* Better trash
I recently lost a bunch of time editing and searching for pages that were actually in the Trash. Docmost intentionally tries to not link to Trashed pages, but the url of that Trashed page and any inbound links still work. This makes it clearer when a page you are interacting with is in the Trash.
- /trash
- Refactored banner into `trash-banner.tsx`
- Refactored "Restore" modal into `use-restore-page-modal.tsx`
- Page (when isDeleted)
- Add: `trash-banner.tsx`
- Add breadcrumbs: `Parent / Child / Page (Deleted)`
- Change: Deleted Pages are read-only
- Replace "Move to Trash" with "Restore" in page menu (invokes `use-restore-page-modal`)
I tried very hard to keep this simple and re-use existing translation strings wherever possible.
* cleanup
---------
Co-authored-by: Philipinho <16838612+Philipinho@users.noreply.github.com>
* fix(editor): hide transclusion borders and reset spacing in read-only mode
* feat(share): add full width toggle for shared pages
* feat(share): support resizing sidebar on shared pages
* fix: auto redirect if there is only one SSO provider.
- fix tighten sso redirect
- fix share tree margin
* sync
* package overrides
* feat(tree): replace react-arborist with custom tree implementation
* feat(tree): keyboard arrow navigation between rows
* feat(emoji-picker): focus search input on open
* refactor(emoji): switch to @slidoapp/emoji-mart fork for accessibility
* feat(tree): Home/End and typeahead keyboard navigation
* feat(tree): roving tabindex and * to expand sibling subtrees
* feat(tree): Space activation and ARIA refinements
* fix(tree): move treeitem role to focusable row + aria-current
Adds SAML_DISABLE_REQUESTED_AUTHN_CONTEXT env var, passed through
to the SAML strategy's disableRequestedAuthnContext option.
Defaults to existing behavior (element sent). Set to true to omit
the element when the IdP authenticates the user with a method that
does not match (e.g. MFA, FIDO, passwordless), which would
otherwise cause AADSTS75011 with Microsoft Entra ID.
The inline-embed endpoint was a thin wrapper around baseService.create:
its only differences from /bases/create were that it derived the
spaceId/workspaceId from a parent page, gated permission via
pageAccessService.validateCanEdit on that parent, and seeded inline
defaults (Title + Text 1 + Text 2 + one row). All of that fits
naturally on /bases/create as a parentPageId branch.
- CreateBaseDto: spaceId is now optional. Either spaceId or
parentPageId must be supplied; the controller validates the
cross-field requirement and 400s otherwise.
- /bases/create: with parentPageId, derive workspaceId/spaceId from
the parent, validateCanEdit on the parent, apply inline defaults.
Without parentPageId, gate on space-level Create, Page (the
standalone path).
- InlineEmbedBaseDto + createInlineEmbed deleted.
- Slash command in the editor now POSTs /bases/create with
{ parentPageId } — the server picks up the inline branch.
BaseWsService.subscribe was the last surface that didn't go through
the page-permission system. It checked authorization with a bespoke
canReadBaseSpace(userId, spaceId) — which queried space membership
directly and accepted ANY space role — so a user with a per-base
restriction (revoked access via pagePermissionRepo) could still
stream live updates and presence for a base they couldn't otherwise
read.
Replace it with pageAccessService.validateCanView(base, user) — the
same gate the HTTP endpoints (info, list, rows query, etc.) and the
page collab WS already use. Bases are pages structurally (isBase=true),
so reusing the page validator keeps them on a single permission code
path.
Drops the now-unused SpaceMemberRepo / findHighestUserSpaceRole
imports; injects UserRepo + PageAccessService instead (both are
globally provided modules, no DI changes needed).
Bases are pages (isBase=true) and the casl rules already granted the
exact same Manage/Read level on the Base subject as on Page for every
space role (admin, writer, reader). The `Base` subject was therefore
pure duplication: any caller that needed to check base access either
went through pageAccessService (which uses Page internally) or did a
direct Page-equivalent ability.cannot(..., Base) check that produced
the same outcome as Page would have.
Drop SpaceCaslSubject.Base entirely — server enum, server union,
server factory rules, client enum, client union — and switch the two
remaining direct callers to Page:
- base.controller.ts `create` and list checks now use Page (matching
page.controller.ts's create/list).
- base-table.tsx's `canSave` now reads Page edit ability.
Net effect: one source of truth for "can this user view/edit/manage
content in this space," whether the content is a regular page or a
base. Existing role assignments behave identically; no migration
needed because permissions are computed per-request from the role,
not stored.
Base file-cell uploads were hitting a parallel POST /bases/files/upload
endpoint that re-implemented the multipart parse, the size limit
handling, and the spaceId resolution that the standard page-attachment
endpoint (POST /files/upload) already does. The two diverged on minor
points (no audit log, no attachmentId support, slightly different
permission check) without good reason — bases are pages (isBase=true),
so the existing endpoint already handles them correctly.
Server: delete uploadBaseFile and the now-unused BaseRepo injection.
Client: route the file-cell uploader through the existing uploadFile
helper in page-service. The base's pageId is a valid page id, so the
server's pageRepo.findById succeeds and pageAccessService.validateCanEdit
runs — which lines up with the Base edit ability at the space-role
level (Manage Page and Manage Base track together for admins/writers,
Read for readers).
A freshly-created inline-embed used to render with only the primary
"Title" column and zero rows — visually it looks more like a broken
widget than a database, so users always had to do at least three
manual setup steps before the embed conveyed its purpose.
BaseService.create now accepts an optional `defaults` arg for
`extraTextProperties` and `defaultRows`; both extras are inserted in
the same transaction as the page/property/view so a half-built base
can never slip out. The inline-embed controller passes
{ extraTextProperties: 2, defaultRows: 1 } so the embed lands as
"Title + Text 1 + Text 2", with one empty row ready to type into.
Standalone base creation goes through the same code path with no
defaults, so its existing single-Title-column shape is unchanged.