1. **Major Architectural Change: Schema Management**
- Moved from `workspace.schema` to `store.schema` throughout the codebase
- Removed schema property from Workspace and Doc interfaces
- Added `BlockSchemaExtension` pattern across multiple block types
2. **Block Schema Extensions Added**
- Added new `BlockSchemaExtension` to numerous block types including:
- DataView, Surface, Attachment, Bookmark, Code
- Database, Divider, EdgelessText, Embed blocks (Figma, Github, HTML, etc.)
- Frame, Image, Latex, List, Note, Paragraph
- Root, Surface Reference, Table blocks
3. **Import/Export System Updates**
- Updated import functions to accept `schema` parameter:
- `importHTMLToDoc`
- `importHTMLZip`
- `importMarkdownToDoc`
- `importMarkdownZip`
- `importNotionZip`
- Modified export functions to use new schema pattern
4. **Test Infrastructure Updates**
- Updated test files to use new schema extensions
- Modified test document creation to include schema extensions
- Removed direct schema registration in favor of extensions
5. **Service Layer Changes**
- Updated various services to use `getAFFiNEWorkspaceSchema()`
- Modified transformer initialization to use document schema
- Updated collection initialization patterns
6. **Version Management**
- Removed version-related properties and methods from:
- `WorkspaceMetaImpl`
- `TestMeta`
- `DocImpl`
- Removed `blockVersions` and `workspaceVersion/pageVersion`
7. **Store and Extension Updates**
- Added new store extensions and adapters
- Updated store initialization patterns
- Added new schema-related functionality in store extension
This PR represents a significant architectural shift in how schemas are managed, moving from a workspace-centric to a store-centric approach, while introducing a more extensible block schema system through `BlockSchemaExtension`. The changes touch multiple layers of the application including core functionality, services, testing infrastructure, and import/export capabilities.
### TL;DR
Refactored `SpecProvider` singleton access pattern and reorganized adapter/extension code structure.
### What changed?
- Changed `SpecProvider.getInstance()` to `SpecProvider._` for cleaner singleton access
- Moved adapter/extension code from `_common` directory to dedicated `adapters` and `extensions` folders
- Consolidated adapter extensions into a single file
- Removed unused dependencies from package.json
- Deleted unnecessary schema files
- Extracted `MobileSpecsPatches` class into the mobile patching code
- Updated all references to use the new `SpecProvider._` accessor
### How to test?
- Verify all specs are properly registered and accessible via `SpecProvider._`
- Test adapter functionality for HTML, Markdown, Notion HTML and plain text
- Check mobile-specific features and patches work correctly
- Ensure preview functionality works in both page and edgeless modes
### Why make this change?
- Improves code organization by properly separating adapters and extensions
- Simplifies singleton access pattern
- Removes unnecessary dependencies and files
- Makes the codebase more maintainable by consolidating related functionality
### TL;DR
Moved image proxy middleware and adapter extensions to their respective packages and introduced a new spec provider for adapter registration.
### What changed?
- Relocated `defaultImageProxyMiddleware` from blocks to `@blocksuite/affine-block-image`
- Moved `PresentTool` from fragment-frame-panel to block-frame
- Created new adapter extension specs for HTML, Markdown, and Notion HTML
- Introduced a spec provider pattern for adapter registration
- Removed direct transformer references from RootService
- Updated imports across affected files to use new locations
### How to test?
1. Verify image proxy functionality works in exports and imports
2. Test HTML, Markdown, and Notion HTML adapters still function correctly
3. Confirm presentation mode works with the relocated PresentTool
4. Check that all file import/export operations continue to work as expected
### Why make this change?
This reorganization improves code modularity by placing features in their logical packages and introduces a more maintainable pattern for adapter registration. The spec provider pattern makes it easier to manage and extend adapter functionality while reducing coupling between components.