Enhancements were implemented to support hierarchical documentation. Local CMS now respects parent ID and order attributes of content items, and content can be categories as 'blog' or 'documentation'. Changes were also made to the wordpress integration supporting these new categorizations. Introduced working with nested documentation pages.
This commit refactors the CMS to handle two platforms: ContentLayer and WordPress. The CMS layer is abstracted into a core package, and separate implementations for each platform are created. This change allows the app to switch the CMS type based on environment variable, which can improve the flexibility of content management. It also updates several functions in the `server-sitemap.xml` route to accommodate these changes and generate sitemaps based on the CMS client. Further, documentation content and posts have been relocated to align with the new structure. Notably, this refactor is a comprehensive update to the way the CMS is structured and managed.
The commit refactors the handling of account roles and enhances permissions checks. The account role has been shifted to use a string type, providing the ability to define custom roles. It also introduces the RolesDataProvider component, which stipulates role-related data for different forms and tables. The modification goes further to consider user role hierarchy in permissions checks, offering a more granular access control.
The admin functionality related code has been removed which includes various user and organization functionalities like delete, update, ban etc. This includes action logic, UI components and supportive utility functions. Notable deletions include the server action files, dialog components for actions like banning and deleting, and related utility functions. This massive cleanup is aimed at simplifying the codebase and the commit reflects adherence to project restructuring.