- moderation tab
- sorting/pagination
- improved third party reports support
- trending charts
- better perf
- many fixes
- refactoring
- new reports
Co-Authored-By: Simon Cossar <scossar@users.noreply.github.com>
* rename route to dashboard-next
* better scaling of charts for large data sets
* adjust trend position to avoid overlap
* makes sure silenced/suspended is made on real users
* correctly format data when only one data point
* minor refactoring
This is the first iteration of an effort towards making a very good dashboard.
Until we feel confident this is good, this dashboard will only be accessible through /admin/dashboard_next
This feature introduces the concept of themes. Themes are an evolution
of site customizations.
Themes introduce two very big conceptual changes:
- A theme may include other "child themes", children can include grand
children and so on.
- A theme may specify a color scheme
The change does away with the idea of "enabled" color schemes.
It also adds a bunch of big niceties like
- You can source a theme from a git repo
- History for themes is much improved
- You can only have a single enabled theme. Themes can be selected by
users, if you opt for it.
On a technical level this change comes with a whole bunch of goodies
- All CSS is now compiled using a custom pipeline that uses libsass
see /lib/stylesheet
- There is a single pipeline for css compilation (in the past we used
one for customizations and another one for the rest of the app
- The stylesheet pipeline is now divorced of sprockets, there is no
reliance on sprockets for CSS bundling
- CSS is generated with source maps everywhere (including themes) this
makes debugging much easier
- Our "live reloader" is smarter and avoid a flash of unstyled content
we run a file watcher in "puma" in dev so you no longer need to run
rake autospec to watch for CSS changes