Closes#14253
Since we changed the export strategy for the postcss client in #14132,
we accidentally no longer generated type exports for this package.
This PR adds a type export back. We now use a similar pattern to the
`./colors` and `./defaultTheme` exports in the tailwindcss package where
we have a separate cjs entrypoint.
The changes were validated manually in a playground project that were
installing the updated dependencies from tarballs.
Here is one example of it working as expected:
<img width="750" alt="Screenshot 2024-08-26 at 14 10 07"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/83de15f2-1543-4805-9231-9b8df1636c5e">
This PR bumps dependencies
We also make some dependencies `catalog:` dependencies, which allows us
to keep
the version in sync. E.g.: `lightningcss` and `@types/node`.
Bumped `turbo` to the latest version + enabled the new UI
Fixed a bug in the tests now that `lightningcss` outputs the correct
value.
This PR updates vitest to v2. The changes are mostly around using fork
instead of threads for how tests are run which should fix one of the
issues we've found.
Ever since adding the unit tests on Windows, we started seeing
occacional flags of vitest crashing with the following error:
```
ELIFECYCLE Command failed with exit code 3221225477.
Error: Process completed with exit code 1.
```
When reading the [v2
changelog](https://github.com/vitest-dev/vitest/releases/tag/v2.0.0) we
saw many bug fixes related to segfaulting so we believe this was the
issue.
When upgrading `vitest` alone, we got a bunch of dependency mismatches
though (specifically, vite was installed two times with different peer
dependencies for `@types/node` which causes our vite plugin's `Plugin`
type to be different from the one in the vite playground. Yikes. These
were eventually fixed by having pnpm create a new lockfile for us. So,
unfortunatly this PR also bumps a bunch of patch versions for some
transitive dependencies. Tests seem fine, though 🤞
This PR also removes the `bench` script from CI. It doesn't give us
value in its current state (since it's not reporting when performance
regresses) but added a few seconds of unnecessary overhead to each test
run.
* run `pnpm update --recursive`
* update tests to reflect lightningcss bump
It looks like it's mainly (re-)ordering properties. Not 100% sure why
though.