Merge branch 'main' into react-prop-merges

This commit is contained in:
Connor Yoh
2025-06-27 16:15:11 +01:00
1212 changed files with 47304 additions and 4764 deletions

View File

@@ -72,6 +72,8 @@ This guide focuses on developing for Stirling 2.0, including both the React fron
Stirling-PDF uses Lombok to reduce boilerplate code. Some IDEs, like Eclipse, don't support Lombok out of the box. To set up Lombok in your development environment:
Visit the [Lombok website](https://projectlombok.org/setup/) for installation instructions specific to your IDE.
5. Add environment variable
For local testing, you should generally be testing the full 'Security' version of Stirling PDF. To do this, you must add the environment flag DISABLE_ADDITIONAL_FEATURES=false to your system and/or IDE build/run step.
5. **Frontend Setup (Required for Stirling 2.0)**
Navigate to the frontend directory and install dependencies using npm.
@@ -158,9 +160,9 @@ Stirling-PDF offers several Docker versions:
Stirling-PDF provides several example Docker Compose files in the `exampleYmlFiles` directory, such as:
- `docker-compose-latest.yml`: Latest version without security features
- `docker-compose-latest-security.yml`: Latest version with security features enabled
- `docker-compose-latest-fat-security.yml`: Fat version with security features enabled
- `docker-compose-latest.yml`: Latest version without login and security features
- `docker-compose-latest-security.yml`: Latest version with login and security features enabled
- `docker-compose-latest-fat-security.yml`: Fat version with login and security features enabled
These files provide pre-configured setups for different scenarios. For example, here's a snippet from `docker-compose-latest-security.yml`:
@@ -181,11 +183,11 @@ services:
ports:
- "8080:8080"
volumes:
- /stirling/latest/data:/usr/share/tessdata:rw
- /stirling/latest/config:/configs:rw
- /stirling/latest/logs:/logs:rw
- ./stirling/latest/data:/usr/share/tessdata:rw
- ./stirling/latest/config:/configs:rw
- ./stirling/latest/logs:/logs:rw
environment:
DOCKER_ENABLE_SECURITY: "true"
DISABLE_ADDITIONAL_FEATURES: "false"
SECURITY_ENABLELOGIN: "true"
PUID: 1002
PGID: 1002
@@ -214,7 +216,7 @@ Stirling-PDF uses different Docker images for various configurations. The build
1. Set the security environment variable:
```bash
export DOCKER_ENABLE_SECURITY=false # or true for security-enabled builds
export DISABLE_ADDITIONAL_FEATURES=true # or false for to enable login and security features for builds
```
2. Build the project with Gradle:
@@ -237,10 +239,10 @@ Stirling-PDF uses different Docker images for various configurations. The build
docker build --no-cache --pull --build-arg VERSION_TAG=alpha -t stirlingtools/stirling-pdf:latest-ultra-lite -f ./Dockerfile.ultra-lite .
```
For the fat version (with security enabled):
For the fat version (with login and security features enabled):
```bash
export DOCKER_ENABLE_SECURITY=true
export DISABLE_ADDITIONAL_FEATURES=false
docker build --no-cache --pull --build-arg VERSION_TAG=alpha -t stirlingtools/stirling-pdf:latest-fat -f ./Dockerfile.fat .
```
@@ -434,7 +436,7 @@ Thymeleaf is a server-side Java HTML template engine. It is used in Stirling-PDF
### Thymeleaf overview
In Stirling-PDF, Thymeleaf is used to create HTML templates that are rendered on the server side. These templates are located in the `src/main/resources/templates` directory. Thymeleaf templates use a combination of HTML and special Thymeleaf attributes to dynamically generate content.
In Stirling-PDF, Thymeleaf is used to create HTML templates that are rendered on the server side. These templates are located in the `stirling-pdf/src/main/resources/templates` directory. Thymeleaf templates use a combination of HTML and special Thymeleaf attributes to dynamically generate content.
Some examples of this are:
@@ -486,7 +488,7 @@ This would generate n entries of tr for each person in exampleData
### Adding a New Feature to the Backend (API)
1. **Create a New Controller:**
- Create a new Java class in the `src/main/java/stirling/software/SPDF/controller/api` directory.
- Create a new Java class in the `stirling-pdf/src/main/java/stirling/software/SPDF/controller/api` directory.
- Annotate the class with `@RestController` and `@RequestMapping` to define the API endpoint.
- Ensure to add API documentation annotations like `@Tag(name = "General", description = "General APIs")` and `@Operation(summary = "Crops a PDF document", description = "This operation takes an input PDF file and crops it according to the given coordinates. Input:PDF Output:PDF Type:SISO")`.
@@ -513,7 +515,7 @@ This would generate n entries of tr for each person in exampleData
```
2. **Define the Service Layer:** (Not required but often useful)
- Create a new service class in the `src/main/java/stirling/software/SPDF/service` directory.
- Create a new service class in the `stirling-pdf/src/main/java/stirling/software/SPDF/service` directory.
- Implement the business logic for the new feature.
```java
@@ -565,7 +567,7 @@ This would generate n entries of tr for each person in exampleData
### Adding a New Feature to the Frontend (UI)
1. **Create a New Thymeleaf Template:**
- Create a new HTML file in the `src/main/resources/templates` directory.
- Create a new HTML file in the `stirling-pdf/src/main/resources/templates` directory.
- Use Thymeleaf attributes to dynamically generate content.
- Use `extract-page.html` as a base example for the HTML template, which is useful to ensure importing of the general layout, navbar, and footer.
@@ -609,7 +611,7 @@ This would generate n entries of tr for each person in exampleData
```
2. **Create a New Controller for the UI:**
- Create a new Java class in the `src/main/java/stirling/software/SPDF/controller/ui` directory.
- Create a new Java class in the `stirling-pdf/src/main/java/stirling/software/SPDF/controller/ui` directory.
- Annotate the class with `@Controller` and `@RequestMapping` to define the UI endpoint.
```java
@@ -639,7 +641,7 @@ This would generate n entries of tr for each person in exampleData
3. **Update the Navigation Bar:**
- Add a link to the new feature page in the navigation bar.
- Update the `src/main/resources/templates/fragments/navbar.html` file.
- Update the `stirling-pdf/src/main/resources/templates/fragments/navbar.html` file.
```html
<li class="nav-item">
@@ -653,7 +655,7 @@ When adding a new feature or modifying existing ones in Stirling-PDF, you'll nee
### 1. Locate Existing Language Files
Find the existing `messages.properties` files in the `src/main/resources` directory. You'll see files like:
Find the existing `messages.properties` files in the `stirling-pdf/src/main/resources` directory. You'll see files like:
- `messages.properties` (default, usually English)
- `messages_en_GB.properties`