This package was added as a devDependency to address a peerDependency
warning when installing Storybook v5.3.14. We're now using Storybook
v6, which doesn't list this as a peerDependency.
The packages `eth-sig-util` and `ethashjs` have been updated to their
latest in-range versions in the lockfile. This removes the last
instance of `ethereumjs-abi@0.6.5` from our dependency tree, as well as
the last non-optional instance of `sha3` (it's still present as a
transitive dependency of an optional development dependency via
`ganache`)
Fixes#10356
There was a bug in the inpage provider that would mistakenly report
usage of our injected `web3` instance when the `web3.currentProvider`
property was accessed. This was fixed in v8.0.4 of
`@metamask/inpage-provider`.
* use @lavamoat/allow-scripts for package postinstall allow list
* dnode: set "weak" to false
Co-authored-by: kumavis <kumavis@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Erik Marks <25517051+rekmarks@users.noreply.github.com>
The changes made between v1.3.2 and v1.5.0 of `@reduxjs/toolkit` don't
appear to affect us at all. They mostly consist of feature additions
and bug fixes for edge cases we haven't encountered.[1]
The one change that is technically breaking is that v8 of `immer` now
freezes state objects in production rather than just in development.
That would only be breaking if we were mutating Redux state though,
which we aren't doing in the few Redux slices in which we use
`@reduxjs/toolkit`. Even if we were, we would have noticed that it
broke in development already.
[1]: https://github.com/reduxjs/redux-toolkit/releases
This update comes with a breaking change to the Approval controller. It
now requires a `defaultApprovalType` parameter.
I don't think we have any use for a default approval type, but I've
added a "NO_TYPE" one for now because it's a strict requirement. We
should consider making this parameter optional in the future, for cases
like this where it's not needed.
This update will hopefully address some caching issues we've been
seeing with our phishing configuration. See here for more details:
https://github.com/MetaMask/controllers/pull/297
This update comes with a breaking change to the Approval controller. It
now requires a `defaultApprovalType` parameter.
I don't think we have any use for a default approval type, but I've
added a "NO_TYPE" one for now because it's a strict requirement. We
should consider making this parameter optional in the future, for cases
like this where it's not needed.
This update will hopefully address some caching issues we've been
seeing with our phishing configuration. See here for more details:
https://github.com/MetaMask/controllers/pull/297
The `eth_decrypt` used to fail on Firefox with a recursion error.
Updating these `tweetnacl` dependencies seemed to have fixed the issue
the last time I tested this.
When I tried to reproduce the failure today, it failed due to a
different reason, both before and after this update.
But nonetheless, it still seems like a good idea to update. These newer
versions have no breaking changes and contain important bug fixes.
We don't look at coveralls very much. We might occasionally consult it
to see a report on our code coverage, but that report is already
generated entirely locally, and has been added to the MetaMask bot
comment in #10061.
Update `geckodriver` to the latest version, and `selenium-webdriver`
to the second-most-recent version. Updates include various dependency
updates, bug fixes, and minor features. None of the updates seem to
directly affect us, aside from one new feature of `selenium-webdriver`
that updates the `installAddon` function to support `.zip` files, which
will be used in a subsequent PR.
`selenium-webdriver` was pinned one version behind latest because the
latest version caused our Chrome e2e tests to fail with a mysterious
error whenever `getAttribute` was called on a WebElement.
The `eth_decrypt` used to fail on Firefox with a recursion error.
Updating these `tweetnacl` dependencies seemed to have fixed the issue
the last time I tested this.
When I tried to reproduce the failure today, it failed due to a
different reason, both before and after this update.
But nonetheless, it still seems like a good idea to update. These newer
versions have no breaking changes and contain important bug fixes.