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metamask-extension/ui/helpers/utils/fetch-with-cache.test.js

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import nock from 'nock';
import sinon from 'sinon';
import { getStorageItem, setStorageItem } from './storage-helpers';
jest.mock('./storage-helpers.js', () => ({
getStorageItem: jest.fn(),
setStorageItem: jest.fn(),
}));
const fetchWithCache = require('./fetch-with-cache').default;
describe('Fetch with cache', () => {
afterEach(() => {
sinon.restore();
nock.cleanAll();
});
it('fetches a url', async () => {
nock('https://fetchwithcache.metamask.io')
.get('/price')
.reply(200, '{"average": 1}');
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const response = await fetchWithCache(
'https://fetchwithcache.metamask.io/price',
);
expect(response).toStrictEqual({
average: 1,
});
});
it('returns cached response', async () => {
nock('https://fetchwithcache.metamask.io')
.get('/price')
.reply(200, '{"average": 2}');
getStorageItem.mockReturnValueOnce({
Fix `fetch-with-cache` handling of interwoven requests (#10079) A data race was introduced in #9919 when the old synchronous storage API was replaced with an async storage API. The problem arises when `fetchWithCache` is called a second time while it's still processing another call. In this case, the `cachedFetch` object can become stale while blocked waiting for a fetch response, and result in a cache being overwritten unintentionally. See this example (options omitted for simplicity, and assuming an empty initial cache): ``` await Promise.all([ fetchWithCache('https://metamask.io/foo'), fetchWithCache('https://metamask.io/bar'), ] ``` The order of events could be as follows: 1. Empty cache retrieved for `/foo` route 2. Empty cache retrieved for `/bar` route 3. Call made to `/foo` route 4. Call made to `/bar` route 5. `/foo` response is added to the empty cache object retrieved in step 1, then is saved in the cache. 6. `/bar` response is added to the empty cache object retrieved in step 2, then is saved in the cache. In step 6, the cache object saved would not contain the `/foo` response set in step 5. As a result, `/foo` would never be cached. This problem was resolved by embedding the URL being cached directly in the cache key. This prevents simultaneous responses from overwriting each others caches. Technically a data race still exists when handing simultaneous responses to the same route, but the result would be that the last call to finish would overwrite the previous. This seems acceptable.
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cachedResponse: { average: 1 },
cachedTime: Date.now(),
});
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const response = await fetchWithCache(
'https://fetchwithcache.metamask.io/price',
);
expect(response).toStrictEqual({
average: 1,
});
});
it('fetches URL again after cache refresh time has passed', async () => {
nock('https://fetchwithcache.metamask.io')
.get('/price')
.reply(200, '{"average": 3}');
getStorageItem.mockReturnValueOnce({
Fix `fetch-with-cache` handling of interwoven requests (#10079) A data race was introduced in #9919 when the old synchronous storage API was replaced with an async storage API. The problem arises when `fetchWithCache` is called a second time while it's still processing another call. In this case, the `cachedFetch` object can become stale while blocked waiting for a fetch response, and result in a cache being overwritten unintentionally. See this example (options omitted for simplicity, and assuming an empty initial cache): ``` await Promise.all([ fetchWithCache('https://metamask.io/foo'), fetchWithCache('https://metamask.io/bar'), ] ``` The order of events could be as follows: 1. Empty cache retrieved for `/foo` route 2. Empty cache retrieved for `/bar` route 3. Call made to `/foo` route 4. Call made to `/bar` route 5. `/foo` response is added to the empty cache object retrieved in step 1, then is saved in the cache. 6. `/bar` response is added to the empty cache object retrieved in step 2, then is saved in the cache. In step 6, the cache object saved would not contain the `/foo` response set in step 5. As a result, `/foo` would never be cached. This problem was resolved by embedding the URL being cached directly in the cache key. This prevents simultaneous responses from overwriting each others caches. Technically a data race still exists when handing simultaneous responses to the same route, but the result would be that the last call to finish would overwrite the previous. This seems acceptable.
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cachedResponse: { average: 1 },
cachedTime: Date.now() - 1000,
});
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const response = await fetchWithCache(
'https://fetchwithcache.metamask.io/price',
{},
{ cacheRefreshTime: 123 },
);
expect(response).toStrictEqual({
average: 3,
});
});
it('should abort the request when the custom timeout is hit', async () => {
nock('https://fetchwithcache.metamask.io')
.get('/price')
.delay(100)
.reply(200, '{"average": 4}');
await expect(() =>
fetchWithCache(
'https://fetchwithcache.metamask.io/price',
{},
{ timeout: 20 },
),
).rejects.toThrow({ name: 'AbortError', message: 'Aborted' });
});
it('throws when the response is unsuccessful', async () => {
nock('https://fetchwithcache.metamask.io')
.get('/price')
.reply(500, '{"average": 6}');
await expect(() =>
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fetchWithCache('https://fetchwithcache.metamask.io/price'),
).rejects.toThrow('');
});
it('throws when a POST request is attempted', async () => {
nock('https://fetchwithcache.metamask.io')
.post('/price')
.reply(200, '{"average": 7}');
await expect(() =>
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fetchWithCache('https://fetchwithcache.metamask.io/price', {
method: 'POST',
}),
).rejects.toThrow('');
});
it('throws when the request has a truthy body', async () => {
nock('https://fetchwithcache.metamask.io')
.get('/price')
.reply(200, '{"average": 8}');
await expect(() =>
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fetchWithCache('https://fetchwithcache.metamask.io/price', { body: 1 }),
).rejects.toThrow('');
});
it('throws when the request has an invalid Content-Type header', async () => {
nock('https://fetchwithcache.metamask.io')
.get('/price')
.reply(200, '{"average": 9}');
await expect(() =>
fetchWithCache('https://fetchwithcache.metamask.io/price', {
headers: { 'Content-Type': 'text/plain' },
}),
).rejects.toThrow({
message: 'fetchWithCache only supports JSON responses',
});
});
Fix `fetch-with-cache` handling of interwoven requests (#10079) A data race was introduced in #9919 when the old synchronous storage API was replaced with an async storage API. The problem arises when `fetchWithCache` is called a second time while it's still processing another call. In this case, the `cachedFetch` object can become stale while blocked waiting for a fetch response, and result in a cache being overwritten unintentionally. See this example (options omitted for simplicity, and assuming an empty initial cache): ``` await Promise.all([ fetchWithCache('https://metamask.io/foo'), fetchWithCache('https://metamask.io/bar'), ] ``` The order of events could be as follows: 1. Empty cache retrieved for `/foo` route 2. Empty cache retrieved for `/bar` route 3. Call made to `/foo` route 4. Call made to `/bar` route 5. `/foo` response is added to the empty cache object retrieved in step 1, then is saved in the cache. 6. `/bar` response is added to the empty cache object retrieved in step 2, then is saved in the cache. In step 6, the cache object saved would not contain the `/foo` response set in step 5. As a result, `/foo` would never be cached. This problem was resolved by embedding the URL being cached directly in the cache key. This prevents simultaneous responses from overwriting each others caches. Technically a data race still exists when handing simultaneous responses to the same route, but the result would be that the last call to finish would overwrite the previous. This seems acceptable.
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it('should correctly cache responses from interwoven requests', async () => {
Fix `fetch-with-cache` handling of interwoven requests (#10079) A data race was introduced in #9919 when the old synchronous storage API was replaced with an async storage API. The problem arises when `fetchWithCache` is called a second time while it's still processing another call. In this case, the `cachedFetch` object can become stale while blocked waiting for a fetch response, and result in a cache being overwritten unintentionally. See this example (options omitted for simplicity, and assuming an empty initial cache): ``` await Promise.all([ fetchWithCache('https://metamask.io/foo'), fetchWithCache('https://metamask.io/bar'), ] ``` The order of events could be as follows: 1. Empty cache retrieved for `/foo` route 2. Empty cache retrieved for `/bar` route 3. Call made to `/foo` route 4. Call made to `/bar` route 5. `/foo` response is added to the empty cache object retrieved in step 1, then is saved in the cache. 6. `/bar` response is added to the empty cache object retrieved in step 2, then is saved in the cache. In step 6, the cache object saved would not contain the `/foo` response set in step 5. As a result, `/foo` would never be cached. This problem was resolved by embedding the URL being cached directly in the cache key. This prevents simultaneous responses from overwriting each others caches. Technically a data race still exists when handing simultaneous responses to the same route, but the result would be that the last call to finish would overwrite the previous. This seems acceptable.
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nock('https://fetchwithcache.metamask.io')
.get('/foo')
.reply(200, '{"average": 9}');
Fix `fetch-with-cache` handling of interwoven requests (#10079) A data race was introduced in #9919 when the old synchronous storage API was replaced with an async storage API. The problem arises when `fetchWithCache` is called a second time while it's still processing another call. In this case, the `cachedFetch` object can become stale while blocked waiting for a fetch response, and result in a cache being overwritten unintentionally. See this example (options omitted for simplicity, and assuming an empty initial cache): ``` await Promise.all([ fetchWithCache('https://metamask.io/foo'), fetchWithCache('https://metamask.io/bar'), ] ``` The order of events could be as follows: 1. Empty cache retrieved for `/foo` route 2. Empty cache retrieved for `/bar` route 3. Call made to `/foo` route 4. Call made to `/bar` route 5. `/foo` response is added to the empty cache object retrieved in step 1, then is saved in the cache. 6. `/bar` response is added to the empty cache object retrieved in step 2, then is saved in the cache. In step 6, the cache object saved would not contain the `/foo` response set in step 5. As a result, `/foo` would never be cached. This problem was resolved by embedding the URL being cached directly in the cache key. This prevents simultaneous responses from overwriting each others caches. Technically a data race still exists when handing simultaneous responses to the same route, but the result would be that the last call to finish would overwrite the previous. This seems acceptable.
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nock('https://fetchwithcache.metamask.io')
.get('/bar')
.reply(200, '{"average": 9}');
Fix `fetch-with-cache` handling of interwoven requests (#10079) A data race was introduced in #9919 when the old synchronous storage API was replaced with an async storage API. The problem arises when `fetchWithCache` is called a second time while it's still processing another call. In this case, the `cachedFetch` object can become stale while blocked waiting for a fetch response, and result in a cache being overwritten unintentionally. See this example (options omitted for simplicity, and assuming an empty initial cache): ``` await Promise.all([ fetchWithCache('https://metamask.io/foo'), fetchWithCache('https://metamask.io/bar'), ] ``` The order of events could be as follows: 1. Empty cache retrieved for `/foo` route 2. Empty cache retrieved for `/bar` route 3. Call made to `/foo` route 4. Call made to `/bar` route 5. `/foo` response is added to the empty cache object retrieved in step 1, then is saved in the cache. 6. `/bar` response is added to the empty cache object retrieved in step 2, then is saved in the cache. In step 6, the cache object saved would not contain the `/foo` response set in step 5. As a result, `/foo` would never be cached. This problem was resolved by embedding the URL being cached directly in the cache key. This prevents simultaneous responses from overwriting each others caches. Technically a data race still exists when handing simultaneous responses to the same route, but the result would be that the last call to finish would overwrite the previous. This seems acceptable.
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const testCache = {};
getStorageItem.mockImplementation((key) => testCache[key]);
setStorageItem.mockImplementation((key, value) => {
testCache[key] = value;
});
Fix `fetch-with-cache` handling of interwoven requests (#10079) A data race was introduced in #9919 when the old synchronous storage API was replaced with an async storage API. The problem arises when `fetchWithCache` is called a second time while it's still processing another call. In this case, the `cachedFetch` object can become stale while blocked waiting for a fetch response, and result in a cache being overwritten unintentionally. See this example (options omitted for simplicity, and assuming an empty initial cache): ``` await Promise.all([ fetchWithCache('https://metamask.io/foo'), fetchWithCache('https://metamask.io/bar'), ] ``` The order of events could be as follows: 1. Empty cache retrieved for `/foo` route 2. Empty cache retrieved for `/bar` route 3. Call made to `/foo` route 4. Call made to `/bar` route 5. `/foo` response is added to the empty cache object retrieved in step 1, then is saved in the cache. 6. `/bar` response is added to the empty cache object retrieved in step 2, then is saved in the cache. In step 6, the cache object saved would not contain the `/foo` response set in step 5. As a result, `/foo` would never be cached. This problem was resolved by embedding the URL being cached directly in the cache key. This prevents simultaneous responses from overwriting each others caches. Technically a data race still exists when handing simultaneous responses to the same route, but the result would be that the last call to finish would overwrite the previous. This seems acceptable.
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await Promise.all([
fetchWithCache(
'https://fetchwithcache.metamask.io/foo',
{},
{ cacheRefreshTime: 123 },
),
fetchWithCache(
'https://fetchwithcache.metamask.io/bar',
{},
{ cacheRefreshTime: 123 },
),
]);
Fix `fetch-with-cache` handling of interwoven requests (#10079) A data race was introduced in #9919 when the old synchronous storage API was replaced with an async storage API. The problem arises when `fetchWithCache` is called a second time while it's still processing another call. In this case, the `cachedFetch` object can become stale while blocked waiting for a fetch response, and result in a cache being overwritten unintentionally. See this example (options omitted for simplicity, and assuming an empty initial cache): ``` await Promise.all([ fetchWithCache('https://metamask.io/foo'), fetchWithCache('https://metamask.io/bar'), ] ``` The order of events could be as follows: 1. Empty cache retrieved for `/foo` route 2. Empty cache retrieved for `/bar` route 3. Call made to `/foo` route 4. Call made to `/bar` route 5. `/foo` response is added to the empty cache object retrieved in step 1, then is saved in the cache. 6. `/bar` response is added to the empty cache object retrieved in step 2, then is saved in the cache. In step 6, the cache object saved would not contain the `/foo` response set in step 5. As a result, `/foo` would never be cached. This problem was resolved by embedding the URL being cached directly in the cache key. This prevents simultaneous responses from overwriting each others caches. Technically a data race still exists when handing simultaneous responses to the same route, but the result would be that the last call to finish would overwrite the previous. This seems acceptable.
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expect(
Fix `fetch-with-cache` handling of interwoven requests (#10079) A data race was introduced in #9919 when the old synchronous storage API was replaced with an async storage API. The problem arises when `fetchWithCache` is called a second time while it's still processing another call. In this case, the `cachedFetch` object can become stale while blocked waiting for a fetch response, and result in a cache being overwritten unintentionally. See this example (options omitted for simplicity, and assuming an empty initial cache): ``` await Promise.all([ fetchWithCache('https://metamask.io/foo'), fetchWithCache('https://metamask.io/bar'), ] ``` The order of events could be as follows: 1. Empty cache retrieved for `/foo` route 2. Empty cache retrieved for `/bar` route 3. Call made to `/foo` route 4. Call made to `/bar` route 5. `/foo` response is added to the empty cache object retrieved in step 1, then is saved in the cache. 6. `/bar` response is added to the empty cache object retrieved in step 2, then is saved in the cache. In step 6, the cache object saved would not contain the `/foo` response set in step 5. As a result, `/foo` would never be cached. This problem was resolved by embedding the URL being cached directly in the cache key. This prevents simultaneous responses from overwriting each others caches. Technically a data race still exists when handing simultaneous responses to the same route, but the result would be that the last call to finish would overwrite the previous. This seems acceptable.
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testCache['cachedFetch:https://fetchwithcache.metamask.io/foo']
.cachedResponse,
).toStrictEqual({ average: 9 });
expect(
Fix `fetch-with-cache` handling of interwoven requests (#10079) A data race was introduced in #9919 when the old synchronous storage API was replaced with an async storage API. The problem arises when `fetchWithCache` is called a second time while it's still processing another call. In this case, the `cachedFetch` object can become stale while blocked waiting for a fetch response, and result in a cache being overwritten unintentionally. See this example (options omitted for simplicity, and assuming an empty initial cache): ``` await Promise.all([ fetchWithCache('https://metamask.io/foo'), fetchWithCache('https://metamask.io/bar'), ] ``` The order of events could be as follows: 1. Empty cache retrieved for `/foo` route 2. Empty cache retrieved for `/bar` route 3. Call made to `/foo` route 4. Call made to `/bar` route 5. `/foo` response is added to the empty cache object retrieved in step 1, then is saved in the cache. 6. `/bar` response is added to the empty cache object retrieved in step 2, then is saved in the cache. In step 6, the cache object saved would not contain the `/foo` response set in step 5. As a result, `/foo` would never be cached. This problem was resolved by embedding the URL being cached directly in the cache key. This prevents simultaneous responses from overwriting each others caches. Technically a data race still exists when handing simultaneous responses to the same route, but the result would be that the last call to finish would overwrite the previous. This seems acceptable.
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testCache['cachedFetch:https://fetchwithcache.metamask.io/bar']
.cachedResponse,
).toStrictEqual({ average: 9 });
});
});