This is a backport of #8314. Here's the original description:
MetaMask would sometimes get into a state where the notification popup
would never open. This could happen if the notification window was
closed shortly after being opened. After this happened, no popups would
show up until after the extension was reset.
This was happening because the background thought the popup was already
open. The variable it uses to track whether the popup was open or not
was being set to `true` immediately after the background asked the
browser to open a new window, before a handler was attached that could
respond to the window being closed.
Removing this line seems to solve the problem.
This line was added originally in #5437, which dealt with batch
transactions. Batches of transactions seem to work just fine without
this line though (from local testing), and I can't think of why this
would be required.
Closes#7051
The `shift-list-item` component for displaying ShapeShift transactions
has been removed, along with three other components that were used
solely by that component (`copyButton`, `eth-balance`, and
`fiat-value`).
This component hasn't been used in some time, as ShapeShift
transactions no longer exist to display. The controller that ShapeShift
transactions originated from was removed in #8118, and it became
impossible to create new ShapeShift transactions from within MetaMask
in #6746
This state has been removed from the background. It was used for the
old UI, and has been unused for some time. A migration has been added
to delete this state as well.
The action creator responsible for updating this state has been removed
from the UI as well, along with the `callBackgroundThenUpdateNoSpinner`
convenience function, which was only used for this action.
Keyrings are added either through the `getKeyringForDevice` background
method (as part of the hardware wallet connect flow), or via
`importAccountWithStrategy` (when importing an account). The
`addNewKeyring` action and corresponding background method has not been
used in a long time.
* Add popover for informing user about the connected status indicator
* Ensure user only sees connected status info popover once
* Default connectedStatusPopoverHasBeenShown to true and set it to false in a migration
* Add unit test for migration 42
* Initialize AppStateController if it does not exist in migration 42
* Update connect indicator popup locale text
* Code cleanup for connected-indicator-info-popup
* Code cleanup for connected-indicator-info-popup
This method adds the given account to the given origin's list of
exposed accounts. This method is not yet used, but it will be in
subsequent PRs (e.g. #8312)
This method has been added to the background API, and a wrapper action
creator has been written as well.
Now that identities are available synchronously in the permissions
controller, accounts can be validated synchronously as well. Any
account the user wants to give permissions to should already be tracked
as an identity in the preferences controller.
* Fix order of accounts in `eth_accounts` response
The accounts returned by `eth_accounts` were in a fixed order - the
order in which the keyring returned them - rather than ordered with the
selected account first. The accounts returned by the `accountsChanged`
event were ordered with the selected account first, but the same order
wasn't used for `eth_accounts`.
We needed to store additional state in order to determine the correct
account order correctly on all dapps. We had only been storing the
current selected account, but since we also need to determine the
primary account per dapp (i.e. the last "selected" account among the
accounts exposed to that dapp), that wasn't enough.
A `lastSelected` property has been added to each identity in the
preferences controller to keep track of the last selected time. This
property is set to the current time (in milliseconds) whenever a new
selection is made. The accounts returned with `accountsChanged` and by
`eth_accounts` are both ordered by this property.
The `updatePermittedAccounts` function was merged with the internal
methods for responding to account selection, to keep things simpler. It
wasn't called externally anyway, so it wasn't needed in the public API.
* Remove caveat update upon change in selected account
The order of accounts in the caveat isn't meaningful, so the caveat
doesn't need to be updated when the accounts get re-ordered.
* Emit event regardless of account order
Now that we're no longer relying upon the caveat for the account order,
we also have no way of knowing if a particular account selection
resulted in a change in order or not. The notification is now emitted
whenever an exposed account is selected - even if the order stayed the
same.
The inpage provider currently caches the account order, so it can be
relied upon to ignore these redundant events. We were already emiting
redundant `accountsChanged` events in some cases anyway.
Selecting a new account now results in all domains that can view this
change being notified. Previously only the dapp in the active tab was
being notified (though not correctly, as the `origin` was accidentally
set to the MetaMask chrome extension origin).
This handling of account selection has been moved into the background
to minimize the gap between account selection and the notification
being sent out. It's simpler for the UI to not be involved anyway.
Previously all browser globals were allowed to be used anywhere by
ESLint because we had set the `env` property to `browser` in the ESLint
config. This has made it easy to accidentally use browser globals
(e.g. #8338), so it has been removed. Instead we now have a short list
of allowed globals.
All browser globals are now accessed as properties on `window`.
Unfortunately this change resulted in a few different confusing unit
test errors, as some of our unit tests setup assumed that a particular
global would be used via `window` or `global`. In particular,
`window.fetch` didn't work correctly because it wasn't patched by the
AbortController polyfill (only `global.fetch` was being patched).
The `jsdom-global` package we were using complicated matters by setting
all of the JSDOM `window` properties directly on `global`, overwriting
the `AbortController` for example.
The `helpers.js` test setup module has been simplified somewhat by
removing `jsdom-global` and constructing the JSDOM instance manually.
The JSDOM window is set on `window`, and a few properties are set on
`global` as well as needed by various dependencies. `node-fetch` and
the AbortController polyfill/patch now work as expected as well,
though `fetch` is only available on `window` now.
The tests for the detect-tokens controller were nearly all broken. They
have been fixed, and a few improvements were made to controller itself
to help with this.
* The core `detectNewTokens` method has been updated to be async, so
that the caller can know when the operation had completed.
* The part of the function that used `Web3` to check the token balances
has been split into a separate function, so that that part could be
stubbed out in tests. Eventually we should test this using `ganache`
instead, but this was an easier first step.
* The internal `tokenAddresses` array is now initialized on
construction, rather than upon the first Preferences controller update.
The `detectNewTokens` function would have previously failed if it ran
prior to this initialization, so it was failing if called before any
preferences state changes.
Additionally, the `detectTokenBalance` function was removed, as it was
no longer used.
The tests have been updated to ensure they're actually testing the
behavior they purport to be testing. I've simulated a test failure with
each one to check that it'd fail when it should. The preferences
controller instance was updated to set addresses correctly as well.
Any action in the background that would have opened the notification
window will now focus the window instead if it was already open.
Previously it would leave the window unfocused. This was particularly
inconvenient when taking multiple actions in quick succession that all
require confirmations (e.g. triggering multiple transactions).
The notification manager has been refactored to use the extension
platform module instead of using `extensionizer` directly. The
extension platform API presents a more ergonomic API, and it correctly
handles errors (which the old notification manager did not). Methods
that the extension platform lacked have been added.
It has been updated to use `async/await` instead of callbacks as well,
for readability.
The `triggerUI` function has also been updated to use the extension
platform instead of `extensionizer`.
During the initialization of the full-screen or popup UI, we attempted
to close the notification popup (if it was open). This never worked (or
at least hasn't in a long time).
The method used to attempt closing the notification popup was
`closePopup` from the `notificationManager`, which keeps track
internally of the id of the notification popup window, and can close
the window by using this id.
However, this id is only set in the first place if the popup is opened
with this specific instance of the `notificationManager`. The popup is
never opened from the UI in practice; it's only opened from the
background (which has its own instance of `notificationManager`). The
popup id is never set for this `notificationManager` instance in the UI.
It's not entirely clear that we'd always want to close the notification
popup in this circumstance anyway. The user might want to open MetaMask
alongside the popup to check something else.
MetaMask would sometimes get into a state where the notification popup
would never open. This could happen if the notification window was
closed shortly after being opened. After this happened, no popups would
show up until after the extension was reset.
This was happening because the background thought the popup was already
open. The variable it uses to track whether the popup was open or not
was being set to `true` immediately after the background asked the
browser to open a new window, before a handler was attached that could
respond to the window being closed.
Removing this line seems to solve the problem.
This line was added originally in #5437, which dealt with batch
transactions. Batches of transactions seem to work just fine without
this line though (from local testing), and I can't think of why this
would be required.
Closes#7051
* Connect screen popup redesign
* Open permission request in notification instead of tab
* Remove no longer user locales
* Update permissions unit test mock to accout for change of opts passed to permissions controller
* Lint fix
* Inline broken line svg in permission-page-container-content.component.js for faster loading
* Add back button to second screen on connect flow
* Add xOfY locale and use for the page count in the connect flow
* Lint fix for svgs permission-page-container-content.component.js
* Fix rebase error
* Lint fix
* Clean up styles on the connect-screen-into-popup branch
* Use closeCurrentWindow to close window on cancel when in full screen connect flow
* Handle errors in rejectPermissionsRequest
* Full screen styles for connect flow
* Lint fixed in permissions-connect and actions.js
* Redirect screen now shows metamask icon instead of users identicon
* Fix subtitle spacing in permissions-connect-header'
* Use window.close instead of closeCurrentWindow() in cancelPermissionsRequest
* Use permissions-connect-header__subtitle in permissions-connect-header.component
We don't need to store the current UI type as a global. We're already
using the `getEnvironmentType` helper function throughout the UI, so
we'd might as well use that instead of this global state.
The sidebar used to speed up a transaction while it's pending or after
it has failed currently allows editing the gas limit, but that new
limit is ignored. This is especially problematic for transactions that
failed due to a low gas limit, as the problem becomes impossible to fix
by retrying.
The gas limit specified by the user is now used in the speed up
transaction.
Fixes#8156Fixes#7977
Errors without stack traces would break the Sentry error processing,
which assumes the presence of a stack trace. Many errors don't have any
stack trace though, such as uncaught promises.
This breakage resulting in the app state being missing from the error
report, and a console warning.