* 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.
* 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.
Sentry is now configured with environment variables, rather than with
hard-coded values. This makes it easier to test Sentry functionality
using a different Sentry account, as we did recently during QA of
v9.5.1.
The only change for the normal build process is the introduction of the
`SENTRY_DSN_DEV` variable, which can be set via `.metamaskrc` or via an
environment variable. This determines where error reports are sent. It
still defaults to our team Sentry account's `metamask-testing` project.
The `sentry:publish` script now requires SENTRY_ORG and SENTRY_PROJECT
to be set in order to publish release artifacts. The CircleCI
configuration has been updated with these values, so it should act the
same as it did before. Previously we had used a CLI flag to specify the
organization and project, but Sentry already natively supports these
environment variables [1].
[1]: https://docs.sentry.io/product/cli/configuration/#configuration-values
The function we were using to run shell commands during the
`sentry:publish` script were swallowing the CLI output. We also weren't
correctly detecting the process exit in some cases.
The `run-command` module originally written for `auto-changelog`
(introduced in #10782 and replaced in #10993) has been resurrected for
running commands where we don't care about the output, or where we want
to use the output for something. A second function (`runInShell`) has
been added for running commands with the same STDOUT and STDERR
streams, so that the output is sent directly to the CLI. This ensures
that the console output from the shell script we run gets correctly
output to the CLI.
Sentry is now configured with environment variables, rather than with
hard-coded values. This makes it easier to test Sentry functionality
using a different Sentry account, as we did recently during QA of
v9.5.1.
The only change for the normal build process is the introduction of the
`SENTRY_DSN_DEV` variable, which can be set via `.metamaskrc` or via an
environment variable. This determines where error reports are sent. It
still defaults to our team Sentry account's `metamask-testing` project.
The `sentry:publish` script now requires SENTRY_ORG and SENTRY_PROJECT
to be set in order to publish release artifacts. The CircleCI
configuration has been updated with these values, so it should act the
same as it did before. Previously we had used a CLI flag to specify the
organization and project, but Sentry already natively supports these
environment variables [1].
[1]: https://docs.sentry.io/product/cli/configuration/#configuration-values
The `sentry:publish` script now exits with an exit code of `1` upon
failure, indicating that something went wrong. Previously it would exit
with a code of `0`, indicating to CI that everything worked correctly.
The script will now also exit early if the authentication check fails.