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feat(system-info): expose rhodecode config for better visibility of set settings
feat(system-info): expose rhodecode config for better visibility of set settings

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How To Build A New Icon Font

Welcome. Contained in this repo is everything you need to build a new custom RhodeCode icon font for RhodeCode Community and Enterprise Editions. While the files are here, this document references what needs to be done in the actual Community Edition repository.

Creating New Icons

Presumably, you're reading this because you'd like to update the icon font with new icons. To create new icons, you'll want to use Illustrator. Start with an empty 1000px x 1000px artboard, or use an existing .svg file if you'd like to use an existing icon as a guide.

You'll need to make sure that your outlines are paths. This can be done using the Shape Modes in the Pathfinder tool; see Window > Pathfinder in Illustrator to build a compound image. It may happen that your image is rasterized, in which case it will need to be converted to vector; check the results carefully.

Note

When adding to the existing icon collection, please maintain our existing icon style.

Creating The Font

Fontello

We use fontello.com to generate the font files. On the main page, there is a section for clicking and dragging icons to add to a font. If you would like to use the existing font icons, here you will need to drag the .json file from the current fontello folder. Once it has preloaded all of the existing fonts, drag any new .svg icons into this same section to add them.

Any icons which appear blank or incorrect will need to be rebuilt in Illustrator. This likely means that the paths have not been generated correctly; check the settings in the Pathfinder tool.

After all of the icons are loaded into fontello, resist the temptation to click the big red button; there's another task to do. Each icon has a pencil button; click every icon - including the pre-existing ones - and check the settings. Each current icon should have the same hex code as that which is listed in rcicons.less. The "default css name" should be its simplified name; this is what will be prepended with "icon-" for the CSS classes. Also remove any unnecessary information from the keywords.

Once you have checked the icons, click the button in fontello which downloads a zip file of the new font.

Preparing The LESS Files

Note

It's a good idea to have grunt watch running in the background for this.

First, obviously the font files located in the unzipped folder under "font" should replace the existing files in rhodecode/public/fonts/RCIcons/. While doing this, check the permissions of the files that they have not changed; they should be set to chmod 644 but fontello's files may be different.

Next, you'll need to open the rcicons.css file which comes in the fontello .zip and match the @font-face declaration to the one at the top of rhodecode/public/css/rcicons.less, making sure to adjust the paths to /fonts/RCIcons/.

In the same file, you will see the CSS for each icon. Take a quick look to make sure that the existing icons haven't changed; if they have, you'll need to adjust the content. Add any new icons to rcicons.less (note that similar ones have been grouped together).

If you haven't yet, you'll need to run grunt to compile the LESS files; see the developer documentation for instructions.