requirements are very similar to those of OpenDC (modeling computing
services), migrating to PatternFly 4 allows us to re-use design choices
from these services.
See https://www.patternfly.org/v4/ for more information about
PatternFly.
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This change adds support in our Next.js application for the PatternFly 4
design framework. This framework is built by RedHat and provides several
components that are useful for the space in which OpenDC operates.
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This change updates the OpenDC frontend to use React Query for fetching
and mutating project data. Previously, this state was tracked and
synchronized via Redux. Migrating to React Query greatly simplifies the
state synchronization logic necessary in the frontend.
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This change re-adds the support for Sentry. This was lost during the
migration from CRA to Next.js.
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This change updates the frontend codebase to move away from the Google
login and instead use Auth0 as generic Identity Provider. This allows
users to login with other accounts as well.
Since Auth0 has a free tier, users can experiment themselves with OpenDC
locally without having to pay for the login functionality. The code has
been written so that we should be able to migrate away from Auth0 once
it is not a suitable Identity Provider for OpenDC anymore.
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This change updates the structure of the OpenDC frontend in order to
improve the maintainability of the frontend.
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This change updates the web frontend to use Next.js instead of Create
React App (CRA). Next.js enables the possibility of rendering pages on
the server side (which reduces the time to first frame) and overall
provides a better development experience.
Future commits will try to futher optimize the implementation for
Next.js.
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