The `disable-console` script introduced in #10040 used an arrow-
function no-op function to replace `console.log` and `console.info`.
This replacement function was early-bound to the `this` context of the
`disable-console` script, because that's how arrow functions work.
This violates an assumption baked into Sentry, which also replaces the
`console` functions. It wraps them in a function it uses to track
console logs as breadcrumbs. This wrapper function blows up for some
reason if the "original" `console` function is early-bound to a `this`
value of `undefined`.
This resulted in various UI freezes. One example is during onboarding,
when using Firefox with Enhanced Tracking Protection set in "strict"
mode. After submitting a password in the 'Create wallet' flow, the
Sentry `console` wrapper would throw and leave the user stuck on the
loading screen.
By replacing the no-op arrow function with a no-op function
declaration, the problem has been resolved.
Relates to #10097
The `disable-console` script introduced in #10040 used an arrow-
function no-op function to replace `console.log` and `console.info`.
This replacement function was early-bound to the `this` context of the
`disable-console` script, because that's how arrow functions work.
This violates an assumption baked into Sentry, which also replaces the
`console` functions. It wraps them in a function it uses to track
console logs as breadcrumbs. This wrapper function blows up for some
reason if the "original" `console` function is early-bound to a `this`
value of `undefined`.
This resulted in various UI freezes. One example is during onboarding,
when using Firefox with Enhanced Tracking Protection set in "strict"
mode. After submitting a password in the 'Create wallet' flow, the
Sentry `console` wrapper would throw and leave the user stuck on the
loading screen.
By replacing the no-op arrow function with a no-op function
declaration, the problem has been resolved.
Relates to #10097
Failure to persist state will now only report to Sentry if the last
attempt to save state succeeded. This ensures that if anyone is stuck
in a state where state can't be saved (e.g. low disk space), we aren't
flooded with repeated errors on Sentry.
Failure to persist state will now only report to Sentry if the last
attempt to save state succeeded. This ensures that if anyone is stuck
in a state where state can't be saved (e.g. low disk space), we aren't
flooded with repeated errors on Sentry.
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
`eth_getProof` is an unpermissioned, read-only RPC method for getting account-related Merkle proofs, specified here: https://eips.ethereum.org/EIPS/eip-1186
It's been supported by major Ethereum clients, and Infura, for some time. By adding it to the safe methods list, we enable this method for our users.
* Maintain console logging in dev mode
Co-authored-by: kumavis <aaron@kumavis.me>
Co-authored-by: Erik Marks <rekmarks@protonmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Mark Stacey <markjstacey@gmail.com>
On Firefox 56 and Waterfox Classic, our `runLockdown.js` script throws
an error. This is fine on the HTML pages, as the next script tags still
get run without issue (though they don't benefit from the SES lockdown
sadly). But in the `contentscript`, an exception thrown here appears to
halt the execution of subsequent scripts.
To prevent the `contentscript` from crashing completely, lockdown
errors are now caught and logged. They are also logged to Sentry on the
pages where Sentry is setup.
`eth_getProof` is an unpermissioned, read-only RPC method for getting account-related Merkle proofs, specified here: https://eips.ethereum.org/EIPS/eip-1186
It's been supported by major Ethereum clients, and Infura, for some time. By adding it to the safe methods list, we enable this method for our users.
* Maintain console logging in dev mode
Co-authored-by: kumavis <aaron@kumavis.me>
Co-authored-by: Erik Marks <rekmarks@protonmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Mark Stacey <markjstacey@gmail.com>
This PR introduces the new approval controller to the extension codebase. We use it for the permissions controller's pending approval functionality.
The approval controller sets us up for a new pattern of requesting and managing user confirmations in RPC methods. Along with the generic RPC method middleware, the approval controller will allow us to eliminate our message managers, and decouple various method handlers from our provider stack, making the implementations more portable between the extension and mobile.
On Firefox 56 and Waterfox Classic, our `runLockdown.js` script throws
an error. This is fine on the HTML pages, as the next script tags still
get run without issue (though they don't benefit from the SES lockdown
sadly). But in the `contentscript`, an exception thrown here appears to
halt the execution of subsequent scripts.
To prevent the `contentscript` from crashing completely, lockdown
errors are now caught and logged. They are also logged to Sentry on the
pages where Sentry is setup.
The new metrics controller has a `trackEvent` function that was being
called unbound, so `this` references were undefined. It is now bound
early in both places where it is passed in as a parameter.
The SES lockdown added in #9729 had the effect of obfuscating our error
messages. Any messages printed to the console would have the error
message replaced with the string "Error #" followed by a number. The
stack was also updated to point at `lockdown.cjs`, though the original
stack was preserved beneath the top stack frame.
Marking the `console` API as untamed seems to have fixed both issues.
The original error message is now printed to the console, along with
the original stack.
From a behavioral standpoint this PR fixes the issue with tracking, and persisting, tokens that the user hides. Whether we can/should optimize this to prevent duplicates of the accountHiddenTokens and hiddenToken is a point of contention, but it acts similiarly to how we track tokens and accountTokens.
Also to note, for tokens under a custom network there is no way to distinguish two different custom network sets of hidden tokens, they are all under the `rpc` property, same as accountTokens.
* @metamask/inpage-provider@^8.0.0
* Replace public config store with JSON-RPC notifications
* Encapsulate notification permissioning in permissions controller
* Update prefix of certain internal RPC methods and notifications
* Add accounts to getProviderState
* Send accounts with isUnlocked notification (#10007)
* Rename provider streams, notify provider of stream failures (#10006)
The new metrics controller has a `trackEvent` function that was being
called unbound, so `this` references were undefined. It is now bound
early in both places where it is passed in as a parameter.
The SES lockdown added in #9729 had the effect of obfuscating our error
messages. Any messages printed to the console would have the error
message replaced with the string "Error #" followed by a number. The
stack was also updated to point at `lockdown.cjs`, though the original
stack was preserved beneath the top stack frame.
Marking the `console` API as untamed seems to have fixed both issues.
The original error message is now printed to the console, along with
the original stack.
* Migration to remove legacy local storage keys from localStorage
* Update app/scripts/migrations/050.js
Co-authored-by: Mark Stacey <markjstacey@gmail.com>
* Update app/scripts/migrations/050.js
Co-authored-by: Mark Stacey <markjstacey@gmail.com>
* Fix unit tests for migration 50
* Fixing stubbing and localstorage reference in migration 50
* Update test/helper.js
Co-authored-by: Mark Stacey <markjstacey@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Mark Stacey <markjstacey@gmail.com>
Attempts to send metrics would fail when no `options` were used. This
was because when the options parameter was not set, it was often sent
over our RPC connection as `undefined`, which gets serialized to `null`
when the message is converted to JSON. This `null` parameter didn't
trigger the default parameter set in the metametrics controller, as
default parameters are only used for `undefined`.
Instead the `options` parameter is now treated as fully optional, with
no default value set. The optional chaining operator is used to ensure
it won't blow up if it's not set. A fallback of `{}` was used for the
one destructure case as well.
If a `gasPrice` was specified in a transaction sent via a dapp, we
would include it in our `eth_estimateGas` call, causing it to fail if
the user had insufficient balance (for either the transaction amount or
the gas fee). This resulted in the fallback gas estimate being used;
the block gas limit. The block gas limit is quite a bit larger than
most transactions need, so this resulted in wildly inflated gas costs
being shown on our confirmation screen.
The `gasPrice` has been removed from the `txParams` object we pass to
`eth_estimateGas`, so now it won't perform any balance checks anymore.
This ensures that we'll get a valid gas estimate, as long as geth is
able to simulate the contract execution properly.
Fixes#9967
* Remove use of ethgassthat; use metaswap /gasPrices api for gas price estimates
* Remove references to ethgasstation
* Pass base to BigNumber constructor in fetchExternalBasicGasEstimates
* Update ui/app/hooks/useTokenTracker.js
Co-authored-by: Erik Marks <25517051+rekmarks@users.noreply.github.com>
* Delete gas price chart
* Remove price chart css import
* Delete additional fee chart code
* Lint fix
* Delete more code no longer used after ethgasstation removal
Co-authored-by: Erik Marks <25517051+rekmarks@users.noreply.github.com>
* Freezeglobals: remove Promise freezing, add lockdown
* background & UI: temp disable sentry
* add loose-envify, dedupe symbol-observable
* use loose envify
* add symbol-observable patch
* run freezeGlobals after sentry init
* use require instead of import
* add lockdown to contentscript
* add error code in message
* try increasing node env heap size to 2048
* change back circe CI option
* make freezeGlobals an exported function
* make freezeGlobals an exported function
* use freezeIntrinsics
* pass down env to child process
* fix unknown module
* fix tests
* change back to 2048
* fix import error
* attempt to fix memory error
* fix lint
* fix lint
* fix mem gain
* use lockdown in phishing detect
* fix lint
* move sentry init into freezeIntrinsics to run lockdown before other imports
* lint fix
* custom lockdown modules per context
* lint fix
* fix global test
* remove run in child process
* remove lavamoat-core, use ses, require lockdown directly
* revert childprocess
* patch package postinstall
* revert back child process
* add postinstall to ci
* revert node max space size to 1024
* put back loose-envify
* Disable sentry to see if e2e tetss pass
* use runLockdown, add as script in manifest
* remove global and require from runlockdown
* add more memory to tests
* upgrade resource class for prep-build & prep-build-test
* fix lint
* lint fix
* upgrade remote-redux-devtools
* skillfully re-add sentry
* lintfix
* fix lint
* put back beep
* remove envify, add loose-envify and patch-package in dev deps
* Replace patch with Yarn resolution (#9923)
Instead of patching `symbol-observable`, this ensures that all
versions of `symbol-observable` are resolved to the given range, even
if it contradicts the requested range.
Co-authored-by: Mark Stacey <markjstacey@gmail.com>
The `matomo` option passed to the send metrics function is invalid. The
intent was to set the `matomoEvent` option, but instead of rectifying
that, we've decide to keep sending this event to the production Segment
project for now. The invalid option has been removed.