* Revert "Moved subscribe and filter into network controller (#16693)"
This reverts commit 6f6984fa58. That
commit was an RPC middleware refactor intended to move the subscribe
and filter middleware into the network controller, to simplify the
process of sharing this middleware between clients.
This refactor resulted in `eth_subscribe` notifications being sent on
the wrong connections, causing the UI to break in some cases (the UI
`provider` connection does not support notifications). This happened
because the `setupProviderEngine` function runs per-connection,
whereas the engine setup inside the network controller is global. The
global network client cannot support notifications because it has no
way to route them; they'll need to stay in the per-connection provider
engine.
Closes#17467
* Add e2e test
An e2e test has been added that confirms subscriptions are only
broadcast to the site that registered them. This test fails on
`develop`.
This release only includes one breaking change, which is the renaming
of the package to be under the `@metamask` scope. It includes
improvements to the types that will unblock migrating our network
clients to TypeScript.
The network controller has a variety of methods that just retrieve
controller state. These methods are not necessary because controller
state is already part of the public API of the controller and can be
accessed directly.
These methods are:
- getCurrentChainId
- getCurrentRpcUrl
- getNetworkIdentifier
- getNetworkState
- getProviderConfig
- isNetworkLoading
This is part of a larger effort to normalize the API of both network
controllers, to make them easier to merge.
The network controller has some tests, but they are incomplete and don't
follow our latest best practices for writing unit tests.
This commit greatly increases the amount of test coverage for the API
that we want to retain in NetworkController, in particular the seemingly
myriad paths that the code takes starting from `initializeProvider`,
`resetConnection`, `setRpcTarget`, `setProviderType`,
`rollbackToPreviousProvider`, and `lookupNetwork`.
There were a couple of pieces of logic I noted which don't seem to have
any effect due to being redundant or unreachable, but they also don't
make our lives more difficult, either, so I opted to leave them in.
Co-authored-by: Mark Stacey <markjstacey@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Zachary Belford <belfordz66@gmail.com>
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 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 "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.
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").