The state object had been changed, but our mock states for tx approval were using the old keys.
Rather than try to muck about and figure out each and every change, I've re-generated a UI dev state for tx approval, which should help @zanibas on his current project.
We can continue adding new dev states as needed from here. If anyone catches a state that doesn't render correctly, it's worth checking if a new snapshot doesn't solve things.
Debugged by adding new debugging loggers, and I've left them in place for easier future debugging.
Provider egine bump
Remove presence of message manger in keyring controller
Change the status wording fom conf to approved
make Message manager a class
fix messages not being apart of the badge
re write message manger to better reflect controller pattern
There is now a menu item labeled "JSON File" for importing, and it can digest either:
- v1 MyEtherWallet JSON files
- v3 Account files (used by Geth, Mist, and MyEtherWallet).
Fixes#715
Doesn't work on any JSON file I have, it's a very naieve strategy provided by ethereumjs-wallet. Will need to raise its sophistication before deploying to production.
Now any strategy for importing a private key that can be described as a pure function can be very easily turned into a MetaMask import strategy.
I've created a generic and reusable UI action called `importNewAccount(strategy, args)`.
The `strategy` is a unique identifier defined in `app/scripts/account-import-strategies`, and the `args` will be passed to the member of the `strategies` array whose key matches the strategy string.
Strategies return private key hex strings, and are used by the metamask-controller to create a new keyring, and select that new account, before calling back.
This also implements @frankiebee's idea of showing the imported account when it's been imported (my oversight!).
This commit only moves us to this architecture, keeping feature parity for private key import, but has some untested code for importing geth-style JSON files as well!
Fixes#1021
A top-right menu item now allows `Account Import`. It has a menu (with one item for now) that allows importing a private key string.
Errors are displayed, and a success navigates the user to their account list, where the imported account is labeled `LOOSE`.