* feat(878): implement new incoming transaction toggle networks for setting and onboarding
* Update state snapshots
* feat(878): change gaps, migration types based on comment
---------
Co-authored-by: Mark Stacey <markjstacey@gmail.com>
This commit fulfills a long-standing desire to get the extension using
the same network controller as mobile by removing NetworkController from
this repo and replacing it with NetworkController from the
`@metamask/network-controller` package.
The new version of NetworkController is different the old one in a few
ways:
- The new controller inherits from BaseControllerV2, so the `state`
property is used to access the state instead of `store.getState()`.
All references of the latter have been replaced with the former.
- As the new controller no longer has a `store` property, it cannot be
subscribed to; the controller takes a messenger which can be
subscribed to instead. There were various places within
MetamaskController where the old way of subscribing has been replaced
with the new way. In addition, DetectTokensController has been updated
to take a messenger object so that it can listen for NetworkController
state changes.
- The state of the new controller is not updatable from the outside.
This affected BackupController, which dumps state from
NetworkController (among other controllers), but also loads the same
state into NetworkController on import. A method `loadBackup` has been
added to NetworkController to facilitate this use case, and
BackupController is now using this method instead of attempting to
call `update` on NetworkController.
- The new controller does not have a `getCurrentChainId` method;
instead, the chain ID can be read from the provider config in state.
This affected MmiController. (MmiController was also updated to read
custom networks from the new network controller instead of the
preferences controller).
- The default network that the new controller is set to is always
Mainnet (previously it could be either localhost or Goerli in test
mode, depending on environment variables). This has been addressed
by feeding the NetworkController initial state using the old logic, so
this should not apply.
In the `core` version of this controller, event types are not held in an
enum but are specified directly as strings instead.
Simplifying the event types will make it easier to compare the
NetworkController unit tests between extension and core.
* Rename `provider` to `providerConfig`
The network controller `provider` state has been renamed to
`providerConfig`. This better reflects what this state is, and makes
this controller more closely aligned with the core network controller.
All references to the provider configuration have been updated to
prefer `providerConfig` over `provider`, to make the distinction clear
between a provider and provider config.
Closes#18902
* Add migration
The network controller method `setProviderType` is now async, and the
async operation `_setProviderConfig` called at the end of the method is
now awaited.
Because the only async operation was the last step, this should have no
impact upon the flow of execution. The only functional change is that
now any callers have the option of waiting until the network switch
operation has completed.
One such change was made, in the `switch-ethereum-chain` middleware. As
a result, an error thrown while the network is switching will now
be thrown in this middleware and returned to the dapp as an internal
error.
Relates to https://github.com/MetaMask/metamask-extension/issues/18587
Converting this controller to TypeScript furthers the goal of getting
this whole codebase converted, of course, but it also helps in comparing
the differences between this version of the NetworkController and the
version in the `core` repo more easily, which will ultimately help us in
coalescing the two implementations.
Co-authored-by: Mark Stacey <markjstacey@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: legobeat <109787230+legobeat@users.noreply.github.com>
The `network` store of the network controller crams two types of data
into one place. It roughly tracks whether we have enough information to
make requests to the network and whether the network is capable of
receiving requests, but it also stores the ID of the network (as
obtained via `net_version`).
Generally we shouldn't be using the network ID for anything, as it has
been completely replaced by chain ID, which all custom RPC endpoints
have been required to support for over a year now. However, as the
network ID is used in various places within the extension codebase,
removing it entirely would be a non-trivial effort. So, minimally, this
commit splits `network` into two stores: `networkId` and
`networkStatus`. But it also expands the concept of network status.
Previously, the network was in one of two states: "loading" and
"not-loading". But now it can be in one of four states:
- `available`: The network is able to receive and respond to requests.
- `unavailable`: The network is not able to receive and respond to
requests for unknown reasons.
- `blocked`: The network is actively blocking requests based on the
user's geolocation. (This is specific to Infura.)
- `unknown`: We don't know whether the network can receive and respond
to requests, either because we haven't checked or we tried to check
and were unsuccessful.
This commit also changes how the network status is determined —
specifically, how many requests are used to determine that status, when
they occur, and whether they are awaited. Previously, the network
controller would make 2 to 3 requests during the course of running
`lookupNetwork`.
* First, if it was an Infura network, it would make a request for
`eth_blockNumber` to determine whether Infura was blocking requests or
not, then emit an appropriate event. This operation was not awaited.
* Then, regardless of the network, it would fetch the network ID via
`net_version`. This operation was awaited.
* Finally, regardless of the network, it would fetch the latest block
via `eth_getBlockByNumber`, then use the result to determine whether
the network supported EIP-1559. This operation was awaited.
Now:
* One fewer request is made, specifically `eth_blockNumber`, as we don't
need to make an extra request to determine whether Infura is blocking
requests; we can reuse `eth_getBlockByNumber`;
* All requests are awaited, which makes `lookupNetwork` run fully
in-band instead of partially out-of-band; and
* Both requests for `net_version` and `eth_getBlockByNumber` are
performed in parallel to make `lookupNetwork` run slightly faster.
Currently, the network controller notifies consumers about events by
emitting them directly from the controller. In order to migrate the
controller to the core repo, where controllers use the BaseControllerV2
interface, events should be emitted via a messenger object.
This commit updates the network controller to use a messenger, and then
updates all of the controllers that listen for network events to use the
messenger as well.
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 `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>
* Migrate to new controller packages
`@metamask/controllers` is deprecated, and most of the controllers that
lived here are now located in their own package ([1]). This commit
replaces `@metamask/controllers` in `package.json` with references to
these packages and updates `import` lines to match.
[1]: https://github.com/MetaMask/controllers/pull/831
* Support GitHub registry for draft PRs (#16549)
* Add additional allowed host to lockfile linter
* Update LavaMoat policies
* Add policy exception for nanoid
* Add additional nanoid overrides
* Update LavaMoat policies again
* Bump controller packages
* Update lavamoat
* Bump controller packages
* Update packages to v1.0.0
* Expand gitignore comment
* Unpin controller dependencies, using ^ range instead
Co-authored-by: Mark Stacey <markjstacey@gmail.com>
* 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>
* using the aggregators from tokenList instead of detectedToken to avoid conflicts between static and dynamic list
* removing aggregator from the detectTokens object List
* addding the legacy tokenlist, tuning token detection OFF by default, adding new message while importing tokens
updating the controller version and calling detectNewToken on network change
fixing rebase error
Run yarn lavamoat:auto for updating policies
updating lavamoat
Deleted node modules and run again lavamoat auto
fixing rebase issues
updating lavamoat policies
updating lavamoat after rebasing
policies
updating custom token warning and blocking detectedtoken link when tpken detection is off for supported networks
to update the token in fetchTosync
updating the contract map object
Revert build-system lavamoat policy changes
Move token list selection logic from components to getTokenList selector
updating the tokenList
Update lavamoat
Fix error
updating lavamoat
lint fix
fix unit test fail
fix unit test fail
lint fix
fixing rebase locale error
rebase fix
Revert build-system policy changes
temp
addressing review comments
* rebase fix
* add erc-721 token detection and flag to disable sending
* addressing feedback
* remove redundant provider instantiation
* fix issue caused by unprotected destructuring
* add tests and documentation
* move add isERC721 flag to useTokenTracker hook
* Update and unit tests
* use memoizedTokens in useTokenTracker
Co-authored-by: Dan Miller <danjm.com@gmail.com>
The `assert` module has two modes: "Legacy" and "strict". When using
strict mode, the "strict" version of each assertion method is implied.
Whereas in legacy mode, by default it will use the deprecated, "loose"
version of each assertion.
We now use strict mode everywhere. A few tests required updates where
they were asserting the wrong thing, and it was passing beforehand due
to the loose matching.