When the `chainId` for a custom RPC endpoint is edited, we now migrate
the corresponding address book entries to ensure they are not orphaned.
The address book entries are grouped by the `metamask.network` state,
which unfortunately was sometimes the `chainId`, and sometimes the
`networkId`. It was always the `networkId` for built-in Infura
networks, but for custom RPC endpoints it would be set to the user-set
`chainId` field, with a fallback to the `networkId` of the network.
A recent change will force users to enter valid `chainId`s on all
custom networks, which will be normalized to be hex-prefixed. As a
result, address book contacts will now be keyed by a different string.
The contact entries are now migrated when this edit takes place.
There are some edge cases where two separate entries share the same set
of contacts. For example, if two entries have the same `chainId`, or if
they had the same `networkId` and had no `chainId` set. When the
`chainId` is edited in such cases, the contacts are duplicated on both
networks. This is the best we can do, as we don't have any way to know
which network the contacts _should_ be on.
The `typed-message-manager` unit tests have also been updated as part
of this commit because the addition of `sinon.restore()` to the
preferences controller tests ended up clearing a test object in-between
individual tests in that file. The test object is now re-constructed
before each individual test.
The `_fetchAndSetSwapsLiveness` was accidentally passed to
`setInterval` without being bound first, so the `this` reference was
not defined when it was called. It is now bound before being passed to
`setInterval`.
* Remove network config store
* Remove inline networks variable in network controller
* Re-key network controller 'rpcTarget' to 'rpcUrl'
* Require chainId in lookupNetwork, implement eth_chainId
* Require chain ID in network form
* Add alert, migrations, and tests
* Add chainId validation to addToFrequentRpcList
* Update public config state selector to match new network controller
state
* Use network enums in networks-tab.constants
* Ensure chainId in provider config is current
* Update tests
* Fix require-unicode-regexp issues
See [`require-unicode-regexp`](https://eslint.org/docs/rules/require-unicode-regexp) for more information.
This change enables `require-unicode-regexp` and fixes the issues raised by the rule.
* Remove case-insensitive flag from regexps
This method was accidentally broken with the introduction of the
permissions controller, as this was missing from the list of safe
methods.
It is now included in the list of safe methods.
Fixes#8993
It seems that this blocklist checker never worked correctly. Ever since
the initial commit, it was comparing the Number `1` to the `networkId`,
which is a string. Additionally, even if it did throw, the transaction
continued unhindered. The user could still approve it, and there was no
indication shown to the user that anything went wrong. Also some of the
blocklist entries were incorrectly mixed-case, and were never hit.
We can remove this for now, and re-add it later on after we rewrite the
transaction controller.
The `metamaskNetworkId` property in the `txMeta` for incoming
transactions was incorrectly set as a Number instead of a String. This
change was made accidentally as part of #8627.
As a result incoming transactions were being excluded from the
transaction list, as they didn't have a matching network ID.
`metamaskNetworkId` is now set to a string, and a migration has been
added to ensure `metamaskNetworkId` is converted to a string for any
incoming transactions in state.
* Use over the whole stringified error object which doesn't show the actual error message that is set as the
Co-authored-by: Mark Stacey <markjstacey@gmail.com>
* Feedback commit
The code for checking whether a transaction was dropped or not was
refactored in #8398, but in the process an off-by-one error was
introduced.
The old version of `_checkIfTxWasDropped` would query for an updated
transaction count from the network, and would consider the pending
transaction to be dropped if the count was above the nonce. However,
the version introduced in #8398 considers the transaction to be dropped
if the count is above *or equal to* the nonce.
The pending transaction nonce is expected to be equal to the
transaction count, because the nonce starts at zero. The transaction
count is equal to the expected next nonce.
The variable name has been updated to make this more clear
(`networkNextNonce` is how the `nonce-tracker` refers to this value).
`parseInt` is now called with an explicit radix of `16` as well, to
ensure both nonce strings are always parsed as hex. In all cases I am
aware of, these nonce strings were prefixed by `0x`, meaning that
`parseInt` would default to a radix of `16`, so this likely doesn't
constitute a functional change.
Fixes#8688