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mirror of https://github.com/kremalicious/metamask-extension.git synced 2024-11-22 18:00:18 +01:00
metamask-extension/.circleci/config.yml

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2019-11-14 17:47:32 +01:00
version: 2.1
2018-03-09 21:47:01 +01:00
executors:
node-browsers:
docker:
- image: cimg/node:16.20-browsers
node-browsers-medium-plus:
docker:
- image: cimg/node:16.20-browsers
resource_class: medium+
environment:
NODE_OPTIONS: --max_old_space_size=2048
shellcheck:
docker:
2021-11-19 01:58:31 +01:00
- image: koalaman/shellcheck-alpine@sha256:dfaf08fab58c158549d3be64fb101c626abc5f16f341b569092577ae207db199
orbs:
gh: circleci/github-cli@2.0
codecov: codecov/codecov@3.2.2
rc_branch_only: &rc_branch_only
filters:
branches:
only:
- /^Version-v(\d+)[.](\d+)[.](\d+)/
2018-03-09 21:47:01 +01:00
workflows:
test_and_release:
2018-03-09 21:47:01 +01:00
jobs:
- create_release_pull_request:
<<: *rc_branch_only
requires:
- prep-deps
- trigger-beta-build:
requires:
- prep-deps
Switch from `npm` to `yarn` (#6843) As a solution to the constant lockfile churn issues we've had with `npm`, the project now uses `yarn` to manage dependencies. The `package-lock.json` file has been replaced with `yarn.lock`, which was created using `yarn import`. It should approximate the contents of `package-lock.json` fairly well, though there may be some changes due to deduplication. The codeowners file has been updated to reference this new lockfile. All documentation and npm scripts have been updated to reference `yarn` rather than `npm`. Note that running scripts using `npm run` still works fine, but it seemed better to switch those to `yarn` as well to avoid confusion. The `npm-audit` Bash script has been replaced with `yarn-audit`. The output of `yarn audit` is a bit different than `npm audit` in that it returns a bitmask to describe which severity issues were found. This made it simpler to check the results directly from the Bash script, so the associated `npm-audit-check.js` script was no longer required. The output should be exactly the same, and the information is still sourced from the same place (the npm registry). The new `yarn-audit` script does have an external dependency: `jq`. However, `jq` is already assumed to be present by another CI script, and is present on all CI images we use. `jq` was not added to `package.json` as a dependency because there is no official package on the npm registry, just wrapper scripts. We don't need it anywhere exept on CI anyway. The section in `CONTRIBUTING` about how to develop inside the `node_modules` folder was removed, as the advice was a bit dated, and wasn't specific to this project anyway.
2019-07-30 20:36:23 +02:00
- prep-deps
- test-deps-audit:
requires:
- prep-deps
- test-deps-depcheck:
requires:
- prep-deps
- test-yarn-dedupe:
requires:
- prep-deps
- validate-lavamoat-config:
filters:
branches:
only:
- /^Version-v(\d+)[.](\d+)[.](\d+)|master/
requires:
- prep-deps
2018-03-27 23:16:58 +02:00
- prep-build:
requires:
Switch from `npm` to `yarn` (#6843) As a solution to the constant lockfile churn issues we've had with `npm`, the project now uses `yarn` to manage dependencies. The `package-lock.json` file has been replaced with `yarn.lock`, which was created using `yarn import`. It should approximate the contents of `package-lock.json` fairly well, though there may be some changes due to deduplication. The codeowners file has been updated to reference this new lockfile. All documentation and npm scripts have been updated to reference `yarn` rather than `npm`. Note that running scripts using `npm run` still works fine, but it seemed better to switch those to `yarn` as well to avoid confusion. The `npm-audit` Bash script has been replaced with `yarn-audit`. The output of `yarn audit` is a bit different than `npm audit` in that it returns a bitmask to describe which severity issues were found. This made it simpler to check the results directly from the Bash script, so the associated `npm-audit-check.js` script was no longer required. The output should be exactly the same, and the information is still sourced from the same place (the npm registry). The new `yarn-audit` script does have an external dependency: `jq`. However, `jq` is already assumed to be present by another CI script, and is present on all CI images we use. `jq` was not added to `package.json` as a dependency because there is no official package on the npm registry, just wrapper scripts. We don't need it anywhere exept on CI anyway. The section in `CONTRIBUTING` about how to develop inside the `node_modules` folder was removed, as the advice was a bit dated, and wasn't specific to this project anyway.
2019-07-30 20:36:23 +02:00
- prep-deps
- prep-build-desktop:
filters:
branches:
ignore: master
requires:
- prep-deps
- prep-build-flask:
requires:
- prep-deps
- prep-build-test:
requires:
- prep-deps
- prep-build-test-mv3:
requires:
- prep-deps
- prep-build-test-flask:
requires:
- prep-deps
- prep-build-storybook:
requires:
2022-11-18 16:32:20 +01:00
- prep-deps
Add TypeScript migration dashboard (#13820) 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
2022-08-09 22:16:08 +02:00
- prep-build-ts-migration-dashboard:
requires:
- prep-deps
- test-lint:
2018-03-09 21:47:01 +01:00
requires:
Switch from `npm` to `yarn` (#6843) As a solution to the constant lockfile churn issues we've had with `npm`, the project now uses `yarn` to manage dependencies. The `package-lock.json` file has been replaced with `yarn.lock`, which was created using `yarn import`. It should approximate the contents of `package-lock.json` fairly well, though there may be some changes due to deduplication. The codeowners file has been updated to reference this new lockfile. All documentation and npm scripts have been updated to reference `yarn` rather than `npm`. Note that running scripts using `npm run` still works fine, but it seemed better to switch those to `yarn` as well to avoid confusion. The `npm-audit` Bash script has been replaced with `yarn-audit`. The output of `yarn audit` is a bit different than `npm audit` in that it returns a bitmask to describe which severity issues were found. This made it simpler to check the results directly from the Bash script, so the associated `npm-audit-check.js` script was no longer required. The output should be exactly the same, and the information is still sourced from the same place (the npm registry). The new `yarn-audit` script does have an external dependency: `jq`. However, `jq` is already assumed to be present by another CI script, and is present on all CI images we use. `jq` was not added to `package.json` as a dependency because there is no official package on the npm registry, just wrapper scripts. We don't need it anywhere exept on CI anyway. The section in `CONTRIBUTING` about how to develop inside the `node_modules` folder was removed, as the advice was a bit dated, and wasn't specific to this project anyway.
2019-07-30 20:36:23 +02:00
- prep-deps
- test-lint-shellcheck
2020-01-06 19:58:43 +01:00
- test-lint-lockfile:
requires:
- prep-deps
- test-lint-changelog:
requires:
- prep-deps
- test-e2e-chrome:
2018-05-28 18:22:48 +02:00
requires:
- prep-build-test
- test-e2e-firefox:
2018-05-28 18:22:48 +02:00
requires:
- prep-build-test
- test-e2e-chrome-snaps:
requires:
- prep-build-test-flask
- test-e2e-firefox-snaps:
requires:
- prep-build-test-flask
- test-e2e-chrome-mv3:
requires:
- prep-build-test-mv3
- test-unit-mocha:
requires:
Switch from `npm` to `yarn` (#6843) As a solution to the constant lockfile churn issues we've had with `npm`, the project now uses `yarn` to manage dependencies. The `package-lock.json` file has been replaced with `yarn.lock`, which was created using `yarn import`. It should approximate the contents of `package-lock.json` fairly well, though there may be some changes due to deduplication. The codeowners file has been updated to reference this new lockfile. All documentation and npm scripts have been updated to reference `yarn` rather than `npm`. Note that running scripts using `npm run` still works fine, but it seemed better to switch those to `yarn` as well to avoid confusion. The `npm-audit` Bash script has been replaced with `yarn-audit`. The output of `yarn audit` is a bit different than `npm audit` in that it returns a bitmask to describe which severity issues were found. This made it simpler to check the results directly from the Bash script, so the associated `npm-audit-check.js` script was no longer required. The output should be exactly the same, and the information is still sourced from the same place (the npm registry). The new `yarn-audit` script does have an external dependency: `jq`. However, `jq` is already assumed to be present by another CI script, and is present on all CI images we use. `jq` was not added to `package.json` as a dependency because there is no official package on the npm registry, just wrapper scripts. We don't need it anywhere exept on CI anyway. The section in `CONTRIBUTING` about how to develop inside the `node_modules` folder was removed, as the advice was a bit dated, and wasn't specific to this project anyway.
2019-07-30 20:36:23 +02:00
- prep-deps
- test-unit-jest-main:
requires:
- prep-deps
- test-unit-jest-development:
requires:
- prep-deps
- upload-and-validate-coverage:
requires:
- test-unit-jest-main
- test-unit-jest-development
- test-unit-mocha
- test-unit-global:
requires:
- prep-deps
- test-storybook:
requires:
- prep-deps
- prep-build-storybook
- validate-source-maps:
requires:
- prep-build
- validate-source-maps-beta:
requires:
- trigger-beta-build
- validate-source-maps-desktop:
filters:
branches:
ignore: master
requires:
- prep-build-desktop
- validate-source-maps-flask:
requires:
- prep-build-flask
2018-09-26 02:44:57 +02:00
- test-mozilla-lint:
requires:
Switch from `npm` to `yarn` (#6843) As a solution to the constant lockfile churn issues we've had with `npm`, the project now uses `yarn` to manage dependencies. The `package-lock.json` file has been replaced with `yarn.lock`, which was created using `yarn import`. It should approximate the contents of `package-lock.json` fairly well, though there may be some changes due to deduplication. The codeowners file has been updated to reference this new lockfile. All documentation and npm scripts have been updated to reference `yarn` rather than `npm`. Note that running scripts using `npm run` still works fine, but it seemed better to switch those to `yarn` as well to avoid confusion. The `npm-audit` Bash script has been replaced with `yarn-audit`. The output of `yarn audit` is a bit different than `npm audit` in that it returns a bitmask to describe which severity issues were found. This made it simpler to check the results directly from the Bash script, so the associated `npm-audit-check.js` script was no longer required. The output should be exactly the same, and the information is still sourced from the same place (the npm registry). The new `yarn-audit` script does have an external dependency: `jq`. However, `jq` is already assumed to be present by another CI script, and is present on all CI images we use. `jq` was not added to `package.json` as a dependency because there is no official package on the npm registry, just wrapper scripts. We don't need it anywhere exept on CI anyway. The section in `CONTRIBUTING` about how to develop inside the `node_modules` folder was removed, as the advice was a bit dated, and wasn't specific to this project anyway.
2019-07-30 20:36:23 +02:00
- prep-deps
2018-09-26 02:44:57 +02:00
- prep-build
- test-mozilla-lint-desktop:
filters:
branches:
ignore: master
requires:
- prep-deps
- prep-build-desktop
- test-mozilla-lint-flask:
requires:
- prep-deps
- prep-build-flask
- all-tests-pass:
requires:
- validate-lavamoat-config
- test-lint
- test-lint-shellcheck
2020-01-06 19:58:43 +01:00
- test-lint-lockfile
- test-lint-changelog
- test-unit-jest-main
- test-unit-jest-development
- test-unit-global
- test-unit-mocha
- upload-and-validate-coverage
- validate-source-maps
- validate-source-maps-beta
- validate-source-maps-desktop
- validate-source-maps-flask
2018-09-26 02:44:57 +02:00
- test-mozilla-lint
- test-mozilla-lint-desktop
- test-mozilla-lint-flask
- test-e2e-chrome
- test-e2e-firefox
- test-e2e-chrome-snaps
- test-e2e-firefox-snaps
- test-storybook
- benchmark:
requires:
- prep-build-test
- user-actions-benchmark:
requires:
- prep-build-test
2022-07-20 17:33:16 +02:00
- stats-module-load-init:
requires:
- prep-build-test-mv3
- job-publish-prerelease:
requires:
Switch from `npm` to `yarn` (#6843) As a solution to the constant lockfile churn issues we've had with `npm`, the project now uses `yarn` to manage dependencies. The `package-lock.json` file has been replaced with `yarn.lock`, which was created using `yarn import`. It should approximate the contents of `package-lock.json` fairly well, though there may be some changes due to deduplication. The codeowners file has been updated to reference this new lockfile. All documentation and npm scripts have been updated to reference `yarn` rather than `npm`. Note that running scripts using `npm run` still works fine, but it seemed better to switch those to `yarn` as well to avoid confusion. The `npm-audit` Bash script has been replaced with `yarn-audit`. The output of `yarn audit` is a bit different than `npm audit` in that it returns a bitmask to describe which severity issues were found. This made it simpler to check the results directly from the Bash script, so the associated `npm-audit-check.js` script was no longer required. The output should be exactly the same, and the information is still sourced from the same place (the npm registry). The new `yarn-audit` script does have an external dependency: `jq`. However, `jq` is already assumed to be present by another CI script, and is present on all CI images we use. `jq` was not added to `package.json` as a dependency because there is no official package on the npm registry, just wrapper scripts. We don't need it anywhere exept on CI anyway. The section in `CONTRIBUTING` about how to develop inside the `node_modules` folder was removed, as the advice was a bit dated, and wasn't specific to this project anyway.
2019-07-30 20:36:23 +02:00
- prep-deps
- prep-build
- trigger-beta-build
- prep-build-desktop
- prep-build-flask
- prep-build-storybook
Add TypeScript migration dashboard (#13820) 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
2022-08-09 22:16:08 +02:00
- prep-build-ts-migration-dashboard
2022-07-20 17:33:16 +02:00
- prep-build-test-mv3
- benchmark
- user-actions-benchmark
2022-07-20 17:33:16 +02:00
- stats-module-load-init
- all-tests-pass
2018-05-18 20:29:10 +02:00
- job-publish-release:
filters:
branches:
only: master
requires:
Switch from `npm` to `yarn` (#6843) As a solution to the constant lockfile churn issues we've had with `npm`, the project now uses `yarn` to manage dependencies. The `package-lock.json` file has been replaced with `yarn.lock`, which was created using `yarn import`. It should approximate the contents of `package-lock.json` fairly well, though there may be some changes due to deduplication. The codeowners file has been updated to reference this new lockfile. All documentation and npm scripts have been updated to reference `yarn` rather than `npm`. Note that running scripts using `npm run` still works fine, but it seemed better to switch those to `yarn` as well to avoid confusion. The `npm-audit` Bash script has been replaced with `yarn-audit`. The output of `yarn audit` is a bit different than `npm audit` in that it returns a bitmask to describe which severity issues were found. This made it simpler to check the results directly from the Bash script, so the associated `npm-audit-check.js` script was no longer required. The output should be exactly the same, and the information is still sourced from the same place (the npm registry). The new `yarn-audit` script does have an external dependency: `jq`. However, `jq` is already assumed to be present by another CI script, and is present on all CI images we use. `jq` was not added to `package.json` as a dependency because there is no official package on the npm registry, just wrapper scripts. We don't need it anywhere exept on CI anyway. The section in `CONTRIBUTING` about how to develop inside the `node_modules` folder was removed, as the advice was a bit dated, and wasn't specific to this project anyway.
2019-07-30 20:36:23 +02:00
- prep-deps
2018-05-18 20:29:10 +02:00
- prep-build
- prep-build-desktop
- prep-build-flask
2018-05-18 20:29:10 +02:00
- all-tests-pass
2020-02-08 20:56:33 +01:00
- job-publish-storybook:
filters:
branches:
only: develop
requires:
- prep-build-storybook
Add TypeScript migration dashboard (#13820) 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
2022-08-09 22:16:08 +02:00
- job-publish-ts-migration-dashboard:
filters:
branches:
only: develop
requires:
- prep-build-ts-migration-dashboard
2018-03-09 21:47:01 +01:00
2018-03-09 21:38:28 +01:00
jobs:
trigger-beta-build:
executor: node-browsers-medium-plus
steps:
- checkout
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- when:
condition:
not:
matches:
pattern: /^master$/
value: << pipeline.git.branch >>
steps:
- run:
name: Build beta prod
command: |
.circleci/scripts/trigger-beta-build.sh
- run:
name: Move beta build to 'dist-beta' to avoid conflict with production build
command: mv ./dist ./dist-beta
- run:
name: Move beta zips to 'builds-beta' to avoid conflict with production build
command: mv ./builds ./builds-beta
- persist_to_workspace:
root: .
paths:
- dist-beta
- builds-beta
create_release_pull_request:
executor: node-browsers
steps:
- checkout
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: Bump manifest version
command: .circleci/scripts/release-bump-manifest-version.sh
- run:
name: Update changelog
command: yarn update-changelog --rc
- run:
name: Commit changes
command: .circleci/scripts/release-commit-version-bump.sh
- run:
name: Create GitHub Pull Request for version
command: .circleci/scripts/release-create-release-pr.sh
Switch from `npm` to `yarn` (#6843) As a solution to the constant lockfile churn issues we've had with `npm`, the project now uses `yarn` to manage dependencies. The `package-lock.json` file has been replaced with `yarn.lock`, which was created using `yarn import`. It should approximate the contents of `package-lock.json` fairly well, though there may be some changes due to deduplication. The codeowners file has been updated to reference this new lockfile. All documentation and npm scripts have been updated to reference `yarn` rather than `npm`. Note that running scripts using `npm run` still works fine, but it seemed better to switch those to `yarn` as well to avoid confusion. The `npm-audit` Bash script has been replaced with `yarn-audit`. The output of `yarn audit` is a bit different than `npm audit` in that it returns a bitmask to describe which severity issues were found. This made it simpler to check the results directly from the Bash script, so the associated `npm-audit-check.js` script was no longer required. The output should be exactly the same, and the information is still sourced from the same place (the npm registry). The new `yarn-audit` script does have an external dependency: `jq`. However, `jq` is already assumed to be present by another CI script, and is present on all CI images we use. `jq` was not added to `package.json` as a dependency because there is no official package on the npm registry, just wrapper scripts. We don't need it anywhere exept on CI anyway. The section in `CONTRIBUTING` about how to develop inside the `node_modules` folder was removed, as the advice was a bit dated, and wasn't specific to this project anyway.
2019-07-30 20:36:23 +02:00
prep-deps:
executor: node-browsers
2018-03-09 21:38:28 +01:00
steps:
- checkout
- restore_cache:
keys:
# First try to get the specific cache for the checksum of the yarn.lock file.
# This cache key lookup will fail if the lock file is modified and a cache
# has not yet been persisted for the new checksum.
- dependency-cache-v1-{{ checksum "yarn.lock" }}
# To prevent having to do a full install of every node_module when
# dependencies change, restore from the last known cache of any
# branch/checksum, the install step will remove cached items that are no longer
# required and add the new dependencies, and the cache will be persisted.
- dependency-cache-v1-
- gh/install
- run:
name: Set IS_DRAFT environment variable
command: |
PR_NUMBER="${CIRCLE_PULL_REQUEST##*/}"
if [ -n "$PR_NUMBER" ]
then
echo "IS_DRAFT=$(gh pr view --json isDraft --jq '.isDraft' "$PR_NUMBER")" >> "$BASH_ENV"
source "$BASH_ENV"
else
echo "Not a PR; skipping"
fi
- run:
name: Setup registry config for using package previews on draft PRs
command: |
if [[ $IS_DRAFT == 'true' ]]
then
printf '%s\n\n%s' '@metamask:registry=https://npm.pkg.github.com' "//npm.pkg.github.com/:_authToken=${GITHUB_PACKAGE_READ_TOKEN}" > .npmrc
else
echo "Not draft; skipping GitHub registry setup"
fi
- run:
Switch from `npm` to `yarn` (#6843) As a solution to the constant lockfile churn issues we've had with `npm`, the project now uses `yarn` to manage dependencies. The `package-lock.json` file has been replaced with `yarn.lock`, which was created using `yarn import`. It should approximate the contents of `package-lock.json` fairly well, though there may be some changes due to deduplication. The codeowners file has been updated to reference this new lockfile. All documentation and npm scripts have been updated to reference `yarn` rather than `npm`. Note that running scripts using `npm run` still works fine, but it seemed better to switch those to `yarn` as well to avoid confusion. The `npm-audit` Bash script has been replaced with `yarn-audit`. The output of `yarn audit` is a bit different than `npm audit` in that it returns a bitmask to describe which severity issues were found. This made it simpler to check the results directly from the Bash script, so the associated `npm-audit-check.js` script was no longer required. The output should be exactly the same, and the information is still sourced from the same place (the npm registry). The new `yarn-audit` script does have an external dependency: `jq`. However, `jq` is already assumed to be present by another CI script, and is present on all CI images we use. `jq` was not added to `package.json` as a dependency because there is no official package on the npm registry, just wrapper scripts. We don't need it anywhere exept on CI anyway. The section in `CONTRIBUTING` about how to develop inside the `node_modules` folder was removed, as the advice was a bit dated, and wasn't specific to this project anyway.
2019-07-30 20:36:23 +02:00
name: Install deps
2018-07-06 06:32:12 +02:00
command: |
.circleci/scripts/deps-install.sh
- save_cache:
key: dependency-cache-v1-{{ checksum "yarn.lock" }}
paths:
- .yarn/cache
- persist_to_workspace:
root: .
paths:
- node_modules
- build-artifacts
2018-03-09 23:58:02 +01:00
validate-lavamoat-config:
executor: node-browsers-medium-plus
steps:
- checkout
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: Validate allow-scripts config
command: |
.circleci/scripts/validate-allow-scripts.sh
- run:
name: Validate LavaMoat policy
command: |
.circleci/scripts/validate-lavamoat-policy.sh
2018-03-27 23:16:58 +02:00
prep-build:
executor: node-browsers-medium-plus
2018-03-27 23:16:58 +02:00
steps:
- checkout
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- when:
condition:
not:
matches:
pattern: /^master$/
value: << pipeline.git.branch >>
steps:
- run:
name: build:dist
command: yarn build dist
- when:
condition:
matches:
pattern: /^master$/
value: << pipeline.git.branch >>
steps:
- run:
name: build:prod
command: yarn build prod
2018-03-27 23:16:58 +02:00
- run:
name: build:debug
command: find dist/ -type f -exec md5sum {} \; | sort -k 2
- persist_to_workspace:
root: .
2018-03-27 23:16:58 +02:00
paths:
- dist
- builds
prep-build-desktop:
executor: node-browsers-medium-plus
steps:
- checkout
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: build:dist
command: yarn build --build-type desktop dist
- run:
name: build:debug
command: find dist/ -type f -exec md5sum {} \; | sort -k 2
- run:
name: Move desktop build to 'dist-desktop' to avoid conflict with production build
command: mv ./dist ./dist-desktop
- run:
name: Move desktop zips to 'builds-desktop' to avoid conflict with production build
command: mv ./builds ./builds-desktop
- persist_to_workspace:
root: .
paths:
- dist-desktop
- builds-desktop
prep-build-flask:
executor: node-browsers-medium-plus
steps:
- checkout
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- when:
condition:
not:
matches:
pattern: /^master$/
value: << pipeline.git.branch >>
steps:
- run:
name: build:dist
command: yarn build --build-type flask dist
- when:
condition:
matches:
pattern: /^master$/
value: << pipeline.git.branch >>
steps:
- run:
name: build:prod
command: yarn build --build-type flask prod
- run:
name: build:debug
command: find dist/ -type f -exec md5sum {} \; | sort -k 2
- run:
name: Move flask build to 'dist-flask' to avoid conflict with production build
command: mv ./dist ./dist-flask
- run:
name: Move flask zips to 'builds-flask' to avoid conflict with production build
command: mv ./builds ./builds-flask
- persist_to_workspace:
root: .
paths:
- dist-flask
- builds-flask
prep-build-test-flask:
executor: node-browsers-medium-plus
steps:
- checkout
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: Build extension for testing
command: yarn build:test:flask
- run:
name: Move test build to 'dist-test' to avoid conflict with production build
command: mv ./dist ./dist-test-flask
- run:
name: Move test zips to 'builds-test' to avoid conflict with production build
command: mv ./builds ./builds-test-flask
- persist_to_workspace:
root: .
paths:
- dist-test-flask
- builds-test-flask
prep-build-test-mv3:
executor: node-browsers-medium-plus
steps:
- checkout
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: Build extension in mv3 for testing
command: yarn build:test:mv3
- run:
name: Move test build to 'dist-test' to avoid conflict with production build
command: mv ./dist ./dist-test-mv3
- run:
name: Move test zips to 'builds-test' to avoid conflict with production build
command: mv ./builds ./builds-test-mv3
- persist_to_workspace:
root: .
paths:
- dist-test-mv3
- builds-test-mv3
prep-build-test:
executor: node-browsers-medium-plus
steps:
- checkout
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: Build extension for testing
command: yarn build:test
- run:
name: Move test build to 'dist-test' to avoid conflict with production build
command: mv ./dist ./dist-test
- run:
name: Move test zips to 'builds-test' to avoid conflict with production build
command: mv ./builds ./builds-test
- persist_to_workspace:
root: .
paths:
- dist-test
- builds-test
2020-02-08 20:56:33 +01:00
prep-build-storybook:
executor: node-browsers-medium-plus
2020-02-08 20:56:33 +01:00
steps:
- checkout
2020-02-08 20:56:33 +01:00
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: Build Storybook
command: yarn storybook:build
- persist_to_workspace:
root: .
paths:
- storybook-build
Add TypeScript migration dashboard (#13820) 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
2022-08-09 22:16:08 +02:00
prep-build-ts-migration-dashboard:
executor: node-browsers
steps:
- checkout
Add TypeScript migration dashboard (#13820) 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
2022-08-09 22:16:08 +02:00
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: Build TypeScript migration dashboard
command: yarn ts-migration:dashboard:build
- persist_to_workspace:
root: .
paths:
- development/ts-migration-dashboard/build/final
Add TypeScript migration dashboard (#13820) 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
2022-08-09 22:16:08 +02:00
test-yarn-dedupe:
executor: node-browsers
steps:
- checkout
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: Detect yarn lock deduplications
command: yarn dedupe --check
test-lint:
executor: node-browsers
2018-03-09 21:38:28 +01:00
steps:
- checkout
- attach_workspace:
at: .
2018-03-09 21:38:28 +01:00
- run:
name: Lint
Switch from `npm` to `yarn` (#6843) As a solution to the constant lockfile churn issues we've had with `npm`, the project now uses `yarn` to manage dependencies. The `package-lock.json` file has been replaced with `yarn.lock`, which was created using `yarn import`. It should approximate the contents of `package-lock.json` fairly well, though there may be some changes due to deduplication. The codeowners file has been updated to reference this new lockfile. All documentation and npm scripts have been updated to reference `yarn` rather than `npm`. Note that running scripts using `npm run` still works fine, but it seemed better to switch those to `yarn` as well to avoid confusion. The `npm-audit` Bash script has been replaced with `yarn-audit`. The output of `yarn audit` is a bit different than `npm audit` in that it returns a bitmask to describe which severity issues were found. This made it simpler to check the results directly from the Bash script, so the associated `npm-audit-check.js` script was no longer required. The output should be exactly the same, and the information is still sourced from the same place (the npm registry). The new `yarn-audit` script does have an external dependency: `jq`. However, `jq` is already assumed to be present by another CI script, and is present on all CI images we use. `jq` was not added to `package.json` as a dependency because there is no official package on the npm registry, just wrapper scripts. We don't need it anywhere exept on CI anyway. The section in `CONTRIBUTING` about how to develop inside the `node_modules` folder was removed, as the advice was a bit dated, and wasn't specific to this project anyway.
2019-07-30 20:36:23 +02:00
command: yarn lint
- run:
name: Verify locales
command: yarn verify-locales --quiet
test-storybook:
executor: node-browsers-medium-plus
steps:
- checkout
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: Install Playwright browsers
command: yarn exec playwright install
- run:
name: Test Storybook
command: yarn test-storybook:ci
test-lint-shellcheck:
executor: shellcheck
steps:
- checkout
- run: apk add --no-cache bash jq yarn
- run:
2020-09-21 22:08:15 +02:00
name: ShellCheck Lint
command: ./development/shellcheck.sh
2020-01-06 19:58:43 +01:00
test-lint-lockfile:
executor: node-browsers
2020-01-06 19:58:43 +01:00
steps:
- checkout
2020-01-06 19:58:43 +01:00
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: lockfile-lint
command: yarn lint:lockfile
test-lint-changelog:
executor: node-browsers
steps:
- checkout
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- when:
condition:
not:
matches:
pattern: /^Version-v(\d+)[.](\d+)[.](\d+)$/
value: << pipeline.git.branch >>
steps:
- run:
name: Validate changelog
command: yarn lint:changelog
- when:
condition:
matches:
pattern: /^Version-v(\d+)[.](\d+)[.](\d+)$/
value: << pipeline.git.branch >>
steps:
- run:
name: Validate release candidate changelog
command: .circleci/scripts/validate-changelog-in-rc.sh
test-deps-audit:
executor: node-browsers
2019-06-06 17:56:27 +02:00
steps:
- checkout
2019-06-06 17:56:27 +02:00
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
Switch from `npm` to `yarn` (#6843) As a solution to the constant lockfile churn issues we've had with `npm`, the project now uses `yarn` to manage dependencies. The `package-lock.json` file has been replaced with `yarn.lock`, which was created using `yarn import`. It should approximate the contents of `package-lock.json` fairly well, though there may be some changes due to deduplication. The codeowners file has been updated to reference this new lockfile. All documentation and npm scripts have been updated to reference `yarn` rather than `npm`. Note that running scripts using `npm run` still works fine, but it seemed better to switch those to `yarn` as well to avoid confusion. The `npm-audit` Bash script has been replaced with `yarn-audit`. The output of `yarn audit` is a bit different than `npm audit` in that it returns a bitmask to describe which severity issues were found. This made it simpler to check the results directly from the Bash script, so the associated `npm-audit-check.js` script was no longer required. The output should be exactly the same, and the information is still sourced from the same place (the npm registry). The new `yarn-audit` script does have an external dependency: `jq`. However, `jq` is already assumed to be present by another CI script, and is present on all CI images we use. `jq` was not added to `package.json` as a dependency because there is no official package on the npm registry, just wrapper scripts. We don't need it anywhere exept on CI anyway. The section in `CONTRIBUTING` about how to develop inside the `node_modules` folder was removed, as the advice was a bit dated, and wasn't specific to this project anyway.
2019-07-30 20:36:23 +02:00
name: yarn audit
command: .circleci/scripts/yarn-audit.sh
2018-05-02 20:05:39 +02:00
test-deps-depcheck:
executor: node-browsers
steps:
- checkout
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: depcheck
command: yarn depcheck
test-e2e-chrome:
executor: node-browsers
parallelism: 8
2018-05-28 18:22:48 +02:00
steps:
- checkout
- run:
name: Re-Install Chrome
command: ./.circleci/scripts/chrome-install.sh
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: Move test build to dist
command: mv ./dist-test ./dist
- run:
name: Move test zips to builds
command: mv ./builds-test ./builds
2018-05-28 18:22:48 +02:00
- run:
name: test:e2e:chrome
command: |
if .circleci/scripts/test-run-e2e.sh
then
yarn test:e2e:chrome --retries 2
fi
no_output_timeout: 20m
2023-02-08 15:34:44 +01:00
- run:
name: Merge JUnit report
command: |
if [ "$(ls -A test/test-results/e2e)" ]; then
yarn test:e2e:report
fi
2023-02-22 15:40:55 +01:00
when: always
2018-05-28 18:22:48 +02:00
- store_artifacts:
path: test-artifacts
destination: test-artifacts
2023-02-08 15:34:44 +01:00
- store_test_results:
path: test/test-results/e2e.xml
test-e2e-chrome-mv3:
executor: node-browsers
parallelism: 8
steps:
- checkout
- run:
name: Re-Install Chrome
command: ./.circleci/scripts/chrome-install.sh
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: Move test build to dist
command: mv ./dist-test-mv3 ./dist
- run:
name: Move test zips to builds
command: mv ./builds-test-mv3 ./builds
- run:
name: test:e2e:chrome
command: |
if .circleci/scripts/test-run-e2e.sh
then
yarn test:e2e:chrome --retries 2 --mv3 || echo "Temporarily suppressing MV3 e2e test failures"
fi
no_output_timeout: 20m
- store_artifacts:
path: test-artifacts
destination: test-artifacts
2018-05-28 18:22:48 +02:00
test-e2e-firefox-snaps:
executor: node-browsers
parallelism: 4
steps:
- checkout
- run:
name: Install Firefox
command: ./.circleci/scripts/firefox-install.sh
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: Move test build to dist
command: mv ./dist-test-flask ./dist
- run:
name: Move test zips to builds
command: mv ./builds-test-flask ./builds
- run:
name: test:e2e:firefox:snaps
command: |
if .circleci/scripts/test-run-e2e.sh
then
yarn test:e2e:firefox:snaps --retries 2
fi
no_output_timeout: 20m
2023-02-08 15:34:44 +01:00
- run:
name: Merge JUnit report
command: |
if [ "$(ls -A test/test-results/e2e)" ]; then
yarn test:e2e:report
fi
2023-02-22 15:40:55 +01:00
when: always
- store_artifacts:
path: test-artifacts
destination: test-artifacts
2023-02-08 15:34:44 +01:00
- store_test_results:
path: test/test-results/e2e.xml
test-e2e-chrome-snaps:
executor: node-browsers
parallelism: 4
steps:
- checkout
- run:
name: Re-Install Chrome
command: ./.circleci/scripts/chrome-install.sh
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: Move test build to dist
command: mv ./dist-test-flask ./dist
- run:
name: Move test zips to builds
command: mv ./builds-test-flask ./builds
- run:
name: test:e2e:chrome:snaps
command: |
if .circleci/scripts/test-run-e2e.sh
then
yarn test:e2e:chrome:snaps --retries 2
fi
no_output_timeout: 20m
2023-02-08 15:34:44 +01:00
- run:
name: Merge JUnit report
command: |
if [ "$(ls -A test/test-results/e2e)" ]; then
yarn test:e2e:report
fi
2023-02-22 15:40:55 +01:00
when: always
- store_artifacts:
path: test-artifacts
destination: test-artifacts
2023-02-08 15:34:44 +01:00
- store_test_results:
path: test/test-results/e2e.xml
test-e2e-firefox:
executor: node-browsers-medium-plus
parallelism: 8
2018-05-28 18:22:48 +02:00
steps:
- checkout
2018-05-28 18:22:48 +02:00
- run:
name: Install Firefox
command: ./.circleci/scripts/firefox-install.sh
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: Move test build to dist
command: mv ./dist-test ./dist
- run:
name: Move test zips to builds
command: mv ./builds-test ./builds
2018-05-28 18:22:48 +02:00
- run:
name: test:e2e:firefox
command: |
if .circleci/scripts/test-run-e2e.sh
then
yarn test:e2e:firefox --retries 2
fi
no_output_timeout: 20m
2023-02-08 15:34:44 +01:00
- run:
name: Merge JUnit report
command: |
if [ "$(ls -A test/test-results/e2e)" ]; then
yarn test:e2e:report
fi
2023-02-22 15:40:55 +01:00
when: always
2018-05-28 18:22:48 +02:00
- store_artifacts:
path: test-artifacts
destination: test-artifacts
2023-02-08 15:34:44 +01:00
- store_test_results:
path: test/test-results/e2e.xml
2018-05-28 18:22:48 +02:00
benchmark:
executor: node-browsers-medium-plus
steps:
- checkout
- run:
name: Re-Install Chrome
command: ./.circleci/scripts/chrome-install.sh
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: Move test build to dist
command: mv ./dist-test ./dist
- run:
name: Move test zips to builds
command: mv ./builds-test ./builds
- run:
name: Run page load benchmark
command: yarn benchmark:chrome --out test-artifacts/chrome/benchmark/pageload.json --retries 2
- store_artifacts:
path: test-artifacts
destination: test-artifacts
- persist_to_workspace:
root: .
paths:
- test-artifacts
user-actions-benchmark:
executor: node-browsers-medium-plus
steps:
- checkout
- run:
name: Re-Install Chrome
command: ./.circleci/scripts/chrome-install.sh
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: Move test build to dist
command: mv ./dist-test ./dist
- run:
name: Move test zips to builds
command: mv ./builds-test ./builds
- run:
name: Run page load benchmark
command: yarn user-actions-benchmark:chrome --out test-artifacts/chrome/benchmark/user_actions.json --retries 2
- store_artifacts:
path: test-artifacts
destination: test-artifacts
- persist_to_workspace:
root: .
paths:
- test-artifacts
2022-07-20 17:33:16 +02:00
stats-module-load-init:
executor: node-browsers-medium-plus
steps:
- checkout
2022-07-20 17:33:16 +02:00
- run:
name: Re-Install Chrome
command: ./.circleci/scripts/chrome-install.sh
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: Move test build to dist
command: mv ./dist-test-mv3 ./dist
- run:
name: Move test zips to builds
command: mv ./builds-test-mv3 ./builds
- run:
name: Run page load benchmark
command: |
mkdir -p test-artifacts/chrome/mv3
cp -R development/charts/flamegraph test-artifacts/chrome/mv3/initialisation
cp -R development/charts/flamegraph/chart test-artifacts/chrome/mv3/initialisation/background
cp -R development/charts/flamegraph/chart test-artifacts/chrome/mv3/initialisation/ui
cp -R development/charts/table test-artifacts/chrome/mv3/load_time
- run:
name: Run page load benchmark
command: yarn mv3:stats:chrome --out test-artifacts/chrome/mv3
- run:
name: Install jq
command: sudo apt install jq -y
Bundlesize stats over time (#15209) * Adding tasks for MV3 test build * more changes * fix * fix * fix * MV3 CI fixes * fixes * fix * Initial work to capture the logs, write to file, and parse it. Signed-off-by: Akintayo A. Olusegun <akintayo.segun@gmail.com> * chrome debug logs * Pull logs from webdriver and save to json file. Signed-off-by: Akintayo A. Olusegun <akintayo.segun@gmail.com> * comment out stats stuffs Signed-off-by: Akintayo A. Olusegun <akintayo.segun@gmail.com> * Lint Fixes Signed-off-by: Akintayo A. Olusegun <akintayo.segun@gmail.com> * Remove console.log Signed-off-by: Akintayo A. Olusegun <akintayo.segun@gmail.com> * fixes * Adding build artifact for initialisation time * change * fix lint * fix * fix * fix * fix * fixes * Capturing load time stats * fix * fix * fix * fix * fix build * fix * fix * fix * fix * fix * Initial work to capture the logs, write to file, and parse it. Signed-off-by: Akintayo A. Olusegun <akintayo.segun@gmail.com> * chrome debug logs * Pull logs from webdriver and save to json file. Signed-off-by: Akintayo A. Olusegun <akintayo.segun@gmail.com> * comment out stats stuffs Signed-off-by: Akintayo A. Olusegun <akintayo.segun@gmail.com> * Lint Fixes Signed-off-by: Akintayo A. Olusegun <akintayo.segun@gmail.com> * Remove console.log Signed-off-by: Akintayo A. Olusegun <akintayo.segun@gmail.com> * fix * fix * fix * fix * Initial work to capture the logs, write to file, and parse it. Signed-off-by: Akintayo A. Olusegun <akintayo.segun@gmail.com> chrome debug logs Pull logs from webdriver and save to json file. Signed-off-by: Akintayo A. Olusegun <akintayo.segun@gmail.com> Remove console.log Signed-off-by: Akintayo A. Olusegun <akintayo.segun@gmail.com> split output of lavamoat to 2 files. background and ui Signed-off-by: Akintayo A. Olusegun <akintayo.segun@gmail.com> * fix * fix * fix * Enable logging to chrome_debug only if in MV3 Signed-off-by: Akintayo A. Olusegun <akintayo.segun@gmail.com> * fix * fix * fix * fixes * fix * fix * fix * fix * fixes * test * test * fix * fix * MV3 bundle size stats * fix * Committing bundle size status to extension_bundlesize_stats repo * fix * fix * fix * fix * fix * fix * fix * fix * fix * fix * Initial commit * Initial commit * Initial commit * Initial commit * fixes * fix * fix * fix * fix * fix * fix Co-authored-by: Akintayo A. Olusegun <akintayo.segun@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: PeterYinusa <peter.yinusa@consensys.net>
2022-07-22 00:25:18 +02:00
- run:
name: Record bundle size at commit
command: ./.circleci/scripts/bundle-stats-commit.sh
2022-07-20 17:33:16 +02:00
- store_artifacts:
path: test-artifacts
destination: test-artifacts
- persist_to_workspace:
root: .
paths:
- test-artifacts
job-publish-prerelease:
executor: node-browsers
steps:
- checkout
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: build:source-map-explorer
command: ./development/source-map-explorer.sh
- store_artifacts:
path: dist/sourcemaps
destination: builds/sourcemaps
- store_artifacts:
path: dist-beta/sourcemaps
destination: builds-beta/sourcemaps
- store_artifacts:
path: dist-flask/sourcemaps
destination: builds-flask/sourcemaps
- store_artifacts:
path: builds
destination: builds
- store_artifacts:
path: builds-beta
destination: builds-beta
- store_artifacts:
path: builds-flask
destination: builds-flask
- store_artifacts:
path: coverage
destination: coverage
2018-03-30 10:01:16 +02:00
- store_artifacts:
path: test-artifacts
destination: test-artifacts
# important: generate lavamoat viz AFTER uploading builds as artifacts
# Temporarily disabled until we can update to a version of `sesify` with
# this fix included: https://github.com/LavaMoat/LavaMoat/pull/121
- run:
name: build:lavamoat-viz
command: ./.circleci/scripts/create-lavamoat-viz.sh
- store_artifacts:
path: build-artifacts
destination: build-artifacts
- store_artifacts:
path: storybook-build
destination: storybook
Add TypeScript migration dashboard (#13820) 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
2022-08-09 22:16:08 +02:00
- store_artifacts:
path: development/ts-migration-dashboard/build/final
Add TypeScript migration dashboard (#13820) 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
2022-08-09 22:16:08 +02:00
destination: ts-migration-dashboard
- run:
name: Set branch parent commit env var
command: |
echo "export PARENT_COMMIT=$(git merge-base origin/HEAD HEAD)" >> $BASH_ENV
source $BASH_ENV
- run:
name: build:announce
command: ./development/metamaskbot-build-announce.js
2018-05-18 20:29:10 +02:00
job-publish-release:
executor: node-browsers
2018-05-18 20:29:10 +02:00
steps:
- checkout
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: Publish main release to Sentry
command: yarn sentry:publish
- run:
name: Publish Flask release to Sentry
command: yarn sentry:publish --build-type flask
- run:
name: Create GitHub release
command: |
.circleci/scripts/release-create-gh-release.sh
2020-02-08 20:56:33 +01:00
job-publish-storybook:
executor: node-browsers
2020-02-08 20:56:33 +01:00
steps:
- add_ssh_keys:
fingerprints:
- '3d:49:29:f4:b2:e8:ea:af:d1:32:eb:2a:fc:15:85:d8'
- checkout
2020-02-08 20:56:33 +01:00
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: storybook:deploy
command: |
git remote add storybook git@github.com:MetaMask/metamask-storybook.git
yarn storybook:deploy
2018-03-30 10:01:16 +02:00
Add TypeScript migration dashboard (#13820) 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
2022-08-09 22:16:08 +02:00
job-publish-ts-migration-dashboard:
executor: node-browsers
steps:
- add_ssh_keys:
fingerprints:
- '8b:21:e3:20:7c:c9:db:82:74:2d:86:d6:11:a7:2f:49'
- checkout
Add TypeScript migration dashboard (#13820) 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
2022-08-09 22:16:08 +02:00
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: ts-migration-dashboard:deploy
command: |
git remote add ts-migration-dashboard git@github.com:MetaMask/metamask-extension-ts-migration-dashboard.git
git config user.name "MetaMask Bot"
git config user.email metamaskbot@users.noreply.github.com
Add TypeScript migration dashboard (#13820) 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
2022-08-09 22:16:08 +02:00
yarn ts-migration:dashboard:deploy
test-unit-mocha:
executor: node-browsers-medium-plus
steps:
- checkout
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
Permission System 2.0 (#12243) # Permission System 2.0 ## Background This PR migrates the extension permission system to [the new `PermissionController`](https://github.com/MetaMask/snaps-skunkworks/tree/main/packages/controllers/src/permissions). The original permission system, based on [`rpc-cap`](https://github.com/MetaMask/rpc-cap), introduced [`ZCAP-LD`](https://w3c-ccg.github.io/zcap-ld/)-like permissions to our JSON-RPC stack. We used it to [implement](https://github.com/MetaMask/metamask-extension/pull/7004) what we called "LoginPerSite" in [version 7.7.0](https://github.com/MetaMask/metamask-extension/releases/tag/v7.7.0) of the extension, which enabled the user to choose which accounts, if any, should be exposed to each dapp. While that was a worthwhile feature in and of itself, we wanted a permission _system_ in order to enable everything we are going to with Snaps. Unfortunately, the original permission system was difficult to use, and necessitated the creation of the original `PermissionsController` (note the "s"), which was more or less a wrapper for `rpc-cap`. With this PR, we shake off the yoke of the original permission system, in favor of the modular, self-contained, ergonomic, and more mature permission system 2.0. Note that [the `PermissionController` readme](https://github.com/MetaMask/snaps-skunkworks/tree/main/packages/controllers/src/permissions/README.md) explains how the new permission system works. The `PermissionController` and `SubjectMetadataController` are currently shipped via `@metamask/snap-controllers`. This is a temporary state of affairs, and we'll move them to `@metamask/controllers` once they've landed in prod. ## Changes in Detail First, the changes in this PR are not as big as they seem. Roughly half of the additions in this PR are fixtures in the test for the new migration (number 68), and a significant portion of the remaining ~2500 lines are due to find-and-replace changes in other test fixtures and UI files. - The extension `PermissionsController` has been deleted, and completely replaced with the new `PermissionController` from [`@metamask/snap-controllers`](https://www.npmjs.com/package/@metamask/snap-controllers). - The original `PermissionsController` "domain metadata" functionality is now managed by the new `SubjectMetadataController`, also from [`@metamask/snap-controllers`](https://www.npmjs.com/package/@metamask/snap-controllers). - The permission activity and history log controller has been renamed `PermissionLogController` and has its own top-level state key, but is otherwise functionally equivalent to the existing implementation. - Migration number 68 has been added to account for the new state changes. - The tests in `app/scripts/controllers/permissions` have been migrated from `mocha` to `jest`. Reviewers should focus their attention on the following files: - `app/scripts/` - `metamask-controller.js` - This is where most of the integration work for the new `PermissionController` occurs. Some functions that were internal to the original controller were moved here. - `controllers/permissions/` - `selectors.js` - These selectors are for `ControllerMessenger` selector subscriptions. The actual subscriptions occur in `metamask-controller.js`. See the `ControllerMessenger` implementation for details. - `specifications.js` - The caveat and permission specifications are required by the new `PermissionController`, and are used to specify the `eth_accounts` permission and its JSON-RPC method implementation. See the `PermissionController` readme for details. - `migrations/068.js` - The new state should be cross-referenced with the controllers that manage it. The accompanying tests should also be thoroughly reviewed. Some files may appear new but have just moved and/or been renamed: - `app/scripts/lib/rpc-method-middleware/handlers/request-accounts.js` - This was previously implemented in `controllers/permissions/permissionsMethodMiddleware.js`. - `test/mocks/permissions.js` - A truncated version of `test/mocks/permission-controller.js`. Co-authored-by: Mark Stacey <markjstacey@gmail.com>
2021-12-07 04:16:49 +01:00
name: test:coverage:mocha
command: yarn test:coverage:mocha
- persist_to_workspace:
root: .
paths:
- .nyc_output
- coverage
test-unit-jest-development:
executor: node-browsers
steps:
- checkout
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: jest development unit tests
command: yarn test:coverage:jest:dev
- persist_to_workspace:
root: .
paths:
- coverage
- store_test_results:
path: test/test-results/junit.xml
test-unit-jest-main:
executor: node-browsers-medium-plus
parallelism: 12
steps:
- checkout
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: test:coverage:jest
command: yarn test:coverage:jest
2019-08-14 15:11:01 +02:00
- persist_to_workspace:
root: .
paths:
- coverage
- store_test_results:
path: test/test-results/junit.xml
upload-and-validate-coverage:
executor: node-browsers
steps:
- checkout
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- codecov/upload
- run:
name: test:coverage:validate
command: yarn test:coverage:validate
- persist_to_workspace:
root: .
paths:
- coverage
test-unit-global:
executor: node-browsers
steps:
- checkout
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: test:unit:global
command: yarn test:unit:global
validate-source-maps:
executor: node-browsers
steps:
- checkout
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: Validate source maps
command: yarn validate-source-maps
validate-source-maps-beta:
executor: node-browsers
steps:
- checkout
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: Validate source maps
command: |
.circleci/scripts/validate-source-maps-beta.sh
validate-source-maps-desktop:
executor: node-browsers
steps:
- checkout
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: Move desktop build to dist
command: mv ./dist-desktop ./dist
- run:
name: Move desktop zips to builds
command: mv ./builds-desktop ./builds
- run:
name: Validate source maps
command: yarn validate-source-maps
validate-source-maps-flask:
executor: node-browsers
steps:
- checkout
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: Move flask build to dist
command: mv ./dist-flask ./dist
- run:
name: Move flask zips to builds
command: mv ./builds-flask ./builds
- run:
name: Validate source maps
command: yarn validate-source-maps
2018-09-26 02:44:57 +02:00
test-mozilla-lint:
executor: node-browsers
2018-09-26 02:44:57 +02:00
steps:
- checkout
2018-09-26 02:44:57 +02:00
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: test:mozilla-lint
Switch from `npm` to `yarn` (#6843) As a solution to the constant lockfile churn issues we've had with `npm`, the project now uses `yarn` to manage dependencies. The `package-lock.json` file has been replaced with `yarn.lock`, which was created using `yarn import`. It should approximate the contents of `package-lock.json` fairly well, though there may be some changes due to deduplication. The codeowners file has been updated to reference this new lockfile. All documentation and npm scripts have been updated to reference `yarn` rather than `npm`. Note that running scripts using `npm run` still works fine, but it seemed better to switch those to `yarn` as well to avoid confusion. The `npm-audit` Bash script has been replaced with `yarn-audit`. The output of `yarn audit` is a bit different than `npm audit` in that it returns a bitmask to describe which severity issues were found. This made it simpler to check the results directly from the Bash script, so the associated `npm-audit-check.js` script was no longer required. The output should be exactly the same, and the information is still sourced from the same place (the npm registry). The new `yarn-audit` script does have an external dependency: `jq`. However, `jq` is already assumed to be present by another CI script, and is present on all CI images we use. `jq` was not added to `package.json` as a dependency because there is no official package on the npm registry, just wrapper scripts. We don't need it anywhere exept on CI anyway. The section in `CONTRIBUTING` about how to develop inside the `node_modules` folder was removed, as the advice was a bit dated, and wasn't specific to this project anyway.
2019-07-30 20:36:23 +02:00
command: NODE_OPTIONS=--max_old_space_size=3072 yarn mozilla-lint
test-mozilla-lint-desktop:
executor: node-browsers
steps:
- checkout
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: Move desktop build to dist
command: mv ./dist-desktop ./dist
- run:
name: Move desktop zips to builds
command: mv ./builds-desktop ./builds
- run:
name: test:mozilla-lint
command: NODE_OPTIONS=--max_old_space_size=3072 yarn mozilla-lint
test-mozilla-lint-flask:
executor: node-browsers
steps:
- checkout
- attach_workspace:
at: .
- run:
name: Move flask build to dist
command: mv ./dist-flask ./dist
- run:
name: Move flask zips to builds
command: mv ./builds-flask ./builds
- run:
name: test:mozilla-lint
command: NODE_OPTIONS=--max_old_space_size=3072 yarn mozilla-lint
all-tests-pass:
executor: node-browsers
steps:
- run:
name: All Tests Passed
command: echo 'weew - everything passed!'