Tested:
* Can sign in on saas -> can run local tools with or without credits->
can run saas only tools (if credits) -> can't run saas only tools
without credits
* Can sign in self-hosted -> can run all tools on remote if available ->
can run local when self-hosted unavailable
Clouds show on saas tools when connected
Tools are disabled when connected to self-hosted but cannot find server.
You also get banner
#cantwaitforplaywritetests
# Description of Changes
Ages ago I made #4835 to try and fix all the `any` type usage in the
system but never got it finished, and there were just too many to review
and ensure it still worked. There's even more now.
My new tactic is to fix folder by folder. This fixes the `any` typing in
the `saas/` folder, and also enables `no-unnecessary-type-assertion`,
which really helps reduce pointless `as` casts that AI generates when
the type is already known. I hope to expand both of these to the rest of
the folders soon, but one folder is better than none.
# Description of Changes
Previously, `VITE_*` environment variables were scattered across the
codebase with hardcoded fallback values inline (e.g.
`import.meta.env.VITE_STRIPE_KEY || 'pk_live_...'`). This made it
unclear which variables
were required, what they were for, and caused real keys to be silently
used in builds where they hadn't been explicitly configured.
## What's changed
I've added `frontend/.env.example` and `frontend/.env.desktop.example`,
which declare every `VITE_*` variable the app uses, with comments
explaining each one and sensible defaults where applicable. These
are the source of truth for what's required.
I've added a setup script which runs before `npm run dev`, `build`,
`tauri-dev`, and all `tauri-build*` commands. It:
- Creates your local `.env` / `.env.desktop` from the example files on
first run, so you don't need to do anything manually
- Errors if you're missing keys that the example defines (e.g. after
pulling changes that added a new variable). These can either be
manually-set env vars, or in your `.env` file (env vars take precedence
over `.env` file vars when running)
- Warns if you have `VITE_*` variables set in your environment that
aren't listed in any example file
I've removed all `|| 'hardcoded-value'` defaults from source files
because they are not necessary in this system, as all variables must be
explicitly set (they can be set to `VITE_ENV_VAR=`, just as long as the
variable actually exists). I think this system will make it really
obvious exactly what you need to set and what's actually running in the
code.
I've added a test that checks that every `import.meta.env.VITE_*`
reference found in source is present in at least one example file, so
new variables can't be added without being documented.
## For contributors
New contributors shouldn't need to do anything - `npm run dev` will
create your `.env` automatically.
If you already have a `.env` file in the `frontend/` folder, you may
well need to update it to make the system happy. Here's an example
output from running `npm run dev` with an old `.env` file:
```
$ npm run dev
> [email protected] dev
> npm run prep && vite
> [email protected] prep
> tsx scripts/setup-env.ts && npm run generate-icons
setup-env: see frontend/README.md#environment-variables for documentation
setup-env: .env is missing keys from config/.env.example:
VITE_GOOGLE_DRIVE_CLIENT_ID
VITE_GOOGLE_DRIVE_API_KEY
VITE_GOOGLE_DRIVE_APP_ID
VITE_PUBLIC_POSTHOG_KEY
VITE_PUBLIC_POSTHOG_HOST
Add them manually or delete your local file to re-copy from the example.
setup-env: the following VITE_ vars are set but not listed in any example file:
VITE_DEV_BYPASS_AUTH
Add them to config/.env.example or config/.env.desktop.example if they are required.
```
If you add a new `VITE_*` variable to the codebase, add it to the
appropriate `frontend/config/.env.example` file or the test will fail.
# Description of Changes
Adds the code for the SaaS frontend as proprietary code to the OSS repo.
This version of the code is adapted from 22/1/2026, which was the last
SaaS version based on the 'V2' design. This will move us closer to being
able to have the OSS products understand whether the user has a SaaS
account, and provide the correct UI in those cases.