## Summary The **Block new purchases** toggle on the Payments → Settings page was visually out of place: it rendered as a bare `SettingSwitch` outside the `max-w-3xl` settings column, while every neighboring setting (Stripe Connection, Test Mode, Payment Methods, Platform-Managed Methods) was a full-width `Card`. This PR wraps it in a `Card` that matches the existing `TestModeToggle` pattern so it inherits the same width constraint, border, padding, title/description structure, and state-colored icon badge. **File changed:** [`apps/dashboard/src/app/(main)/(protected)/projects/[projectId]/payments/settings/page-client.tsx`](https://github.com/stack-auth/stack-auth/blob/fix/payments-block-new-purchases-card/apps/dashboard/src/app/(main)/(protected)/projects/%5BprojectId%5D/payments/settings/page-client.tsx) ## What was wrong Two concrete mismatches with the rest of the page: 1. **Wrong container.** The `SettingSwitch` was a direct child of `<PageLayout>` rather than the `<div className="space-y-6 max-w-3xl">` column that wraps the other settings — so it stretched to the full page width instead of the 3xl column and broke the vertical rhythm (no consistent `space-y-6` gap from the card above). 2. **Wrong style primitive.** It used the bare `SettingSwitch` row component instead of a `Card` + `CardHeader`/`CardTitle`/`CardDescription`/`CardContent` structure — so there was no border, no heading hierarchy, and no state-colored icon badge, which every other setting on the page has. ## Fix - Moved the block inside the `space-y-6 max-w-3xl` column so it's constrained and spaced like its siblings. - Replaced the `SettingSwitch` with a `Card` mirroring `TestModeToggle`: - `CardHeader` with `CardTitle` (\"Block New Purchases\") and `CardDescription` (\"Stops new checkouts while keeping existing subscriptions active.\"). - `CardContent` with an icon badge (`ProhibitIcon`) that turns red when blocking is active, plus a short \"Block new purchases\" label and the `Switch`. - Copy is intentionally minimal: one title, one sentence of description, one label next to the switch. No two-state narration. ## Visual comparison ### Pixel diff (changed pixels tinted red over the after image) 4.7% of pixels changed, all concentrated in the bottom of the settings column — everything else is pixel-identical, confirming the fix is scoped.  ### Cropped before/after toggle (zoomed to the changed region) Full-viewport comparisons are noisy when the delta is a single component at the bottom. This one is cropped to the changed bbox so the card fix is the whole frame — 1s before, 1s after, looped.  ### Wipe reveal (before on the left, after swept in from the left) A vertical red sweeps across the full page, revealing the after state over the before state. Useful for spotting any unintended drift elsewhere on the page (there is none).  ## Test plan - [ ] Open `/projects/<id>/payments/settings` in the dashboard. - [ ] Verify \"Block New Purchases\" renders as a `Card` with the same width as Stripe Connection / Test Mode / Payment Methods. - [ ] Toggle the switch on — icon badge turns red, config write fires (`payments.blockNewPurchases = true`, `pushable: true`). - [ ] Toggle off — icon returns to muted gray, config write fires with `false`. - [ ] Reload the page and confirm the persisted state matches the toggle. - [ ] `pnpm lint` and `pnpm typecheck` pass. <!-- This is an auto-generated comment: release notes by coderabbit.ai --> ## Summary by CodeRabbit * **Improvements** * Redesigned the "Block New Purchases" toggle in payment settings with a new card-based interface and visual prohibit indicator for improved clarity and user experience. <!-- end of auto-generated comment: release notes by coderabbit.ai --> |
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📘 Docs | ☁️ Hosted Version | ✨ Demo | 🎮 Discord
Stack Auth: The open-source auth platform
Stack Auth is a managed user authentication solution. It is developer-friendly and fully open-source (licensed under MIT and AGPL).
Stack Auth gets you started in just five minutes, after which you'll be ready to use all of its features as you grow your project. Our managed service is completely optional and you can export your user data and self-host, for free, at any time.
We support Next.js, React, and JavaScript frontends, along with any backend that can use our REST API. Check out our setup guide to get started.
Table of contents
- How is this different from X?
- ✨ Features
- 📦 Installation & Setup
- 🌱 Some community projects built with Stack Auth
- 🏗 Development & Contribution
- ❤ Contributors
How is this different from X?
Ask yourself about X:
- Is
Xopen-source? - Is
Xdeveloper-friendly, well-documented, and lets you get started in minutes? - Besides authentication, does
Xalso do authorization and user management (see feature list below)?
If you answered "no" to any of these questions, then that's how Stack Auth is different from X.
✨ Features
To get notified first when we add new features, please subscribe to our newsletter.
📦 Installation & Setup
To install Stack Auth in your Next.js project (for React, JavaScript, or other frameworks, see our complete documentation):
-
Run Stack Auth's installation wizard with the following command:
npx @stackframe/stack-cli@latest init -
Then, create an account on the Stack Auth dashboard, create a new project with an API key, and copy its environment variables into the .env.local file of your Next.js project:
NEXT_PUBLIC_STACK_PROJECT_ID=<your-project-id> NEXT_PUBLIC_STACK_PUBLISHABLE_CLIENT_KEY=<your-publishable-client-key> STACK_SECRET_SERVER_KEY=<your-secret-server-key> -
That's it! You can run your app with
npm run devand go to http://localhost:3000/handler/signup to see the sign-up page. You can also check out the account settings page at http://localhost:3000/handler/account-settings.
Check out the documentation for a more detailed guide.
🌱 Some community projects built with Stack Auth
Have your own? Happy to feature it if you create a PR or message us on Discord.
Templates
Examples
- Stack Auth Example by career-tokens
- Stack Auth Demo by the Stack Auth team
- Stack Auth E-Commerce Example by the Stack Auth team
🏗 Development & Contribution
This is for you if you want to contribute to the Stack Auth project or run the Stack Auth dashboard locally.
Important: Please read the contribution guidelines carefully and join our Discord if you'd like to help.
Requirements
- Node v20
- pnpm v9
- Docker
Setup
Note: 24GB+ of RAM is recommended for a smooth development experience.
In a new terminal:
pnpm install
# Build the packages and generate code. We only need to do this once, as `pnpm dev` will do this from now on
pnpm build:packages
pnpm codegen
# Start the dependencies (DB, Inbucket, etc.) as Docker containers, seeding the DB with the Prisma schema
# Make sure you have Docker (or OrbStack) installed and running
pnpm restart-deps
# Start the dev server
pnpm dev
# In a different terminal, run tests in watch mode
pnpm test # useful: --no-watch (disables watch mode) and --bail 1 (stops after the first failure)
You can now open the dev launchpad at http://localhost:8100. From there, you can navigate to the dashboard at http://localhost:8101, API on port 8102, demo on port 8103, docs on port 8104, Inbucket (e-mails) on port 8105, and Prisma Studio on port 8106. See the dev launchpad for a list of all running services.
Your IDE may show an error on all @stackframe/XYZ imports. To fix this, simply restart the TypeScript language server; for example, in VSCode you can open the command palette (Ctrl+Shift+P) and run Developer: Reload Window or TypeScript: Restart TS server.
Pre-populated .env files for the setup below are available and used by default in .env.development in each of the packages. However, if you're creating a production build (eg. with pnpm run build), you must supply the environment variables manually (see below).
Useful commands
# NOTE:
# Please see the dev launchpad (default: http://localhost:8100) for a list of all running services.
# Installation commands
pnpm install: Installs dependencies
# Types & linting commands
pnpm typecheck: Runs the TypeScript type checker. May require a build or dev server to run first.
pnpm lint: Runs the ESLint linter. Optionally, pass `--fix` to fix some of the linting errors. May require a build or dev server to run first.
# Build commands
pnpm build: Builds all projects, including apps, packages, examples, and docs. Also runs code-generation tasks. Before you can run this, you will have to copy all `.env.development` files in the folders to `.env.production.local` or set the environment variables manually.
pnpm build:packages: Builds all the npm packages.
pnpm codegen: Runs all the code-generation tasks, eg. Prisma client and OpenAPI docs generation.
# Development commands
pnpm dev: Runs the development servers of the main projects, excluding most examples. On the first run, requires the packages to be built and codegen to be run. After that, it will watch for file changes (including those in code-generation files). If you have to restart the development server for anything, that is a bug that you can report.
pnpm dev:full: Runs the development servers for all projects, including examples.
pnpm dev:basic: Runs the development servers only for the necessary services (backend and dashboard). Not recommended for most users, upgrade your machine instead.
# Environment commands
pnpm start-deps: Starts the Docker dependencies (DB, Inbucket, etc.) as Docker containers, and initializes them with the seed script & migrations. Note: The started dependencies will be visible on the dev launchpad (port 8100 by default).
pnpm stop-deps: Stops the Docker dependencies (DB, Inbucket, etc.) and deletes the data on them.
pnpm restart-deps: Stops and starts the dependencies.
# Database commands
pnpm db:migration-gen: Currently not used. Please generate Prisma migrations manually (or with AI).
pnpm db:reset: Resets the database to the initial state. Run automatically by `pnpm start-deps`.
pnpm db:init: Initializes the database with the seed script & migrations. Run automatically by `pnpm db:reset`.
pnpm db:seed: Re-seeds the database with the seed script. Run automatically by `pnpm db:init`.
pnpm db:migrate: Runs the migrations. Run automatically by `pnpm db:init`.
# Testing commands
pnpm test <file-filters>: Runs the tests. Pass `--bail 1` to make the test only run until the first failure. Pass `--no-watch` to run the tests once instead of in watch mode.
# Various commands
pnpm explain-query: Paste a SQL query to get an explanation of the query plan, helping you debug performance issues.
pnpm verify-data-integrity: Verify the integrity of the data in the database by running a bunch of integrity checks. This should never fail at any point in time (unless you messed with the DB manually).
Note: When working with AI, you should keep a terminal tab with the dev server open so the AI can run queries against it.














