Files
Stirling-PDF/frontend
Anthony StirlingandGitHub c93776e297 Fix z-index conflicts: Google Drive picker, automate dropdowns, tooltips (#6513)
## Summary

## What changed

### 1. Google Drive Picker now renders above the FileManager modal
`frontend/editor/src/core/services/googleDrivePickerService.ts`

The picker is opened from inside the FileManager modal
(`Z_INDEX_FILE_MANAGER_MODAL = 1200`), but Google's Picker defaults to
z-index ~1001 - so it landed *behind* the modal that invoked it. Added
`setZIndex(Z_INDEX_OVER_FILE_MANAGER_MODAL)` to the builder.

### 2. `Z_INDEX_AUTOMATE_DROPDOWN` no longer collides with
`Z_INDEX_FILE_MANAGER_MODAL`
`frontend/editor/src/core/styles/zIndex.ts`

Both constants were `1200`. The automate dropdown only needs to sit
above the automate modal (1100), so dropped it to `1150`. This keeps
automate dropdowns above their parent modal but reliably below the file
manager scrim when the two overlap.

Confirmed callers - all are dropdowns inside automate-modal tool
settings:
- `DropdownListWithFooter.tsx`
- `AddPageNumbersAppearanceSettings.tsx`
- `AddPasswordSettings.tsx`
- `StampPositionFormattingSettings.tsx`
- and several other `*Settings.tsx` files

All keep working as intended (1150 > 1100).

### 3. Tooltip z-index honours the documented hierarchy again
`frontend/editor/src/core/components/shared/tooltip/Tooltip.module.css`

`Tooltip.tsx` sets `zIndex: Z_INDEX_OVER_FULLSCREEN_SURFACE` (1300)
inline, but the CSS module had a hardcoded `z-index: 9999` that overrode
it. Removed the stale CSS rule so tooltips render at the intended 1300
level rather than floating above almost everything.
2026-06-05 08:16:21 +00:00
..
2026-04-27 11:35:50 +01:00
2026-06-02 16:08:24 +00:00
2026-06-02 16:08:24 +00:00
2026-06-02 16:08:24 +00:00
2026-06-02 16:08:24 +00:00
2026-05-22 13:40:34 +01:00

Frontend

All frontend commands are run from the repository root using Task:

  • task frontend:dev — start Vite dev server (localhost:5173)
  • task frontend:build — production build
  • task frontend:test — run tests
  • task frontend:test:watch — run tests in watch mode
  • task frontend:lint — run ESLint + cycle detection
  • task frontend:typecheck — run TypeScript type checking
  • task frontend:check — run typecheck + lint + test
  • task frontend:install — install npm dependencies

For desktop app development, see the Tauri section below.

Layout

frontend/ is a workspace containing one or more apps. Today it holds the PDF editor under frontend/editor/; new apps (the developer portal, etc.) will sit alongside it as siblings. Shared tooling — package.json, node_modules, .storybook/, ESLint, Prettier — lives at frontend/ so every app installs once and lints with the same config.

Environment Variables

The editor's environment variables live in committed .env files at frontend/editor/:

  • .env — used by all builds (core, proprietary, and as the base for desktop/SaaS)
  • .env.desktop — additional vars loaded in desktop (Tauri) mode
  • .env.saas — additional vars loaded in SaaS mode

These files contain non-secret defaults and are checked into Git, so most dev work needs no further setup.

To override values locally (API keys, machine-specific settings), create an uncommitted sibling editor/.env.local / editor/.env.desktop.local / editor/.env.saas.local. Vite automatically layers these on top of the committed files.

Docker Setup

For Docker deployments and configuration, see the Docker README.

Tauri

All desktop tasks are available via Task. From the root of the repo:

Dev

task desktop:dev

This ensures the JLink runtime and backend JAR exist (skipping if already built), then starts Tauri in dev mode.

Build

task desktop:build

This does a full clean rebuild of the backend JAR and JLink runtime, then builds the Tauri app for production.

Platform-specific dev builds are also available:

task desktop:build:dev           # No bundling
task desktop:build:dev:mac       # macOS .app bundle
task desktop:build:dev:windows   # Windows NSIS installer
task desktop:build:dev:linux     # Linux AppImage

You can also run JLink steps individually:

task desktop:jlink          # Build JAR + create JLink runtime
task desktop:jlink:jar      # Build backend JAR only
task desktop:jlink:runtime  # Create JLink custom JRE only
task desktop:jlink:clean    # Remove JLink artifacts

Clean

task desktop:clean

Removes all desktop build artifacts including JLink runtime, bundled JARs, Cargo build, and dist/build directories.