The `accounts` prop of `SignatureRequest` was throwing a PropType
warning because `accounts` was an object instead of an array. It looks
like when the `mergeProps` function was added in #6340, the ownProps
were accidentally set to override the state props.
The now ignored props have been removed from the parent `ConfirmTxScreen`
component as well. `conversionRate` was identical to the one retrieved
in `SignatureRequest`, and `selectedAddress` differed only in the
fallback behaviour when `state.metamask.selectedAddress` does not exist;
it will now default to the first account instead (as was the original
behavior, prior to #6340).
`seedWords` used to be stored on the metamask state temporarily at
certain points. This hasn't been the case since #5994, but references
to this state remained. All of the logic remained for correctly updating
these `seedWords`, handling them during navigation, and scrubbing them
from the state.
However the state was never updated in practice. The `seedWords` are
still returned by `verifySeedPhrase`, and they're still stored in
component state in a few places. But they aren't ever set in the Redux
metadata state or the Preferences controller.
All references to this state have been removed, along with any logic
for interacting with this state. A few unused actions were removed as
well.
The `AccountDropdownMini` component featured the ability to switch
accounts using a dropdown, but this functionality was disabled in #6024.
It has been acting as a restyled `AccountListItem` since then.
The component has been removed, and the style changes moved to the sole
parent component (`RequestSignature`).
The `time-remaining` component hasn't been used since #5704, aside from
a few styles. Those styles have been integrated into the
`advanced-tab-content` styles, and the unused component has been
deleted.
The npm audit script was auditing all dependencies, then filtering the
results to just the advisories concerning production dependencies. This
was done by checking the boolean `dev` and `optional` properties of each
`findings` entry in each advisory.
The `dev` and `optional` properties are now missing, which is resulting
in dev advisories being mistakenly identified as affecting production.
This check has been removed, and instead the `--production` flag is used
when calling `npm audit`. This accomplishes the same goal without
relying as much upon the audit output format.
The `--production` flag was added in `npm` `v6.10.0`, so `npm` has been
updated to the current latest stable (`v6.10.2`) for the `test-deps`
job. It was also updated on the `prep-deps-npm` job to ensure
consistency in behaviour. The other jobs only use `npm run` which hasn't
changed substantially in some time, so compatibility isn't really a
concern for those.
`audit.json` has also been added to `.gitignore`. It was accidentally
checked in once while working on this branch.
The CSS is now served as an external file instead of being injected.
This was done to improve performance. Ideally we would come to a middle
ground between this and the former behaviour by injecting only the CSS
that was required for the initial page load, then lazily loading the
rest. However that change would be more complex. The hope was that
making all CSS external would at least be a slight improvement.
Performance metrics were collected before and after this change to
determine whether this change actually helped. The metrics collected
were the timing events provided by Chrome DevTools:
* DOM Content Loaded (DCL) [1]
* Load (L) [2]
* First Paint (FP) [3]
* First Contentful Paint (FCP) [3]
* First Meaningful Paint (FMP) [3]
Here are the results (units in milliseconds):
Injected CSS:
| Run | DCL | L | FP | FCP | FMP |
| :--- | ---: | ---: | ---: | ---: | ---: |
| 1 | 1569.45 | 1570.97 | 1700.36 | 1700.36 | 1700.36 |
| 2 | 1517.37 | 1518.84 | 1630.98 | 1630.98 | 1630.98 |
| 3 | 1603.71 | 1605.31 | 1712.56 | 1712.56 | 1712.56 |
| 4 | 1522.15 | 1523.72 | 1629.3 | 1629.3 | 1629.3 |
| **Min** | 1517.37 | 1518.84 | 1629.3 | 1629.3 | 1629.3 |
| **Max** | 1603.71 | 1605.31 | 1712.56 | 1712.56 | 1712.56 |
| **Mean** | 1553.17 | 1554.71 | 1668.3 | 1668.3 | 1668.3 |
| **Std. dev.** | 33.41 | 33.43 | 38.16 | 38.16 | 38.16 |
External CSS:
| Run | DCL | L | FP | FCP | FMP |
| :--- | ---: | ---: | ---: | ---: | ---: |
| 1 | 1595.4 | 1598.91 | 284.97 | 1712.86 | 1712.86 |
| 2 | 1537.55 | 1538.99 | 199.38 | 1633.5 | 1633.5 |
| 3 | 1571.28 | 1572.74 | 268.65 | 1677.03 | 1677.03 |
| 4 | 1510.98 | 1512.33 | 206.72 | 1607.03 | 1607.03 |
| **Min** | 1510.98 | 1512.33 | 199.38 | 1607.03 | 1607.03 |
| **Max** | 1595.4 | 1598.91 | 284.97 | 1712.86 | 1712.86 |
| **Mean** | 1553.8025 | 1555.7425 | 239.93 | 1657.605 | 1657.605 |
| **Std. dev.** | 29.5375 | 30.0825 | 36.88 | 37.34 | 37.34 |
Unfortunately, using an external CSS file made no discernible improvement
to the overall page load time. DCM and L were practically identical, and
FCP and FMP were marginally better (well within error margins).
However, the first paint time was _dramatically_ improved. This change
seems worthwhile for the first paint time improvement alone. It also
allows us to delete some code and remove a dependency.
The old `css.js` module included two third-party CSS files as well, so
those have been imported into the main Sass file. This was easier than
bundling them in the gulpfile.
The resulting CSS bundle needs to be served from the root because we're
using a few `@include` rules that make this assumption. We could move
this under `/css/` if desired, but we'd need to update each of these
`@include` rules.
Relates to #6646
[1]: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/Events/DOMContentLoaded
[2]: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/Events/load
[3]: https://developers.google.com/web/fundamentals/performance/user-centric-performance-metrics
The Babel config had previously supported all browsers with greater than
0.25% global usage (according to `browserlist`). This resulted in
`babel-preset-env` including plugins sufficient to support the following
minimum browser versions:
```
{
"chrome": "49",
"android": "4.4",
"edge": "16",
"firefox": "52",
"ios": "9.3",
"safari": "11"
}
```
Instead, the babel config now explicitly supports chrome >= 58 and
firefox >= 53. Chrome and Firefox are the only browsers we currently
publish to, and these were the minimum versions with no additional Babel
transformations.
The minimum browser versions we support should be re-evaluated later,
when we have added tests and documentation.
The plugin 'transform-async-to-generator' has also been removed. It was
used to translate async/await, but our browser targets all support
async/await.
Removing some of these transformations exposed bugs in `uglify-es` that
only presented themselves in the production build. `gulp-uglify-es` has
been updated to a version that uses `terser` instead of `uglify-es`,
which has resolved these issues.
Relates to #6805
Set the minimum browser version supported in the extension manifest.
Currently we only ship the extension on Chrome and Firefox, so the
minimum version has been set for those two browsers.
Relates to #6805
* ci: Rename full_test to test_and_release
* ci: Add scripts to automate GH releases
* Add .bak files to .gitignore
* ci: Add reviewer to the auto version PR
* Abstract domain provider from its stream transport
Creating new provider-consuming extensions, like [a new
platform](https://github.com/MetaMask/metamask-extension/blob/develop/docs/porting_to_new_environment.md)
can be frustrating for new contributors because our provider
construction has been tangled with our streaming interface.
Here I've broken up our streaming domain connection from the provider
construction, so developers can more easily construct local and
domain-restricted providers without dealing with streams.
* Abstract public API from stream interface
* clean up noop
* Document non-streaming interface
* getSiteMetadata must be async
* Clean up filters on stream end
* Document cleaning up filters
* Allow named filterMiddleware to be cleaned up
* Linted
* Require site metadata
* Destroy any destroyable middleware during cleanup
* Lint
The Drizzle tests have not been used for some time. They were used to
ensure compatibility with newer versions of `web3` v1. If we want to
re-add tests to ensure compatibility with newer `web3` versions, we
should find some way of doing that more reliably than was done here -
these tests were somewhat flaky and unreliable.
Update lodash transitive dependencies in response to security advisory:
https://www.npmjs.com/advisories/1065
There are a few remaining instances of the vulnerable lodash dependency
in the lockfile, but those are only used by development dependencies.
They are pinned, so are more difficult to update.
These files were referencing npm scripts that no longer existed. Notices
appear to no longer exist, and the `ui-dev.js` module is no longer
actively used.
The `mock-dev.js` module is still used for certain integration tests, so
I've just removed the reference to the non-existent script.
We've been using the `eslint-plugin-json` plugin for some time, but we
haven't been visiting `.json` files in the lint script. The lint script
has now been updated to incude `.json` files, which means any invalid
JSON will result in a lint error.
Unfortunately this JSON plugin doesn't seem to apply the other eslint
rules (such as `key-spacing`) to the JSON files. I wasn't able to find a
way to get that to work. Instead I manually auto-formatted each of the
locale `message.json` files, which fixed many whitespace
inconsistencies.
The `states.json` file was deleted completely, as it appears to be
unused. It wasn't a valid JSON file anyway, it was JavaScript. It looks
like a `states.js` file is automatically generated, but an old copy was
accidentally saved as `states.json` and included in the repo.
Many duplicate key errors were found and fixed in the
`development/states/` JSON files.
`package-lock.json` was added to `.eslintignore` because it was very
slow to lint, and linting it doesn't provide much value.
We had forgotten to add `eslint` as a dependency, even though we use it
directly. It had always worked because we have dependencies that also
depend upon it.
`eslint` has also been updated to v6, which necessitated two minor
changes.
The AppVeyor configuration appears to be unused - this project is not
connected to AppVeyor.
After deleting the AppVeyor config, the JSDoc config was the last thing
in the `development/tools` directory. That felt a little silly, so I
moved it up to `development`.
Unused expressions are generally a mistake, as they don't do anything.
The exceptions to this rule (short-circuit expressions and ternary
expressions) have been allowed.
The `webrtc-adapter` was previously ignored by eslint because it has a
side-effect upon being imported. I removed the local variable instead,
which should preserve the same side-effect without making eslint
complain.
* Add React and Redux DevTools
* Conditionally load react-devtools
* Add start:dev npm script to run the app with devtools
Co-Authored-By: Mark Stacey <markjstacey@gmail.com>
* Improve auto changelog script
The auto changelog script was creating empty or invalid entries in a
number of different cases, such as when the body of a commit spanned
multiple lines. This has been fixed, and the following additional
improvements have been made:
- Error handling (it will now crash upon encountering an error)
- Commits without a PR number in the subject are listed without the PR
prefix
- Invalid shellcheck warnings ignored
- Only the first line of the commit body is shown
- Carriage returns are stripped (some commits contain them)
This script should be more reliable for helping to manually update the
changelog. It's still not sufficiently robust to use as part of an
automated process - I don't think that's feasible without maintaining
stricter control over commit messages conventions and/or merge
strategies.