* User actions benchmark and artifacts
* Lint and fix identation
* Fix lint
* Updated path
* lint
* Add user actions benchmark to pre release job
* Remove title
* Out path updated
* See if url is finally fixed
* Adding some console logs
* lint
* fix lint
* fix lint
* Updated persisting and store artifacts path
* Added MetaMask bot correct link and remove console logs
* Remove console log
* Sort Imports
* Fix lint
* Update loadAccount function and prop name for clarity to loadNewAccount
* Run yarn setup
* Fix yarn
* Update Create Account element for Create account
* Remove unnecessary step on send
Co-authored-by: Jyoti Puri <jyotipuri@gmail.com>
An improper deploy key was used to deploy the TypeScript
migration dashboard. A new key has been created on the GitHub side for
the `metamask-extension-ts-migration-dashboard` repo and also added to
CircleCI. The new fingerprint for this key is provided in this commit.
This should hopefully make it possible for us to deploy to this repo
from CircleCI.
When the TypeScript migration dashboard is updated, it is built and
deployed in another repo, which is then deployed via GitHub Pages. To
push to this repo we have to set a Git username and email. This is
missing from the CircleCI config, so this commit uses the metamaskbot
GitHub account to do that.
As we convert parts of the codebase to TypeScript, we will want a way to
track progress. This commit adds a dashboard which displays all of the
files that we wish to convert to TypeScript and which files we've
already converted.
The list of all possible files to convert is predetermined by walking
the dependency graph of each entrypoint the build system uses to compile
the extension (the files that the entrypoint imports, the files that the
imports import, etc). The list should not need to be regenerated, but
you can do it by running:
yarn ts-migration:enumerate
The dashboard is implemented as a separate React app. The CircleCI
configuration has been updated so that when a new commit is pushed, the
React app is built and stored in the CircleCI artifacts. When a PR is
merged, the built files will be pushed to a separate repo whose sole
purpose is to serve the dashboard via GitHub Pages (this is the same
way that the Storybook works). All of the app code and script to build
the app are self-contained under
`development/ts-migration-dashboard`. To build this app yourself, you
can run:
yarn ts-migration:dashboard:build
or if you want to build automatically as you change files, run:
yarn ts-migration:dashboard:watch
Then open the following file in your browser (there is no server
component):
development/ts-migration-dashboard/build/index.html
Finally, although you shouldn't have to do this, to manually deploy the
dashboard once built, you can run:
git remote add ts-migration-dashboard git@github.com:MetaMask/metamask-extension-ts-migration-dashboard.git
yarn ts-migration:dashboard:deploy
This reverts commit f09ab88891, reversing
changes made to effc761e0e.
This is being temporarily reverted to make it easier to release an
urgent fix for v10.15.1.
* Automate the Flask release
A Flask release will now be published alongside each main extension
release. The version of each Flask release will be the same as the
extension version except it will have the suffix `-flask.0`.
* Programmatically remove build prefix
The create GH release Bash script derives the Flask version from the
Flask build filename by removing the build prefix, leaving just the
version. Rather than hard-coding the prefix size to remove, it is now
calculated programmatically so that it is easier to read and update.
* Fix tag publishing
The tab publishing step used the wrong credentials, and didn't properly
identify the commit author. This has now been fixed.
* Changed registryUrl for snaps only in firefox
Fixed getPlatform to only be imported into metamask-controller in flask
Removed snaps specific testrunner script and use run-all with a cli option
* Fixed flakey tests
* Removed unneeded await
* Added delay
* Fixed linting
* Automate the Flask release
A Flask release will now be published alongside each main extension
release. The version of each Flask release will be the same as the
extension version except it will have the suffix `-flask.0`.
* Programmatically remove build prefix
The create GH release Bash script derives the Flask version from the
Flask build filename by removing the build prefix, leaving just the
version. Rather than hard-coding the prefix size to remove, it is now
calculated programmatically so that it is easier to read and update.
* Fix tag publishing
The tab publishing step used the wrong credentials, and didn't properly
identify the commit author. This has now been fixed.
* Changed registryUrl for snaps only in firefox
Fixed getPlatform to only be imported into metamask-controller in flask
Removed snaps specific testrunner script and use run-all with a cli option
* Fixed flakey tests
* Removed unneeded await
* Added delay
* Fixed linting
# Permission System 2.0
## Background
This PR migrates the extension permission system to [the new `PermissionController`](https://github.com/MetaMask/snaps-skunkworks/tree/main/packages/controllers/src/permissions).
The original permission system, based on [`rpc-cap`](https://github.com/MetaMask/rpc-cap), introduced [`ZCAP-LD`](https://w3c-ccg.github.io/zcap-ld/)-like permissions to our JSON-RPC stack.
We used it to [implement](https://github.com/MetaMask/metamask-extension/pull/7004) what we called "LoginPerSite" in [version 7.7.0](https://github.com/MetaMask/metamask-extension/releases/tag/v7.7.0) of the extension, which enabled the user to choose which accounts, if any, should be exposed to each dapp.
While that was a worthwhile feature in and of itself, we wanted a permission _system_ in order to enable everything we are going to with Snaps.
Unfortunately, the original permission system was difficult to use, and necessitated the creation of the original `PermissionsController` (note the "s"), which was more or less a wrapper for `rpc-cap`.
With this PR, we shake off the yoke of the original permission system, in favor of the modular, self-contained, ergonomic, and more mature permission system 2.0.
Note that [the `PermissionController` readme](https://github.com/MetaMask/snaps-skunkworks/tree/main/packages/controllers/src/permissions/README.md) explains how the new permission system works.
The `PermissionController` and `SubjectMetadataController` are currently shipped via `@metamask/snap-controllers`. This is a temporary state of affairs, and we'll move them to `@metamask/controllers` once they've landed in prod.
## Changes in Detail
First, the changes in this PR are not as big as they seem. Roughly half of the additions in this PR are fixtures in the test for the new migration (number 68), and a significant portion of the remaining ~2500 lines are due to find-and-replace changes in other test fixtures and UI files.
- The extension `PermissionsController` has been deleted, and completely replaced with the new `PermissionController` from [`@metamask/snap-controllers`](https://www.npmjs.com/package/@metamask/snap-controllers).
- The original `PermissionsController` "domain metadata" functionality is now managed by the new `SubjectMetadataController`, also from [`@metamask/snap-controllers`](https://www.npmjs.com/package/@metamask/snap-controllers).
- The permission activity and history log controller has been renamed `PermissionLogController` and has its own top-level state key, but is otherwise functionally equivalent to the existing implementation.
- Migration number 68 has been added to account for the new state changes.
- The tests in `app/scripts/controllers/permissions` have been migrated from `mocha` to `jest`.
Reviewers should focus their attention on the following files:
- `app/scripts/`
- `metamask-controller.js`
- This is where most of the integration work for the new `PermissionController` occurs.
Some functions that were internal to the original controller were moved here.
- `controllers/permissions/`
- `selectors.js`
- These selectors are for `ControllerMessenger` selector subscriptions. The actual subscriptions occur in `metamask-controller.js`. See the `ControllerMessenger` implementation for details.
- `specifications.js`
- The caveat and permission specifications are required by the new `PermissionController`, and are used to specify the `eth_accounts` permission and its JSON-RPC method implementation.
See the `PermissionController` readme for details.
- `migrations/068.js`
- The new state should be cross-referenced with the controllers that manage it.
The accompanying tests should also be thoroughly reviewed.
Some files may appear new but have just moved and/or been renamed:
- `app/scripts/lib/rpc-method-middleware/handlers/request-accounts.js`
- This was previously implemented in `controllers/permissions/permissionsMethodMiddleware.js`.
- `test/mocks/permissions.js`
- A truncated version of `test/mocks/permission-controller.js`.
Co-authored-by: Mark Stacey <markjstacey@gmail.com>
* add storybook unit tests with CI integration
* fix command and fix casing for test
* change ci ordering for storybook tasks
* fix syntax error
* fix jest
* lint
* Add transaction-total-banner render test to Storybook (#12517)
* transaction-total-banner
* lint
* confirm to spec
* lint
* fix jest ocnfig for snapshot test failure
`improved-yarn-audit` has been updated so that it supports GitHub
advisories. Two new GitHub advisories have been ignored, as they are
both moderate RegExp DoS vulnerabilities that don't affect us, and they
are embedded deep within our dependency graph and are difficult to
update.
`improved-yarn-audit` has been updated so that it supports GitHub
advisories. Two new GitHub advisories have been ignored, as they are
both moderate RegExp DoS vulnerabilities that don't affect us, and they
are embedded deep within our dependency graph and are difficult to
update.
The beta and Flask builds are now built on CI and included in the
metamask bot comment alongside the main builds. The same sourcemap
linter and mozilla linter used for the prod builds is also run on the
beta and Flask builds.
Closes#12426
The beta and Flask builds are now built on CI and included in the
metamask bot comment alongside the main builds. The same sourcemap
linter and mozilla linter used for the prod builds is also run on the
beta and Flask builds.
Closes#12426