A `debug` flag has been added to our e2e test runner scripts, enabling
e2e debug logs. When this flag is enabled, all driver interactions will
be logged to the console. This is extremely useful when debugging e2e
tests, because it lets you known how far the test had progressed before
failing.
This flag should work with all existing e2e test scripts, including
both `test:e2e:single` and all of the test commands that run entire
test suites.
The README has been updated to reference this flag in the section
regarding how to run a single e2e test. To ensure this wasn't totally
missed for the other scripts, I added a line suggesting that users use
`--help` to see all supported options.
This PR converts `generate-lavamoat-policies.sh` to `.js` using Yargs. This makes it easier to only generate policy files for a specific build type (using the `-t` flag), which is often useful during Flask development. In addition, the `lavamoat:background:auto` scripts are renamed, and the main readme is updated with some useful tips.
Note that `lavamoat:background:auto:dev` is removed and `lavamoat:background:auto` should be used during local development.
* Updated README with improvements
* Fix table spacing
* remove argument from flag
Co-authored-by: Mark Stacey <markjstacey@gmail.com>
* Rephrased chrome version sentence
Co-authored-by: Mark Stacey <markjstacey@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Mark Stacey <markjstacey@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: David Walsh <davidwalsh83@gmail.com>
The instructions in the README about how to use Redux DevTools with
MetaMask have been incorrect since #10687, which removed the dependency
`remotedev-server` that this integration requires.
The instructions have been updated to explain that this now must be
installed globally for Redux DevTools to work, and for the command
`yarn start:dev` to work.
Fixes#10770
The instructions for changing dependencies have been updated to include
the `yarn yarn-deduplicate` step. This command removes duplicate
dependencies in the lockfile where possible while keeping everything
in-range, and it's checked in CI in the `test-yarn-dedupe` job that was
added in #12737.
This PR adds one LavaMoat background script policy or each build type. It also renames the build system policy directory from `node` to `build-system` to make its purpose more clear. Each build type has the original `policy-override.json` for `main` builds. The `.prettierignore` file has been updated to match the locations of the new auto-generated policy files.
We need to maintain separate policies for each build type because each type will produce different bundles with different internal and external modules.
Co-authored-by: Mark Stacey <markjstacey@gmail.com>
The npm scripts used to run Mocha scripts have been greatly simplified.
As we transition more tests from Mocha to Jest it was becoming
increasingly difficult to update the CLI arguments to keep all of these
scripts working correctly. This reorganization should make that process
much simpler.
The base Mocha options are in `.mocharc.js` - all except for the target
tests to run. Those are still given via the CLI. There is a second
config file specifically for the `test:unit:lax` tests (i.e. the Mocha
tests that have no coverage requirements) because it requires a change
to the `ignored` configuration property. We can create an additional
configuration file for each test script we add that needs further
configuration changes.
The `test:unit:path` script used to be used to run Mocha tests at a
given path. Now that can be done using `yarn mocha` instead, so this
script has been removed.
The `yarn watch` command has been broken for some time now, so it has
been removed as well. Mocha tests can still be run with a file watcher
using `yarn mocha --watch <path>` or `yarn test:unit:mocha --watch`.
The README has been updated to remove references about the `watch`
command that was removed. I considered explaining the other test
scripts there as well, but they were difficult to explain I will
attempt to update the README after making further simplifications
instead.
Fixes#12149.
Although remotedev.io was the official URL for https://github.com/zalmoxisus/remote-redux-devtools, it looks like a phishing/adult website has taken it over.
I've replaced the link with the homepage Redux Devtools Extension in the `redux-devtools` monorepo,
(same link as on the Chrome extension page)
since that has a link to install `remote-redux-devtools` if need be.
This rationalizes how arguments are passed to and parsed by the build system. To accomplish this, everything that isn't an environment variable from `.metamaskrc` or our CI environment is now passed as an argument on the command line.
Of such arguments, the `entryTask` is still expected as a positional argument in the first position (i.e. `process.argv[2]`), but everything else must be passed as a named argument. We use `minimist` to parse the arguments, and set defaults to preserve existing behavior.
Arguments are parsed in a new function, `parseArgv`, in `development/build/index.js`. They are assigned to environment variables where convenient, and otherwise returned from `parseArgv` to be passed to other functions invoked in the same file.
This change is motivated by our previous inconsistent handling of arguments to the build system, which will grow increasingly problematic as the build system grows in complexity. (Which it will very shortly, as we introduce Flask builds.)
Miscellaneous changes:
- Adds a build system readme at `development/build/README.md`
- Removes the `beta` package script. Now, we can instead call: `yarn dist --build-type beta`
- Fixes the casing of some log messages and reorders some parameters in the build system
The contributor documentation in the README has been improved in
various ways:
* There is now a dedicated section for development builds under
'Contributing', rather than this being under 'Building locally'
* Additional unit test and linting commands have been documented
* Instructions for running e2e tests have been added
* Instructions on how to handle dependency changes have been added,
to accommodate recent changes relating to `allow-scripts` and
`LavaMoat`.
The Community Forum is now linked in the README. The sections for
general questions, feature requests, and developer questions are
directly linked as well, to help users discover that we want those type
of inquiries in the forum from now on instead of on GitHub.
Closes#3484
Our JSDoc documentation has not been updated in a very long time, and
we don't use JSDoc in enough places for the docs to have been
especially useful. The tools and scripts used to generate and publish
these docs have been removed.
References to this documentation have also been removed from the
README.
Hopefully once the TypeScript migration has made substantial progress,
we can generate more useful documentation using something like TypeDoc.
We have recently dropped support for certain older browsers, and we're
planning to have a larger conversation soon about which browsers to
support going forward. In preparation for this, it might be worth
recommending that users use the latest browser version.
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.
These files were referencing npm scripts that no longer existed. Notices
appear to no longer exist, and the `ui-dev.js` module is no longer
actively used.
The `mock-dev.js` module is still used for certain integration tests, so
I've just removed the reference to the non-existent script.