Planet Crust has released a new update of Corteza, including new features and a long list of changes and fixes:

Release notes:

  • Added the ability to export record fields. The change was added to allow users to easily export record fields (3ed3b1e).
  • Added light and dark themes as well as the ability to set custom colors for theming variables. Added the option to set a branding color when configuring a page block, record field or reporter metric. The change was added to provide the user with more freedom to customize Corteza (15791671).
  • Added missing Manage schema alterations translations in Admin’s System component permissions (82f21b7).
  • Added generic optimisations to the workflow execution engine, ID generation, and access control evaluation (49e72cb).
  • Changed the color of the alert for deleting a record from turquaz to yellow. The change was made to better fit the Corteza UI (1634).
  • Changed delimiter class for multi value fields to show values into new lines instead of spaces. The change was made to be consistent with the rest of Corteza UI (d82c5e6).
  • Changed how sorting looks across webapps to match the UI in Low Code. The change was made to standardize how sorting looks in all webapps (1634).
  • Removed social feed block from Low Code block selector (e9bf3d0).
  • Removed deprecated code from messagebus (0346f90).
  • Fixed mapObject undefined error in the developer console in Reporter when navigating to another page (db2bdf3).
  • Fixed hardcoded year value on server (3bb5dd9).
  • Fixed search bar changing its width while it’s being used (9629b83).
  • Fixed not being abel to create records that have a single digit record selector field (c11165e).
  • Fixed newly added sub-workflows failing to execute with a not found error. The fix was made by properly updating internal indexes (405ab13).
  • Fixed undefined namespaceID when viewing list of namespaces (1603).
  • Fixed permissions modal not properly evaluating already selected roles/users (1603).
  • Fixed incorrect evaluation of Low Code permissions (1603).
  • Fixed unnecessary triggering of unsaved changes when a field is empty and hasn’t been edited (d614a00).
  • Fixed not being able to switch aggregation operation when defining new metric (f6d3702).
  • Fixed page layout switching to default configuration after preforming toolbar actions for a record (1655).
  • Fixed unable to save a record if it’s present in multiple layouts and inline editing of record list is enabled (1655).
  • Fixed Low Code permissions set in Admin not displayed correctly in the Low Code app (1633).
  • Fixed invalid prop console error when editing a user or record field (1675).
  • Fixed created at field showing 0 instead of user id in Admin for federation nodeworkflowsmessage queues, and auth clients resources (96f7da8).

View the full changelog.

How to install Corteza

You can follow the offline deployment instructions for a local development or demonstration instance of Corteza. Check out the extensive online deployment instructions to set up a live deployment. If you have questions, you can engage with other community members on the Corteza forum.

How to upgrade your Corteza instance

To upgrade your instance to the latest version of Corteza, follow our Upgrade Guide.

About Planet Crust

Planet Crust is the creator of and driving force behind Corteza, a 100% open-source low-code rapid application development, business process management and integration platform for software vendors, system integrators and internal development teams. For more information or to try Corteza on the cloud, please visit www.planetcrust.com.

About Corteza

Corteza is a 100% open-source low-code rapid application development, business process management and integration platform for software vendors, system integrators and internal development teams. Corteza comes with an Apache 2.0 license, and all code is published and can be reviewed at https://github.com/cortezaproject. All Corteza code is contributed to the Commons Conservancy Software Foundation. To stay up-to-date on the project, follow @CortezaProject on Twitter.

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