- Avoid cross-device copying in Windows CI by setting the tests dir to
the same drive as the workspace.
- Disable LTO and use a faster linker for the Rust build
Buid: ~3min -> ~2min
Integration Tests: ~8min -> ~3min20s
This PR adds CSS codemods for migrating existing `@tailwind` directives
to the new alternatives.
This PR has the ability to migrate the following cases:
---
Typical default usage of `@tailwind` directives in v3.
Input:
```css
@tailwind base;
@tailwind components;
@tailwind utilities;
```
Output:
```css
@import 'tailwindcss';
```
---
Similar as above, but always using `@import` instead of `@import`
directly.
Input:
```css
@import 'tailwindcss/base';
@import 'tailwindcss/components';
@import 'tailwindcss/utilities';
```
Output:
```css
@import 'tailwindcss';
```
---
When you are _only_ using `@tailwind base`:
Input:
```css
@tailwind base;
```
Output:
```css
@import 'tailwindcss/theme' layer(theme);
@import 'tailwindcss/preflight' layer(base);
```
---
When you are _only_ using `@tailwind utilities`:
Input:
```css
@tailwind utilities;
```
Output:
```css
@import 'tailwindcss/utilities' layer(utilities);
```
---
If the default order changes (aka, `@tailwind utilities` was defined
_before_ `@tailwind base`), then an additional `@layer` will be added to
the top to re-define the default order.
Input:
```css
@tailwind utilities;
@tailwind base;
```
Output:
```css
@layer theme, components, utilities, base;
@import 'tailwindcss';
```
---
When you are _only_ using `@tailwind base; @tailwind utilities;`:
Input:
```css
@tailwind base;
@tailwind utilities;
```
Output:
```css
@import 'tailwindcss';
```
We currently don't have a concept of `@tailwind components` in v4, so if
you are not using `@tailwind components`, we can expand to the default
`@import 'tailwindcss';` instead of the individual imports.
---
`@tailwind screens` and `@tailwind variants` are not supported/necessary
in v4, so we can safely remove them.
Input:
```css
@tailwind screens;
@tailwind variants;
```
Output:
```css
```
This PR adds some initial tooling for codemods. We are currently only
interested in migrating CSS files, so we will be using PostCSS under the
hood to do this. This PR also implements the "migrate `@apply`" codemod
from #14412.
The usage will look like this:
```sh
npx @tailwindcss/upgrade
```
You can pass in CSS files to transform as arguments:
```sh
npx @tailwindcss/upgrade src/**/*.css
```
But, if none are provided, it will search for CSS files in the current
directory and its subdirectories.
```
≈ tailwindcss v4.0.0-alpha.24
│ No files provided. Searching for CSS files in the current
│ directory and its subdirectories…
│ Migration complete. Verify the changes and commit them to
│ your repository.
```
The tooling also requires the Git repository to be in a clean state.
This is a common convention to ensure that everything is undo-able. If
we detect that the git repository is dirty, we will abort the migration.
```
≈ tailwindcss v4.0.0-alpha.24
│ Git directory is not clean. Please stash or commit your
│ changes before migrating.
│ You may use the `--force` flag to override this safety
│ check.
```
---
This PR alsoo adds CSS codemods for migrating existing `@apply`
directives to the new version.
This PR has the ability to migrate the following cases:
---
In v4, the convention is to put the important modifier `!` at the end of
the utility class instead of right before it. This makes it easier to
reason about, especially when you are variants.
Input:
```css
.foo {
@apply !flex flex-col! hover:!items-start items-center;
}
```
Output:
```css
.foo {
@apply flex! flex-col! hover:items-start! items-center;
}
```
---
In v4 we don't support `!important` as a marker at the end of `@apply`
directives. Instead, you can append the `!` to each utility class to
make it `!important`.
Input:
```css
.foo {
@apply flex flex-col !important;
}
```
Output:
```css
.foo {
@apply flex! flex-col!;
}
```
While upgrading a project to Tailwind CSS v4, I forgot to remove the
`tailwindcss` import from the PostCSS config. As a result of this, I was
greeted with the following message:
```
node:internal/process/promises:289
triggerUncaughtException(err, true /* fromPromise */);
^
[Failed to load PostCSS config: Failed to load PostCSS config (searchPath: /Users/philipp/dev/project): [TypeError] Invalid PostCSS Plugin found at: plugins[0]
(@/Users/philipp/dev/project/postcss.config.js)
TypeError: Invalid PostCSS Plugin found at: plugins[0]
```
I don't think this was particularly helpful, so I’m proposing we add a
default function export to the `tailwindcss` package so when it's used
inside PostCSS, we can control the error message. So I changed it to
something along these lines:
```
It looks like you're trying to use the \`tailwindcss\` package as a PostCSS plugin. This is no longer possible since Tailwind CSS v4.
If you want to continue to use Tailwind CSS with PostCSS, please install \`@tailwindcss/postcss\` and change your PostCSS config file.
at w (/Users/philipp/dev/project/node_modules/tailwindcss/node_modules/tailwindcss/dist/lib.js:1:21233)
at Object.<anonymous> (/Users/philipp/dev/project/node_modules/tailwindcss/postcss.config.cjs:3:13)
at Module._compile (node:internal/modules/cjs/loader:1358:14)
at Module._extensions..js (node:internal/modules/cjs/loader:1416:10)
at Module.load (node:internal/modules/cjs/loader:1208:32)
at Module._load (node:internal/modules/cjs/loader:1024:12)
at cjsLoader (node:internal/modules/esm/translators:348:17)
at ModuleWrap.<anonymous> (node:internal/modules/esm/translators:297:7)
at ModuleJob.run (node:internal/modules/esm/module_job:222:25)
at async ModuleLoader.import (node:internal/modules/esm/loader:316:24)
```
This is also a good place to link to the migration guides once we have
them 🙂
---------
Co-authored-by: Adam Wathan <adam.wathan@gmail.com>
There are still instances in which CI is flaky after #14332. This PR
applies the same fix (that is, moving the file write into the retrying
block) to all `retryAssertion` callbacks.
This works similar to the Vue setup. The styles that Astro will receive
might still contain Tailwind CSS APIs but since it's not picky, we can
pass that through to the regular Vite `transform` handlers for now.
This, however, will have issues like
https://github.com/tailwindlabs/tailwindcss/issues/14205. We have to fix
this together with Vue and other similar extensions later. For now, it
will break when syntax is used that lightningcss rewrites (like `@apply
text-3xl/tight;`)
---------
Co-authored-by: Jordan Pittman <jordan@cryptica.me>
I noticed the Windows integration tests for Vite's `watch` mode have
been flaky. Moving the file write into the retrying assertion callback
seems to fix it and allows us to get rid of the arbitrary timeout (I
don't remember that I ever added this in the first place 😅 ).
We noticed that Nuxt projects were not working with the tailwindcss
project. The issue was traced down to the fact that Nuxt starts multiple
Vite dev servers and calling the experimental `waitForRequestsIdle()` on
one of the test servers would never resolve.
This was fixed upstream and is part of the latest Vite/Nuxt release:
https://github.com/vitejs/vite/issues/17980.
We still need to handle the fact that Vite can spawn multiple dev
servers. This is necessary because when we invalidate all roots, we need
to find that module inside all of the spawned servers. If we only look
at the _last server_ (what we have done before), we would not find the
module and thus could not invalidate it.
Fixes#14205Fixes#14106
This PR reworks the Vite extension in order to supprt `lightningcss` as
the pre-processor, enable faster rebuilds, and adds support for `vite
build --watch` mode. To make this change possible, we've done two major
changes to the extension that have caused the other changes.
## 1. Tailwind CSS is a preprocessor
We now run all of our modifications in `enforce: 'pre'`. This means that
Tailwind CSS now gets the untransformed CSS files rather than the one
already going through postcss or lightningcss. We do this because
Tailwind CSS _is_ a preprocessor at the same level as those tools and we
do sometimes use the language in ways that [creates problems when it's
the input for other
bundlers](https://github.com/tailwindlabs/tailwindcss/pull/14269).
The correct solution here is to make Tailwind not depend on any other
transformations. The main reason we were not using the `enforce: 'pre'`
phase in Vite before was becuase we relied on the `@import` flattening
of postcss so we now have to do this manually. `@import` flattening is
now a concern that every Tailwind V4 client has to deal with so this
might actually be something we want to inline into tailwindcss in the
future.
## 2. A Vite config can have multiple Tailwind roots
This is something that we have not made very explicit in the previous
iteration of the Vite plugin but we have to support multiple Tailwind
roots in a single Vite workspace. A Tailwind root is a CSS file that is
used to configure Tailwind. Technically, any CSS file can be the input
for `tailwindcss` but you have to add certain rules (e.g. `@import
"tailwindcss";`) to make the compiler do something.
A workspace can have multiple of these rules (e.g. by having different
Tailwind configures for different sub-pages). With the addition of
[support for `@source`
rules](https://github.com/tailwindlabs/tailwindcss/pull/14078) and [JS
config files](https://github.com/tailwindlabs/tailwindcss/pull/14239),
Tailwind roots become more complex and can have a custom list of
_dependencies_ (that is other JavaScript modules the compiler includes
as part of these new rules). In order to _only rebuild the roots we need
to_, we have to make this separation very clear.
---------
Co-authored-by: Jordan Pittman <jordan@cryptica.me>
Co-authored-by: Adam Wathan <4323180+adamwathan@users.noreply.github.com>
Tailwind V3 used [jiti](https://github.com/unjs/jiti/) to allow
importing of TypeScript files for the config and plugins. This PR adds
the new Jiti V2 beta to our `@tailwindcss/node` and uses it if a native
`import()` fails. I added a new integration test to the CLI config
setup, to ensure it still works with our module cache cleanup.
When you configure custom content globs inside an `@config` file, we
want to tread these globs as being relative to that config file and not
the CSS file that requires the content file. A config can be used by
multiple CSS configs.
---------
Co-authored-by: Adam Wathan <adam.wathan@gmail.com>
Builds on #14239 — that PR needs to be merged first.
This PR allows plugins defined with `plugin.withOptions` to receive
options in CSS when using `@plugin` as long as the options are simple
key/value pairs.
For example, the following is now valid and will include the forms
plugin with only the base styles enabled:
```css
@plugin "@tailwindcss/forms" {
strategy: base;
}
```
We handle `null`, `true`, `false`, and numeric values as expected and
will convert them to their JavaScript equivalents. Comma separated
values are turned into arrays. All other values are converted to
strings.
For example, in the following plugin definition, the options that are
passed to the plugin will be the correct types:
- `debug` will be the boolean value `true`
- `threshold` will be the number `0.5`
- `message` will be the string `"Hello world"`
- `features` will be the array `["base", "responsive"]`
```css
@plugin "my-plugin" {
debug: false;
threshold: 0.5;
message: Hello world;
features: base, responsive;
}
```
If you need to pass a number or boolean value as a string, you can do so
by wrapping the value in quotes:
```css
@plugin "my-plugin" {
debug: "false";
threshold: "0.5";
message: "Hello world";
}
```
When duplicate options are encountered the last value wins:
```css
@plugin "my-plugin" {
message: Hello world;
message: Hello plugin; /* this will be the value of `message` */
}
```
It's important to note that this feature is **only available for plugins
defined with `plugin.withOptions`**. If you try to pass options to a
plugin that doesn't support them, you'll get an error message when
building:
```css
@plugin "my-plugin" {
debug: false;
threshold: 0.5;
}
/* Error: The plugin "my-plugin" does not accept options */
```
Additionally, if you try to pass in more complex values like objects or
selectors you'll get an error message:
```css
@plugin "my-plugin" {
color: { red: 100; green: 200; blue: 300 };
}
/* Error: Objects are not supported in `@plugin` options. */
```
```css
@plugin "my-plugin" {
.some-selector > * {
primary: "blue";
secondary: "green";
}
}
/* Error: `@plugin` can only contain declarations. */
```
---------
Co-authored-by: Philipp Spiess <hello@philippspiess.com>
Co-authored-by: Robin Malfait <malfait.robin@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Adam Wathan <adam.wathan@gmail.com>
In Tailwind v4 the CSS file is the main entry point to your project and
is generally configured via `@theme`. However, given that all v3
projects were configured via a `tailwind.config.js` file we definitely
need to support those. This PR adds support for loading existing
Tailwind config files by adding an `@config` directive to the CSS —
similar to how v3 supported multiple config files except that this is
now _required_ to use a config file.
You can load a config file like so:
```
@import "tailwindcss";
@config "./path/to/tailwind.config.js";
```
A few notes:
- Both CommonJS and ESM config files are supported (loaded directly via
`import()` in Node)
- This is not yet supported in Intellisense or Prettier — should
hopefully land next week
- TypeScript is **not yet** supported in the config file — this will be
handled in a future PR.
---------
Co-authored-by: Philipp Spiess <hello@philippspiess.com>
Co-authored-by: Adam Wathan <adam.wathan@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Robin Malfait <malfait.robin@gmail.com>
This PR adds a new standalone client: A single-binary file that you can
use to run Tailwind v4 without having a node setup. To make this work we
use Bun's single-binary build which can properly package up native
modules and the bun runtime for us so we do not have to rely on any
expand-into-tmp-folder-at-runtime workarounds.
When running locally, `pnpm build` will now standalone artifacts inside
`packages/@tailwindcss-standalone/dist`. Note that since we do not build
Oxide for other environments in the local setup, you won't be able to
use the standalone artifacts for other platforms in local dev mode.
Unfortunately Bun does not have support for Windows ARM builds yet but
we found that using the `bun-baseline` runtime for Windows x64 would
make the builds work fine in ARM emulation mode:

Some Bun related issues we faced and worked around:
- We found that the regular Windows x64 build of `bun` does not run on
Windows ARM via emulation. Instead, we have to use the `bun-baseline`
builds which emulate correctly.
- When we tried to bundle artifacts with [embed
directories](https://bun.sh/docs/bundler/executables#embed-directories),
node binary dependencies were no longer resolved correctly even though
they would still be bundled and accessible within the [`embeddedFiles`
list](https://bun.sh/docs/bundler/executables#listing-embedded-files).
We worked around this by using the `import * as from ... with { type:
"file" };` and patching the resolver we use in our CLI.
- If you have an import to a module that is used as a regular import
_and_ a `with { type: "file" }`, it will either return the module in
both cases _or_ the file path when we would expect only the `with {
type: "file" }` import to return the path. We do read the Tailwind CSS
version via the file system and `require.resolve()` in the CLI and via
`import * from './package.json'` in core and had to work around this by
patching the version resolution in our CLI.
```ts
import packageJson from "./package.json"
import packageJsonPath from "./package.json" with {type: "file"}
// We do not expect these to be equal
packageJson === packageJsonPath
```
- We can not customize the app icon used for Windows `.exe` builds
without decompiling the binary. For now we will leave the default but
one workaround is to [use tools like
ResourceHacker](698d9c4bd1)
to decompile the binary first.
---------
Co-authored-by: Jordan Pittman <jordan@cryptica.me>
Co-authored-by: Robin Malfait <malfait.robin@gmail.com>
Currently if a plugin adds a utility called `duration` it will take
precedence over the built-in utilities — or any utilities with the same
name in previously included plugins. However, in v3, we emitted matches
from _all_ plugins where possible.
Take this plugin for example which adds utilities for
`animation-duration` via the `duration-*` class:
```ts
import plugin from 'tailwindcss/plugin'
export default plugin(
function ({ matchUtilities, theme }) {
matchUtilities(
{ duration: (value) => ({ animationDuration: value }) },
{ values: theme("animationDuration") },
)
},
{
theme: {
extend: {
animationDuration: ({ theme }) => ({
...theme("transitionDuration"),
}),
}
},
}
)
```
Before this PR this plugin's `duration` utility would override the
built-in `duration` utility so you'd get this for a class like
`duration-3500`:
```css
.duration-3000 {
animation-duration: 3500ms;
}
```
Now, after this PR, we'll emit rules for `transition-duration`
(Tailwind's built-in `duration-*` utility) and `animation-duration`
(from the above plugin) and you'll get this instead:
```css
.duration-3000 {
transition-duration: 3500ms;
}
.duration-3000 {
animation-duration: 3500ms;
}
```
These are output as separate rules to ensure that they can all be sorted
appropriately against other utilities.
---------
Co-authored-by: Philipp Spiess <hello@philippspiess.com>
This PR enables compatibility for the `@tailwindcss/typography` and
`@tailwindcss/forms` plugins. This required the addition of new Plugin
APIs and new package exports.
## New Plugin APIs and compatibility improvements
We added support for `addComponents`, `matchComponents`, and `prefix`.
The component APIs are an alias for the utilities APIs because the
sorting in V4 is different and emitting components in a custom `@layer`
is not necessary. Since `prefix` is not supported in V4, the `prefix()`
API is currently an identity function.
```js
addComponents({
'.btn': {
padding: '.5rem 1rem',
borderRadius: '.25rem',
fontWeight: '600',
},
'.btn-blue': {
backgroundColor: '#3490dc',
color: '#fff',
'&:hover': {
backgroundColor: '#2779bd',
},
},
'.btn-red': {
backgroundColor: '#e3342f',
color: '#fff',
'&:hover': {
backgroundColor: '#cc1f1a',
},
},
})
```
The behavioral changes effect the `addUtilities` and `matchUtilities`
functions, we now:
- Allow arrays of CSS property objects to be emitted:
```js
addUtilities({
'.text-trim': [
{'text-box-trim': 'both'},
{'text-box-edge': 'cap alphabetic'},
],
})
```
- Allow arrays of utilities
```js
addUtilities([
{
'.text-trim':{
'text-box-trim': 'both',
'text-box-edge': 'cap alphabetic',
},
}
])
```
- Allow more complicated selector names
```js
addUtilities({
'.form-input, .form-select, .form-radio': {
/* styles here */
},
'.form-input::placeholder': {
/* styles here */
},
'.form-checkbox:indeterminate:checked': {
/* styles here */
}
})
```
## New `tailwindcss/color` and `tailwindcss/defaultTheme` export
To be compatible to v3, we're adding two new exports to the tailwindcss
package. These match the default theme values as defined in v3:
```ts
import colors from 'tailwindcss/colors'
console.log(colors.red[600])
```
```ts
import theme from 'tailwindcss/defaultTheme'
console.log(theme.spacing[4])
```
---------
Co-authored-by: Philipp Spiess <hello@philippspiess.com>
This PR fixes an issue introduced with the changed candidate cache
behavior in #14187.
Prior to #14187, candidates were cached globally within an instance of
Oxide. This meant that once a candidate was discovered, it would not
reset until you either manually cleared the cache or restarted the Oxide
process. With the changes in #14187 however, the cache was scoped to the
instance of the `Scanner` class with the intention of making the caching
behavior more easy to understand and to avoid a global cache.
This, however, had an unforeseen side-effect in our Vite extension.
Vite, in dev mode, discovers files _lazily_. So when a developer goes to
`/index.html` the first time, we will scan the `/index.html` file for
Tailwind candidates and then build a CSS file with those candidate. When
they go to `/about.html` later, we will _append_ the candidates from the
new file and so forth.
The problem now arises when the dev server detects changes to the input
CSS file. This requires us to do a re-scan of that CSS file which, after
#14187, caused the candidate cache to be gone. This is usually fine
since we would just scan files again for the changed candidate list but
in the Vite case we would only get the input CSS file change _but no
subsequent change events for all other files, including those currently
rendered in the browser_). This caused updates to the CSS file to remove
all candidates from the CSS file again.
Ideally, we can separate between two concepts: The candidate cache and
the CSS input file scan. An instance of the `Scanner` could re-parse the
input CSS file without having to throw away previous candidates. This,
however, would have another issue with the current Vite extension where
we do not properly retain instances of the `Scanner` class anyways. To
properly improve the cache behavior, we will have to fix the Vite
`Scanner` retaining behavior first. Unfortunately this means that for
the short term, we have to add some manual bookkeeping to the Vite
client and retain the candidate cache between builds ourselves.
---------
Co-authored-by: Jordan Pittman <jordan@cryptica.me>
Using the [new integration test
setup](https://github.com/tailwindlabs/tailwindcss/pull/14089), this PR
adds a test for a V4 Next.js setup using the Postcss plugin. It's
testing both a full build and the dev mode (non-turbo for now).
Because of webpack, tests are quite slow which is worrisome since we
probably need to add many more integrations in the future. One idea I
have is that we separate tests in two buckets: _essential_ tests that
run often and are fast and advanced suites that we only run on CI via
custom, non-blocking, jobs.
---------
Co-authored-by: Jordan Pittman <jordan@cryptica.me>
This PR adds support to transforming `<style>` blocks emitted by Vue
components with tailwindcss when the `@tailwindcss/vite` is used.
Example:
```vue
<style>
@import 'tailwindcss/utilities';
@import 'tailwindcss/theme' theme(reference);
.foo {
@apply text-red-500;
}
</style>
<template>
<div class="underline foo">Hello Vue!</div>
</template>
```
Additionally, this PR also adds an integration test.
---------
Co-authored-by: Robin Malfait <malfait.robin@gmail.com>
Alternative to #14110
This PR changes the way how we load plugins to be compatible with ES6
async `import`s. This allows us to load plugins even inside the browser
but it comes at a downside: We now have to change the `compile` API to
return a `Promise`...
So most of this PR is rewriting all of the call sites of `compile` to
expect a promise instead of the object.
---------
Co-authored-by: Jordan Pittman <jordan@cryptica.me>
While working on #14078, there were a couple of debugging techniques
that we were using quite frequently:
- Being able to `cd` into the test setup
- Seeing the stdio and stdout data in real-time (this currently requires
us to mark a test as failing)
- Checking the exact commands that are being run
Since we naturally worked around this quite often, I decided to make
this a first-level API with the introduction of a new `test.debug` flag.
When set, it will:
- Create the test setup in the project dir within a new `.debug` folder
and won't delete it after the run. Having it in an explicit folder
allows us to easily delete it manually when we need to.
- Logs all run commands to the console (`>` for a sync call, `>&` for a
spawned process)
- Logs stdio and stderr to the console in real time.
- Run the test as `.only`
<img width="2267" alt="Screenshot 2024-08-06 at 13 19 49"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/1b204ac2-feee-489e-9cd8-edf73c0f2abd">
---------
Co-authored-by: Robin Malfait <malfait.robin@gmail.com>
This PR is an umbrella PR where we will add support for the new
`@source` directive. This will allow you to add explicit content glob
patterns if you want to look for Tailwind classes in other files that
are not automatically detected yet.
Right now this is an addition to the existing auto content detection
that is automatically enabled in the `@tailwindcss/postcss` and
`@tailwindcss/cli` packages. The `@tailwindcss/vite` package doesn't use
the auto content detection, but uses the module graph instead.
From an API perspective there is not a lot going on. There are only a
few things that you have to know when using the `@source` directive, and
you probably already know the rules:
1. You can use multiple `@source` directives if you want.
2. The `@source` accepts a glob pattern so that you can match multiple
files at once
3. The pattern is relative to the current file you are in
4. The pattern includes all files it is matching, even git ignored files
1. The motivation for this is so that you can explicitly point to a
`node_modules` folder if you want to look at `node_modules` for whatever
reason.
6. Right now we don't support negative globs (starting with a `!`) yet,
that will be available in the near future.
Usage example:
```css
/* ./src/input.css */
@import "tailwindcss";
@source "../laravel/resources/views/**/*.blade.php";
@source "../../packages/monorepo-package/**/*.js";
```
It looks like the PR introduced a lot of changes, but this is a side
effect of all the other plumbing work we had to do to make this work.
For example:
1. We added dedicated integration tests that run on Linux and Windows in
CI (just to make sure that all the `path` logic is correct)
2. We Have to make sure that the glob patterns are always correct even
if you are using `@import` in your CSS and use `@source` in an imported
file. This is because we receive the flattened CSS contents where all
`@import`s are inlined.
3. We have to make sure that we also listen for changes in the files
that match any of these patterns and trigger a rebuild.
PRs:
- [x] https://github.com/tailwindlabs/tailwindcss/pull/14063
- [x] https://github.com/tailwindlabs/tailwindcss/pull/14085
- [x] https://github.com/tailwindlabs/tailwindcss/pull/14079
- [x] https://github.com/tailwindlabs/tailwindcss/pull/14067
- [x] https://github.com/tailwindlabs/tailwindcss/pull/14076
- [x] https://github.com/tailwindlabs/tailwindcss/pull/14080
- [x] https://github.com/tailwindlabs/tailwindcss/pull/14127
- [x] https://github.com/tailwindlabs/tailwindcss/pull/14135
Once all the PRs are merged, then this umbrella PR can be merged.
> [!IMPORTANT]
> Make sure to merge this without rebasing such that each individual PR
ends up on the main branch.
---------
Co-authored-by: Philipp Spiess <hello@philippspiess.com>
Co-authored-by: Jordan Pittman <jordan@cryptica.me>
Co-authored-by: Adam Wathan <adam.wathan@gmail.com>
This PR adds a new root `/integrations` folder that will be the home of
integration tests. The idea of these tests is to use Tailwind in various
setups just like our users would (by only using the publishable npm
builds).
To avoid issues with concurrent tests making changes to the file system,
to make it very easy to test through a range of versions, and to avoid
changing configuration objects over and over in test runs, we decided to
inline the scaffolding completely into the test file and have no
examples checked into the repo.
Here's an example of how this can look like for a simple Vite test:
```ts
test('works with production builds', {
fs: {
'package.json': json`
{
"type": "module",
"dependencies": {
"@tailwindcss/vite": "workspace:^",
"tailwindcss": "workspace:^"
},
"devDependencies": {
"vite": "^5.3.5"
}
}
`,
'vite.config.ts': ts`
import tailwindcss from '@tailwindcss/vite'
import { defineConfig } from 'vite'
export default defineConfig({
build: { cssMinify: false },
plugins: [tailwindcss()],
})
`,
'index.html': html`
<head>
<link rel="stylesheet" href="./src/index.css">
</head>
<body>
<div class="underline m-2">Hello, world!</div>
</body>
`,
'src/index.css': css`
@import 'tailwindcss/theme' reference;
@import 'tailwindcss/utilities';
`,
},
},
async ({ fs, exec }) => {
await exec('pnpm vite build')
expect.assertions(2)
for (let [path, content] of await fs.glob('dist/**/*.css')) {
expect(path).toMatch(/\.css$/)
expect(stripTailwindComment(content)).toMatchInlineSnapshot(
`
".m-2 {
margin: var(--spacing-2, .5rem);
}
.underline {
text-decoration-line: underline;
}"
`,
)
}
},
)
```
By defining all dependencies this way, we never have to worry about
which fixtures are checked in and can more easily describe changes to
the setup.
For ergonomics, we've also added the [`embed` prettier
plugin](https://github.com/Sec-ant/prettier-plugin-embed). This will
mean that files inlined in the `fs` setup are properly indented. No
extra work needed!
If you're using VS Code, I can also recommend the [Language
Literals](https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=sissel.language-literals)
extension so that syntax highlighting also _just works_.
A neat feature of inlining the scaffolding like this is to make it very
simple to test through a variety of versions. For example, here's how we
can set up a test against Vite 5 and Vite 4:
```js
;['^4.5.3', '^5.3.5'].forEach(viteVersion => {
test(`works with production builds for Vite ${viteVersion}`, {
fs: {
'package.json': json`
{
"type": "module",
"devDependencies": {
"vite": "${viteVersion}"
}
}
`,
async () => {
// Do something
},
)
})
```
## Philosophy
Before we dive into the specifics, I want to clearly state the design
considerations we have chosen for this new test suite:
- All file mutations should be done in temp folders, nothing should ever
mess with your working directory
- Windows as a first-class citizen
- Have a clean and simple API that describes the test setup only using
public APIs
- Focus on reliability (make sure cleanup scripts work and are tolerant
to various error scenarios)
- If a user reports an issue with a specific configuration, we want to
be able to reproduce them with integration tests, no matter how obscure
the setup (this means the test need to be in control of most of the
variables)
- Tests should be reasonably fast (obviously this depends on the
integration. If we use a slow build tool, we can't magically speed it
up, but our overhead should be minimal).
## How it works
The current implementation provides a custom `test` helper function
that, when used, sets up the environment according to the configuration.
It'll create a new temporary directory and create all files, ensuring
things like proper `\r\n` line endings on Windows.
We do have to patch the `package.json` specifically, since we can not
use public versions of the tailwindcss packages as we want to be able to
test against a development build. To make this happen, every `pnpm
build` run now creates tarballs of the npm modules (that contain only
the files that would also in the published build). We then patch the
`package.json` to rewrite `workspace:^` versions to link to those
tarballs. We found this to work reliably on Windows and macOS as well as
being fast enough to not cause any issues. Furthermore we also decided
to use `pnpm` as the version manager for integration tests because of
it's global module cache (so installing `vite` is fast as soon as you
installed it once).
The test function will receive a few utilities that it can use to more
easily interact with the temp dir. One example is a `fs.glob` function
that you can use to easily find files in eventual `dist/` directories or
helpers around `spawn` and `exec` that make sure that processes are
cleaned up correctly.
Because we use tarballs from our build dependencies, working on changes
requires a workflow where you run `pnpm build` before running `pnpm
test:integrations`. However it also means we can run clients like our
CLI client with no additional overhead—just install the dependency like
any user would and set up your test cases this way.
## Test plan
This PR also includes two Vite specific integration tests: One testing a
static build (`pnpm vite build`) and one a dev mode build (`pnpm vite
dev`) that also makes changes to the file system and asserts that the
resources properly update.
---------
Co-authored-by: Robin Malfait <malfait.robin@gmail.com>
* bump `postcss-load-config` in the oxide engine
* bump `postcss-load-config` in the stable engine
* update changelog
* Switch to stable
* Update Node to v14
* Update to latest dependency versions
* Update test helper for new version of `rimraf`
Co-Authored-By: Jordan Pittman <jordan@cryptica.me>
* Downgrade `lightningcss` to `v1.18.0`
Co-Authored-By: Jordan Pittman <jordan@cryptica.me>
* Switch back to oxide
* Update Github actions from Node 12 to Node 14
* Update oxide dependencies
* Update stable dependencies
* Update `content-resolution` integration test dependencies
* Update `postcss-cli` integration test dependencies
* Update `rollup` integration test dependencies
* Update `rollup-sass` integration test dependencies
* Update `vite` integration test dependencies
* Update `webpack-5` integration test dependencies
* Update changelog
* Remove `color-name` dependency
* Replace `quick-lru` dependency with `@alloc/quick-lru`
* Replace `quick-lru` dependency with `@alloc/quick-lru` in stable
* Fix standalone CLI test
---------
Co-authored-by: Jonathan Reinink <jonathan@reinink.ca>
Co-authored-by: Jordan Pittman <jordan@cryptica.me>
* replace `env.OXIDE` with global `__OXIDE__`
This will allow us to replace the `__OXIDE__` at build time, and fully
remove the branches from the final code so that there is not even any
reference to `@tailwindcss/oxide` on the stable engine.
* update changelog
* use `env.ENGINE` in integration tests
* drop oxide branching for the PostCSS plugin for now
This is currently a redirect to the same file, so doesn't hurt.
* Enable better dead-code elimination
* Update CLI tests
Fix indentation
* Fix indentation
---------
Co-authored-by: Jordan Pittman <jordan@cryptica.me>
* try to use `config.default` before using `config`
* update changelog
* add quick `SHOW_OUTPUT` toggle for integration tests
Setting this to `true` shows the output of the executed commands.
* add integration tests for `tailwind.config.ts` and `tailwind.config.js` with ESM syntax
* add `jiti` and `detective-typescript` dependencies
* use `jiti` and `detective-typescript`
Instead of `detective`, this way we will be able to support
`tailwind.config.ts` files and `ESM` files.
* use `@swc/core` instead of the built-in `babel` form `jiti`
* update changelog
* add `jiti` and `detective-typescript` dependencies to `stable`
* use `sucrase` to transform the configs
* add `sucrase` dependency to `stable` engine
* make loading the config easier
* use abstracted loading config utils
* WIP: make `load` related files public API
* use new config loader in PostCSS plugin
* add list of default config files to look for
* cleanup unused arguments
* find default config path when using CLI
* improve `init` command
* make eslint happy
* keep all files in `stubs` folder
* add `tailwind.config.js` stub file
* Initialize PostCSS config using the same format as Tailwind config
* Rename config content stubs to config.*.js
* Improve option descriptions for init options
* Remove unused code, remove `constants` file
* Fix TS warning
* apply CLI changes to the Oxide version
* update `--help` output in CLI tests
* WIP: make tests work on CI
TODO: Test all combinations of `--full`, `--ts`, `--postcss`, and `--esm`.
* wip
* remove unused `fs`
* Fix init tests
Did you know you could pass an empty args to a command? No? Me neither. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
* bump `napi-derive`
* list extensions we are interested in
* no-op the `removeFile` if file doesn't exist
* ensure all `init` flags work
* ensure we cleanup the new files
* test ESM/CJS generation based on package.json
* remove unnecessary test
We are not displaying output in the `--help` anymore based on whether
`type: module` is present or not.
Therefore this test is unneeded.
* only look for `TypeScript` files when the entryFile is `TypeScript` as well
* refactor `load` to be `loadConfig`
This will allow you to use:
```js
import loadConfig from 'tailwindcss/loadConfig'
let config = loadConfig("/Users/xyz/projects/my-app/tailwind.config.ts")
```
The `loadConfig` function will return the configuration object based on
the given absolute path of a tailwind configuration file.
The given path can be a CJS, an ESM or a TS file.
* use the `config.full.js` stub instead of the `defaultConfig.stub.js` file
The root `defaultConfig` is still there for backwards compatibilty
reasons. But the `module.exports = requrie('./config.full.js')` was
causing some problems when actually using tailwindcss.
So dropped it instead.
* apply `load` -> `loadConfig` changes to `Oxide` engine CLI
* ensure we write the config file in the Oxide engine
* improve type in Oxide engine CLI
* catch errors instead of checking if the file exists
A little smaller but just for tests so doesn't matter too much here 👍
* ensure we publish the correct stub files
---------
Co-authored-by: Adam Wathan <4323180+adamwathan@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Jordan Pittman <jordan@cryptica.me>
Co-authored-by: Nate Moore <nate@natemoo.re>
Co-authored-by: Enzo Innocenzi <enzo@innocenzi.dev>
* disable color opacity plugins by default for the `oxide` engine
* update tests to reflect this change in the `oxide` engine
* update changelog
* reflect changes in integration tests
* bump lightningcss
* use `lightningcss` in the main PostCss Plugin
* use lightningcss in our custom matchers
Now that we are using `lightningcss` and nesting in the new `oxide`
engine, the generated output _will_ be different in the majority of test
cases.
Using a combination of `prettier` and `lightningcss` will make the
output consistent.
The moment we are fully using the `oxide` engine, we can drop
`lightningcss` or `prettier` again to improve the performance of the
tests.
* update tests to apply `lightningcss` related changes
* update changelog
* add `lightningcss` and `browserslist` as dev dependencies to stable package.json
* only use `lightningcss` in tests (without prettier)
We will only fallback to prettier if lightningcss fails somehow.
* apply side effect chagnes due to only using lightningcss for tests
* make CI happy (integration tests)
Apply changes to integration tests now that we are using lightningcss
* transform `lightningcss` for Node 12 when running tests
* run prettier on failing tests for `toMatchFormattedCss`
This will result in better diffs because diffs are typically per block
and/or per line. But lightningcss will simplify certain selectors and
the diff won't be as clear.
We will only apply the prettier formatting for failing tests in the diff
view so that diffs are cleaner and we don't pay for the additional
prettier calls when tests pass.
* separate `stable` and `oxide` mode (package.json in this case)
* drop `install` script (we use a workspace now)
* change required engine to 16
* enable OXIDE by default
* ignore generated `oxide` files
* splitup package.json scripts into "public" and "private" scripts
Not ideal of course, but this should make it a tiny bit easier to know
which scripts _you_ as a developer / contributor have to run.
* drop `workspaces` from the `stable` engine
* drop `oxide` related build files from the `stable` engine
* drop `oxide` engine specific dependencies from the `stable` engine
* use the `oxide-node-api-shim` for the `stable` engine
* add little script to swap the engines
* drop `oxide:build` from `turbo` config
* configure `ci` for `stable` and `oxide` engines
- rename `nodejs.yml` -> `ci.yml`
- add `ci-stable.yml` (for stable mode and Node 12)
- ensure to use the `stable` engine in the `ci-stable.yml` workflow
- drop `oxide:___` specific scripts
* rename `release-insiders` to `release-insiders-stable`
This way we will be able to remove all files that contain `stable` once
we are ready.
* rename `release-insiders-oxide` to just `release-insiders`
* cleanup insider related workflows
* rename `release` -> `release-stable`
* rename `release-oxide` -> `release`
* change names of release workflows
* drop `oxide-` prefix from jobs
* inline node versions
* do not use `turbo` for the stable build
Can't use it because we don't have a workspace in the stable build.
* re-rename CI workflow
* encode default engine in relevant `package.json` files
* make Node 12 work
* increase `node-version` matrix
* make release workflows explicit (per engine)
* add `Oxide` to workflow name
* add integration tests for the `oxide` engine
* add integration tests for the `stable` engine
* run `oxide` integrations against node `18`
* run `stable` integration tests against node 18
We should test node 12 for tailwindcss, but integrations itself can run
against a newer version. In fact, we always ran them against node 16.
* use `localhost` instead of `0.0.0.0`
* ensure `webpack-4` works on Node 18
* run relese scripst directly
Instead of going via `npm`. It's a bit nicer and quicker!
* drop unused scripts
* sync package-lock.json
* ensure to generate the plugin list before running `jest`
We _could_ use an `npm run pretest`, but then you can't run `jest`
directly anymore (which is required for some tools like vscode
extensions).
* cleanup npm scripts
* drop pretend comments
* fix typo
* add `build:rust` as a pre-jest run script
* Update rollup to version 3.10.0
* Update Rollup integrations for Rollup 3
Co-authored-by: depfu[bot] <23717796+depfu[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Jonathan Reinink <jonathan@reinink.ca>
* temporarily disable workflows
* add oxide
Our Rust related parts
* use oxide
- Setup the codebase to be able to use the Rust parts based on an
environment variable: `OXIDE=1`.
- Setup some tests that run both the non-Rust and Rust version in the
same test.
- Sort the candidates in a consistent way, to guarantee the order for
now (especially in tests).
- Reflect sorting related changes in tests.
- Ensure tests run in both the Rust and non-Rust version. (Some tests
are explicitly skipped when using the Rust version since we haven't
implemented those features yet. These include: custom prefix,
transformers and extractors).
- `jest`
-`OXIDE=1 jest`
* remove into_par_iter where it doesn't make sense
* cargo fmt
* wip
* enable tracing based on `DEBUG` env
* improve CI for the Oxide build
* sort test output
This happened because the sorting happens in this branch, but changes
happened on the `master` branch.
* add failing tests
I noticed that some of the tests were failing, and while looking at
them, it happened because the tests were structured like this:
```html
<div
class="
backdrop-filter
backdrop-filter-none
backdrop-blur-lg
backdrop-brightness-50
backdrop-contrast-0
backdrop-grayscale
backdrop-hue-rotate-90
backdrop-invert
backdrop-opacity-75
backdrop-saturate-150
backdrop-sepia
"
></div>
```
This means that the class names themselves eventually end up like this: `backdrop-filter-none\n`
-> (Notice the `\n`)
/cc @thecrypticace
* fix range to include `\n`
* Include only unique values for tests
Really, what we care about most is that the list contains every expected candidate. Not necessarily how many times it shows up because while many candidates will show up A LOT in a source text we’ll unique them before passing them back to anything that needs them
* Fix failing tests
* Don’t match empty arbitrary values
* skip tests in oxide mode regarding custom separators in arbitrary variants
* re-enable workflows
* use `@tailwindcss/oxide` dependency
* publish `tailwindcss@oxide`
* drop prepublishOnly
I don't think we actually need this anymore (or even want because this
is trying to do things in CI that we don't want to happen. Aka, build
the Oxide Rust code, it is already a dependency).
* WIP
* Defer to existing CLI for Oxide
* Include new compiled typescript stuff when publishing
* Move TS to ./src/oxide
* Update scripts
* Clean up tests for TS
* copy `cli` to `oxide/cli`
* make CLI files TypeScript files
* drop --postcss flag
* setup lightningcss
* Remove autoprefixer and cssnano from oxide CLI
* cleanup Rust code a little bit
- Drop commented out code
- Drop 500 fixture templates
* sort test output
* re-add `prepublishOnly` script
* bump SWC dependencies in package-lock.json
* pin `@swc` dependencies
* ensure to install and build oxide
* update all GitHub Workflows to reflect Oxide required changes
* sort `content-resolution` integration tests
* add `Release Insiders — Oxide`
* setup turbo repo + remote caching
* use `npx` to invoke `turbo`
* setup unique/proper package names for integration tests
* add missing `isomorphic-fetch` dependency
* setup integration tests to use `turborepo`
* scope tailwind tasks to root workspace
* re-enable `node_modules` cache for integration tests
* re-enable `node_modules` cache for main CI workflow
* split cache for `main` and `oxide` node_modules
* fix indent
* split install dependencies so that they can be cached individually
* improve GitHub actions caching
* use correct path for oxide node_modules (crates/node)
* ensure that `cargo install` always succeeds
cargo install X, on CI will fail if it already exists.
* figure out integration tests with turbo
* tmp: use `npm` instead of `turbo`
* disable `fail-fast`
This will allow us to run integration tests so that it still caches the
succesful ones.
* YAML OH YAML, Y U WHITESPACE SENSITIVE
* copy the oxide-ci workflow to release-oxide
* make `oxide-ci` a normal CI workflow
Without publishing
* try to cache cargo and node_modules for the oxide build
* configure turbo to run scripts in the root
* explicitly skip failing test for the Oxide version
* run oxide tests in CI
* only use build script for root package
* sync package-lock.json
* do not cache node_modules for each individual integration
* look for hoisted `.bin`
* use turbo for caching build tailwind css in integration tests
* Robin...
* try to use the local binary first
* skip installing integration test dependencies
Should already be installed due to workspace usage
* Robin...
* drop `output.clean`
* explicitly add `mini-css-extract-plugin`
* drop oxide-ci, this is tested by proxy
* ensure oxide build is used in integration tests
This will ensure the `@tailwindcss/oxide` dependency is available
(whether we use it or not).
* setup Oxide shim in insiders release
* add browserslist dependency
* use `install:all` script name
Just using `install` as a script name will be called when running
`npm install`.
Now that we marked the repo as a `workspace`, `npm install` will run
install in all workspaces which is... not ideal.
* tmp: enable insiders release in PRs
Just to check if everything works before merging. Can be removed once
tested.
* don't cache node_modules?
I feel there is some catch 22 going on here.
We require `npm install` to build the `oxide/crates/node` version.
But we also require `oxide/crates/node` for the `npm install` becaus of
the dependency: `"@tailwindcss/oxide": "file:oxide/creates/node"`
* try to use `oxide/crates/node` as part of the workspace
* let's think about this
Let's try and cache the `node_modules` and share as much as possible.
However, some scripts still need to be installed specific to the OS.
Running `npm install` locally doesn't throw away your `node_modules`,
so if we just cache `node_modules` but also run `npm install` that
should keep as much as possible and still improve install times since
`node_modules` is already there.
I think.
* ensure generated `index.js` and `index.d.ts` files are considered outputs
* use `npx napi` instead of `napi` directly
* include all `package-lock.json` files
* normalize caching further in all workflows
* drop nested `package-lock.json` files
* `npm uninstall mini-css-extract-plugin && npm install mini-css-extract-plugin --save-dev`
* bump webpack-5 integration tests dependencies
* only release insiders on `master` branch
* tmp: let's figure out release insiders oxide
* fix little typo
* use Node 18 for Oxide Insiders
* syncup package-lock.json
* let's try node 16
Node 18 currently fails on `Build x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu (OXIDE)`
Workflow.
Install Node.JS output:
```
Environment details
Warning: /__t/node/18.13.0/x64/bin/node: /lib64/libm.so.6: version `GLIBC_2.27' not found (required by /__t/node/18.13.0/x64/bin/node)
/__t/node/18.13.0/x64/bin/node: /lib64/libc.so.6: version `GLIBC_2.25' not found (required by /__t/node/18.13.0/x64/bin/node)
/__t/node/18.13.0/x64/bin/node: /lib64/libc.so.6: version `GLIBC_2.28' not found (required by /__t/node/18.13.0/x64/bin/node)
/__t/node/18.13.0/x64/bin/node: /lib64/libstdc++.so.6: version `CXXABI_1.3.9' not found (required by /__t/node/18.13.0/x64/bin/node)
/__t/node/18.13.0/x64/bin/node: /lib64/libstdc++.so.6: version `GLIBCXX_3.4.20' not found (required by /__t/node/18.13.0/x64/bin/node)
/__t/node/18.13.0/x64/bin/node: /lib64/libstdc++.so.6: version `GLIBCXX_3.4.21' not found (required by /__t/node/18.13.0/x64/bin/node)
Warning: node: /lib64/libm.so.6: version `GLIBC_2.27' not found (required by node)
node: /lib64/libc.so.6: version `GLIBC_2.25' not found (required by node)
node: /lib64/libc.so.6: version `GLIBC_2.28' not found (required by node)
node: /lib64/libstdc++.so.6: version `CXXABI_1.3.9' not found (required by node)
node: /lib64/libstdc++.so.6: version `GLIBCXX_3.4.20' not found (required by node)
node: /lib64/libstdc++.so.6: version `GLIBCXX_3.4.21' not found (required by node)
```
* bump some Node versions
* only release oxide insiders on `master` branch
* don't cache `npm`
* bump napi-rs
Co-authored-by: Jordan Pittman <jordan@cryptica.me>
Co-authored-by: Adam Wathan <4323180+adamwathan@users.noreply.github.com>