Currently translated at 99.6% (316 of 317 strings)
Translated using Weblate (German)
Currently translated at 99.6% (316 of 317 strings)
Co-authored-by: Jan Marx <jcm@jcm.re>
Co-authored-by: qwerty287 <ndev@web.de>
Translate-URL: http://translate.woodpecker-ci.org/projects/woodpecker-ci/ui/de/
Translation: Woodpecker CI/UI
1. new translation docs
2. lazy-load TimeAgo locales (used for "x min ago" messages). This 1.
reduces size and 2. provides all languages without adding them manually.
3. Remove DayJS locales, they're unused.
Fixes: https://github.com/woodpecker-ci/woodpecker/issues/1079
What do you think about using a consistent `woodpecker` color scheme?
Right now, the `lime` color scheme from windicss is used that does not
really fit the primary color used for the documentation website. I have
used the primary color `#4CAF50` from the docs and created a color
palette with https://palettte.app/:
<details>
<summary>JSON source</summary>
```Json
[
{
"paletteName": "New Palette",
"swatches": [
{
"name": "New Swatch",
"color": "166E30"
},
{
"name": "New Swatch",
"color": "248438"
},
{
"name": "New Swatch",
"color": "369943"
},
{
"name": "New Swatch",
"color": "4CAF50"
},
{
"name": "New Swatch",
"color": "68C464"
},
{
"name": "New Swatch",
"color": "8AD97F"
}
]
}
]
```
</details>
![image](https://github.com/woodpecker-ci/woodpecker/assets/3391958/a254f1e0-ce17-43a9-9e8b-72252296fd6f)
I have added this color scheme to the windicss config and replaced the
use of `lime` in the UI. While `woodpecker-300` would be the primary
color that is used for the docs, I currently use `woodpecke-400` as
primary color for the UI to fix some contrast issues.
![image](https://github.com/woodpecker-ci/woodpecker/assets/3391958/7bf751e1-f2a6-481c-bee7-a27d27cf8adb)
![image](https://github.com/woodpecker-ci/woodpecker/assets/3391958/e5673dc7-81c1-4fd4-bef9-14494bc5aa27)
What do you think? If you would like to stay with the current colors,
that's fine for me, I can just use the custom CSS feature in this case.
---------
Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de>
closes#1743
fixes: setting secrets for own user namespace
- create org in database
- use orgID for org related APIs
Co-authored-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de>
This PR introduces two new server configuration options, for providing a
custom .JS and .CSS file.
These can be used to show custom banner messages, add
environment-dependent signals, or simply a corporate logo.
### Motivation (what problem I try to solve)
I'm operating Woodpecker in multiple k8s clusters for different
environments.
When having multiple browser tabs open, I prefer strong indicators for
each environment.
E.g. a red "PROD" banner, or just a blue "QA" banner.
Also, we sometimes need to have the chance for maintenance, and instead
of broadcasting emails,
I prefer a banner message, stating something like: "Heads-up: there's a
planned downtime, next Friday, blabla...".
Also, I like to have the firm's logo visible, which makes Woodpecker
look more like an integral part of our platform.
### Implementation notes
* Two new config options are introduced ```WOODPECKER_CUSTOM_CSS_FILE```
and ```WOODPECKER_CUSTOM_JS_FILE```
* I've piggy-bagged the existing handler for assets, as it seemed to me
a minimally invasive approach
* the option along with an example is documented
* a simple unit test for the Gin-handler ensures some regression safety
* no extra dependencies are introduced
### Visual example
The documented example will look like this.
![Screenshot 2023-05-27 at 17 00
44](https://github.com/woodpecker-ci/woodpecker/assets/1189394/8940392e-463c-4651-a1eb-f017cd3cd64d)
### Areas of uncertainty
This is my first contribution to Woodpecker and I tried my best to align
with your conventions.
That said, I found myself uncertain about these things and would be glad
about getting feedback.
* The handler tests are somewhat different than the other ones because I
wanted to keep them simple - I hope that still matches your coding
guidelines
* caching the page sometimes will let the browser not recognize changes
and a user must reload. I'm not fully into the details of how caching is
implemented and neither can judge if it's a real problem. Another pair
of eyes would be good.