Commit graph

14 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Annabel Dunstone Gray
0b72554c1b Finish refactoring grays 2016-12-13 13:13:53 -06:00
Sam Rose
d6d22a5dbd Enable ColorVariable in scss-lint 2016-12-01 20:22:51 -05:00
hhoopes
38ed96e9b1 Add diff hunks to notification emails on MR
Added diff hunks to notification emails of messages on merge requests. This
provides code context to the note. Uses existing template for formatting
a diff for email (from repository push notifications).
2016-11-25 15:23:49 +00:00
Clement Ho
f035cd486a Enable SpaceAfterVariableColon in scss-lint 2016-10-24 14:49:06 -05:00
Clement Ho
e88aa25f42 Enforce TrailingSemicolon and EmptyLineBetweenBlocks in scss-lint 2016-10-14 16:28:10 -05:00
Sean McGivern
18f13e8bb8 Fix email line-height in Outlook
Outlook seems to handle `white-space: pre` weirdly, so just use `pre`
elements (but only for emails!).
2016-08-17 15:55:34 +01:00
Phil Hughes
27a44694af Changed tr to be direct descendant 2016-07-21 11:18:40 +01:00
Phil Hughes
1a596671b8 Fixed padding on line content 2016-07-20 17:53:37 +01:00
Phil Hughes
ba07fa0798 Changed CSS for emails to be mostly single class selectors 2016-07-13 16:31:32 +01:00
Phil Hughes
050e4848a2 Reduced diff email CSS 2016-07-12 15:01:08 +01:00
Robert Speicher
f63bc8222d Center the header logo for all Devise emails 2016-06-16 20:10:52 -04:00
Sean McGivern
f4cedacc7b Optimise email CSS for speed with Premailer
Remove all descendant selectors from the push email styling, to
drastically reduce CPU time when inlining the CSS for syntax-highlighted
diffs.

Background:

Premailer is a Ruby gem that inlines CSS styles from an external
stylesheet before emails are sent, so that they are compatible with
Gmail. At a high level, it parses the CSS files it finds, and parses the
email body with Nokogiri. It then loops through the selectors in the
CSS, using Nokogiri to find matching elements, and adds inline
styles. (It does more than this, like merging styles applied to the same
element, but that's not relevant to this issue.)

Nokogiri converts CSS selectors to XPath first, like so:
    Nokogiri::CSS.xpath_for('foo bar')
    # => ["//foo//bar"]

On documents with high node counts (say, a syntax-highlighted copy of
jQuery), having both descendant selectors is very expensive. Both
`//foo/bar` and `//bar` will be much more efficient, although neither
are directly equivalent.

An example, on a document containing two syntax-highlighted copies of
jQuery:
    Benchmark.realtime { p doc.search('.o').count }
    # 9476
    # => 0.3462457580026239
    Benchmark.realtime { p doc.search('.code.white .o').count }
    # 9476
    # => 85.51952634402551

The performance is similar for selectors which _don't_ match any
elements, and as Premailer loops through all the available selectors, we
want to avoid all descendant selectors in push emails.

Because of the theming support in the web UI, all syntax highlighting
selectors are descendant selectors of classes like `.code.white` or
`.code.monokai`. There are over 60 CSS classes for syntax highlighting
styles alone, all of which are expressed in the inefficient form above.

In emails we always use the white theme, and were reusing the same CSS
file. But in emails, we don't need to descend from `.code.white` as that
will always be the theme, and we can also remove some other selectors
that are only applicable to the web UI. For the remaining descendant
selectors, we can convert them to child selectors, type selectors, or
class selectors as appropriate.

As in the example above, having no descendant selectors at all in the
push email CSS can provide a drastic (and surprising) performance
improvement.
2016-06-07 12:33:19 +01:00
Robert Speicher
3e3463218d New confirmation email 🔥 2016-05-25 16:56:06 -04:00
Sean McGivern
a9977f2b7a Syntax-highlight diffs in push emails
Based on:
https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ee/merge_requests/151
2016-05-17 13:23:17 +01:00