Any methods in the Ethereum JSON-RPC spec are now included in our
network client tests. These tests were skipped previously because they
are not supported by Infura.
Closes#16938
* Add tests for `retryOnEmpty` middleware
Tests have been added for the `retryOnEmpty` middleware.
This middleware is only used on the Infura network client, so the tests
that demonstrate this retry behavior are only enabled for the `infura`
provider type.
Most of the tests added were to cover cases where the retry middleware
is skipped, so they were applicable for both provider types.
Closes#17004
* Improve readability of block number tests
The test cases for passing a block number parameter have been made more
readable. Specifically, a comment has been added each time params are
built to call attention to the block parameter and what value it has,
so that it's clear whether it's larger or smaller than the current
block number.
Additionally the blocks for "less than the current block number" and
"equal to the current block number" have been combined using
`describe.each`.
Tests have been added to ensure that our middleware will not return a
cached response to a request with unique parameters. Each parameter
supported by each method is tested independently.
Closes#17003
The network controller unit test network mocks are now setup for each
test. This makes modifying network behavior on a per-test basis easier,
and makes it more clear which test relies upon which mocks.
The network controller is now constructed within each network
controller unit test, rather than in the `beforeEach`. This allows us
to customize the constructor options in each test, which some planned
future tests will require.
The controller is constructed with a helper function that also handles
calling `destroy` after each test, even if the test failed. This helps
to prevent tests from affecting each other.
Co-authored-by: Elliot Winkler <elliot.winkler@gmail.com>
This test was testing a function that was only present in the test
module.
The function under test was mistakenly moved here when it was
discovered that it wasn't being used elsewhere, under the assumption
that it was used in these tests. I hadn't realized it was being tested
directly.
The network controller unit tests now use network mocks rather than
mocking controller methods.
This makes the tests less brittle, as they will no longer break when
internal changes to the `_getLatestBlock` method are made.
The network controller unit tests have been updated to wait until the
network controller is fully initialized before proceeding. This ensures
that the initialization doesn't have any side-effects that affect later
tests.
The NetworkController `destroy` method has been updated to ensure that
it no longer throws if called before initialization.
This method was added recently in #17032, but we forgot to handle the
case where the controller was not initialized.
The `initializeProvider` parameters were removed recently in #16863,
but they were still being set in tests. They have now been removed.
An unused property was also being set in the tests, which has now also
been removed.
The "MetaMask middleware" is the set of middleware for handling methods that
we don't send to the network. This includes signing, encryption, `getAccounts`,
and methods that rely on pending transaction state.
Previously this middleware was setup as part of the network client, despite
having nothing to do with the network. They have been moved into the main RPC
pipeline established in `metamask-controller.js` instead.
This is a pure refactor, and should have no functional changes. The middleware
are still run in exactly the same order with the same arguments.
Previously we had written tests for `createInfuraClient`, which creates a middleware stack designed to connect to an Infura provider. These tests exercise various RPC methods that relate to the behavior that the middleware provides (mainly around caching).
Now we need to write the same tests but for `createJsonRpcClient`, which creates a middleware stack designed to connect to a non-Infura RPC endpoint. To do this, we had to:
- Consolidate the tests for both types of RPC client into a single test file.
- Add conditions around tests or assertions in tests to account for differences in behavior between the two sets of middleware stacks.
- Relocate code in `createJsonRpcClient` which slows down `eth_estimateGas` calls just for tests so that this behavior can be disabled in the network client tests.
Eventually, as we unify the network controllers in this repo and in the core repo, we will move these tests into the core repo.
Co-authored-by: Elliot Winkler <elliot.winkler@gmail.com>
Our middleware for handling subscription and filter-related methods (`eth-json-rpc-filters`) currently lives in our RPC pipeline ahead of the network stack. This commit moves this middleware to the network client middleware instead. There are two reasons for this change. First, this middleware wraps RPC methods that are supported by the network. Second, it is necessary for this middleware to live with the network client so that it will aid us in unifying the NetworkController in this repo and the NetworkController in the `controllers` repo.
Co-authored-by: Elliot Winkler <elliot.winkler@gmail.com>
The network controller module has been renamed from `network.js` to
`network-controller.js`. All of our newer controllers have "controller"
in the module names, so this aligns better with that convention. It
also brings the test module name into alignment (it's already called
"network-controller.test.js").
* Make `initializeProvider` and `lookupNetwork` async
These two methods were "synchronous" previously, but initiated an
asynchronous operation. They have both been made `async` to bring them
more in-line with the mobile controller API, and to make them easier
to test.
This should include zero functional changes. These methods are still
being invoked without an `await`, to preserve the same behaviour they
had previously.
This relates to https://github.com/MetaMask/controllers/issues/971
* Move 'net_version' query to private function
* Fix error made when resolving conflicts
* Refactor to improve readability
This commit affects the network client tests, which were added in a
previous PR to test the behavior of `createInfuraClient`, a function
called that sets up a portion of the middleware stack in the JSON-RPC
layer.
An `if` statement appears in the tests which limits the execution of
certain tests. However, this seems to have been added for debugging
purposes and is not actually needed.
Co-authored-by: Brad Decker <bhdecker84@gmail.com>
Five network controller methods have been renamed to start with an
underscore:
* `getLatestBlock`
* `setNetworkState`
* `setNetworkEIPSupport`
* `clearNetworkDetails`
* `setProviderConfig`
All of these methods were used solely within the network controller.
The leading underscore now documents these methods as being private.
A few tests required updates as well because they were stubbing out one
of these methods.
This should include zero functional changes.
This relates to https://github.com/MetaMask/controllers/issues/971
The network controller method `setProviderType` was marked as `async`
despite doing nothing async internally. The `async` has been dropped.
This should have zero functional impact.
This relates to https://github.com/MetaMask/controllers/issues/971
The network controller `setInfuraProjectId` method has been deleted.
The Infura project ID is only ever set upon construction, so it is now
passed in as a constructor parameter instead.
Rather than adding this as a second parameter, the network controller
now uses an "options bag" for constructor parameters. The initial state
was the first parameter, but it's now passed in as the `state` option
instead.
These changes make the API more similar to the mobile network
controller API.
This should have zero functional changes.
This relates to https://github.com/MetaMask/controllers/issues/971
Co-authored-by: legobeat <109787230+legobeat@users.noreply.github.com>
* Fix shared mocks in RPC network client test
Some of the provider api unit tests were inadvertently sharing test
mocks. A `params` object used for mock RPC calls was being shared
between tests and between calls within individual tests. They have been
updated to generate a fresh `params` object for each mock RPC call.
* Explicitly set blockParam to undefined
This update includes fixes for our `block-ref` and `retry-on-empty`
middleware.
The `block-ref` middleware resolves the block reference `latest` to a
specific block number, the latest one we are aware of. This is meant to
protect against situations where the network gives inconsistent answers
for what the latest block number is due to some nodes being out-of-sync
with each other (this was a frequent problem years ago with Infura).
It was broken in that the `latest` resolution was failing, and we were
submitting an additional redundant request to Infura for each request.
The `retry-on-empty` middleware is meant to retry certain methods
when they return an empty response. This was also meant to deal with
network synchronization issues that were more common years ago. This
middleware works by making a "child" request over and over until either
a retry limit is reached, or a non-empty response is received.
It was broken in that the final response recieved was thrown away, so
it's as though the middleware was not used. Except that it did result
in additional redundant network requests.
As a result of this update we should see that the extension is more
resilient to certain network synchronization issues. But this is
difficult to test, and these issues may not happen in production
anymore today.
We should see a reduction in requests to Infura as well. This should
be easier to test.
Add tests for the `block-tracker-inspector` middleware — which makes
sure that the block tracker never has a reference to the latest block
which is less than a block number that shows up in an RPC method's
response — and the Infura middleware — which takes care of sending the
request to Infura, and will retry the request up to 5 times if Infura
sends back a certain type of error.
Note that the `retry-on-empty` middleware is not tested because it
currently has a [bug][1] which is making it ineffective.
[1]: https://github.com/MetaMask/eth-json-rpc-middleware/issues/139
* Deprecating Rinkeby, setting default debug network to Goerli
* Deprecating Ropsten and Kovan
* Conflict fix
* Remove unused localization, test fixes
* Add migration for moving used deprecated testnets to custom networks
* Fix migrator test
* Add more unit tests
* Migration updates provider type to rpc if deprecated network is selected
* Migration fully and correctly updates the provider if selected network is a deprecated testnet
* Continue to show deprecation warning on each of rinkeby, ropsten and kovan
* Add rpcUrl deprecation message to loading screen
* Removing mayBeFauceting prop
Co-authored-by: Dan Miller <danjm.com@gmail.com>
We are working on migrating the extension to a unified network
controller, but before we do so we want to extract some of the existing
pieces, specifically `createInfuraClient` and `createJsonRpcClient`,
which provide the majority of the behavior exhibited within the provider
API that the existing NetworkController exposes. This necessitates that
we understand and test that behavior as a whole.
With that in mind, this commit starts with the Infura-specific network
client and adds some initial functional tests for `createInfuraClient`,
specifically covering three pieces of middleware provided by
`eth-json-rpc-middleware`: `createNetworkAndChainIdMiddleware`,
`createBlockCacheMiddleware`, and `createBlockRefMiddleware`.
These tests exercise logic that originate from multiple different places
and combine in sometimes surprising ways, and as a result, understanding
the nature of the tests can be tricky. I've tried to explain the logic
(both of the implementation and the tests) via comments. Additionally,
debugging why a certain test is failing is not the most fun thing in the
world, so to aid with this, I've added some logging to the underlying
packages used when a request passes through the middleware stack.
Because some middleware change the request being made, or make new
requests altogether, this greatly helps to peel back the curtain, as
failures from Nock do not supply much meaningful information on their
own. This logging is disabled by default, but can be activated by
setting `DEBUG=metamask:*,eth-query DEBUG_COLORS=1` alongside the `jest`
command.
We use this logging by bumping `eth-block-tracker`, and
`eth-json-rpc-middleware`.
* Update `eth-json-rpc-infura`
The package `eth-json-rpc-infura@5` has been updated to
`@metamask/eth-json-rpc-infura@7`. This update includes TypeScript
support, and it drops support for older node.js versions. The exports
have also been changed from default to named exports.
See here for a full list of changes: https://github.com/MetaMask/eth-json-rpc-infura/blob/main/CHANGELOG.md#700
* Fix LavaMoat policy issue
The `web3` package used by `@metamask/controllers` unintentionally
overwrites the `XMLHttpRequest` global, which breaks things. This was
fixed by revoking `web3`'s write access to that global using a policy
override.
Previously this policy override was applied to `web3`, but for some
unknown reason, this update caused that override to no longer apply.
* set more appropriate default for ticker symbol when wallet_addEthereumChain is called
* throw error to dapp when site suggests network with same chainId but different ticker symbol from already added network, instead of showing error and disabled notification to user
ESLint rules have been added to enforce our JSDoc conventions. These
rules were introduced by updating `@metamask/eslint-config` to v9.
Some of the rules have been disabled because the effort to fix all lint
errors was too high. It might be easiest to enable these rules one
directory at a time, or one rule at a time.
Most of the changes in this PR were a result of running
`yarn lint:fix`. There were a handful of manual changes that seemed
obvious and simple to make. Anything beyond that and the rule was left
disabled.
A propType error was showing up during e2e tests with a `testDev`
build. It was caused by `process.env.IN_TEST` being treated as a
boolean, when in fact it is either the string `'true'` or a boolean.
`IN_TEST` has been updated to always be a boolean. `loose-envify` has
no trouble injecting boolean values, so there's no reason to treat this
as a string.
We're bumping from `^6` to `^8`. All imports are now named, and they have been updated. This is a breaking change, in that support for `eth_signTransaction` is added in `^8.0.0`. We do not support this method in our UI, so our middleware stack has been instrumented to reject.
In addition, there are some non-breaking behavioral changes in this version that reviewers should be aware of, see the [7.0.0 release](https://github.com/MetaMask/eth-json-rpc-middleware/releases).
* Replace hardcoded sent ether label on confirm screen
* replace transaction type SENT_ETHER with network agnostic SENDING_NATIVE_ASSET
* remove sentEther translation base
* make backwards compatible with lingering transaction of legacy sentEther type
* update localalization files
* fixup legacy sentEther transaction type
* changing new transaction type away from localization string
* revert migration tests
* update fixtures and test data
* update name of new transaction type
* add migration
* remove legacy SENT_ETHER from transaction types enum object
Fixing up tests and add back old custom gas modal for non-eip1559 compliant networks
Remove unnecessary props from send-gas-row.component
fix breaking test
Fix primary and secondary title overrides
fix rebase issue
Fix rebase conflict
Co-authored-by: David Walsh <davidwalsh83@gmail.com>
* Fix a check for EIP presense
* Add support for Polygon
* Update default Polygon URL
* Trigger Build
* Use a more user-friendly error message for disabled Swaps API calls
Only the first parameter, `type`, was ever passed in. The others are
superfluous. The defaults have been set directly instead.
It's a bit silly to set the `rpcUrl` and `nickname` to an empty string,
but to make this more sensible would take much more effort. This at
least is simpler and guaranteed to be equivalent.