* addding the legacy tokenlist, tuning token detection OFF by default, adding new message while importing tokens
updating the controller version and calling detectNewToken on network change
fixing rebase error
Run yarn lavamoat:auto for updating policies
updating lavamoat
Deleted node modules and run again lavamoat auto
fixing rebase issues
updating lavamoat policies
updating lavamoat after rebasing
policies
updating custom token warning and blocking detectedtoken link when tpken detection is off for supported networks
to update the token in fetchTosync
updating the contract map object
Revert build-system lavamoat policy changes
Move token list selection logic from components to getTokenList selector
updating the tokenList
Update lavamoat
Fix error
updating lavamoat
lint fix
fix unit test fail
fix unit test fail
lint fix
fixing rebase locale error
rebase fix
Revert build-system policy changes
temp
addressing review comments
* rebase fix
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 is mainly associated with an update in GridPlus SDK and enables
better strategies for fetching calldata decoder data.
`eth-lattice-keyring` changes:
GridPlus/eth-lattice-keyring@v0.7.3...v0.10.0
`gridplus-sdk` changes (which includes a codebase rewrite):
GridPlus/gridplus-sdk@v1.2.3...v2.2.2
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.
We currently store the JSON-RPC request and response objects in the permission activity log. The utility of doing this was always rather dubious, but never problematic. Until now.
In Flask, as the restricted methods have expanded in number, user secrets may be included on JSON-RPC message objects. This PR removes these properties from the permission activity log, and adds a migration which does the same to existing log objects. We don't interact with the log objects anywhere in our codebase, but we don't want unexpected properties to cause errors in the future should any log objects be retained.
This PR also updates relevant tests and test data. It makes a minor functional change to how a request is designated as a success or failure, but this should not change any behavior in practice.
An array of integers is now used to represent the SRP in three cases:
* In the import wallet flow, the UI uses it to pass the user-provided
SRP to the background (which converts the array to a buffer).
* In the create wallet flow, the UI uses it to retrieve the generated
SRP from the background.
* When persisting the wallet to state, the background uses it to
serialize the SRP.
Co-authored-by: Elliot Winkler <elliot.winkler@gmail.com>
There were several issues related to a retry mechanism. The latest keyring
offers a significant speed and UX enhancement relative to the previous release.
For full details, see:
GridPlus/eth-lattice-keyring@v0.5.0...v0.6.1
There were several issues related to a retry mechanism. The latest keyring
offers a significant speed and UX enhancement relative to the previous release.
For full details, see:
GridPlus/eth-lattice-keyring@v0.5.0...v0.6.1
* deprecate extensionizer for webextension-polyfill
* fix tests
* remove extensionizer
* fix browser windows api calls
* fix broken on firefox
* fix getAcceptLanguages call
* update more browser apis that are now promisified
* remove unnecessary console error ignoring in e2e tests
An array of integers is now used to represent the SRP in three cases:
* In the import wallet flow, the UI uses it to pass the user-provided
SRP to the background (which converts the array to a buffer).
* In the create wallet flow, the UI uses it to retrieve the generated
SRP from the background.
* When persisting the wallet to state, the background uses it to
serialize the SRP.
Co-authored-by: Elliot Winkler <elliot.winkler@gmail.com>