Huge thanks to the Firefox team, for their help on the issue of our long-standing inpage script race condition.
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/38577656/how-can-i-make-a-firefox-add-on-contentscript-inject-and-run-a-script-before-oth
The problem is that we were injecting a `script` tag and assigning its `src` attribute, which triggers an asynchronous fetch request, and does not guarantee execution order! (That was news to me!)
Instead, I'm now assigning the `script` tag a `textContent` value of the script to inject, and it seems to fix the problem!
There is also a Firefox-only API that could solve this whole problem in an even more elegant way, so we might want to expose a code path for that solution later on:
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Mozilla/Tech/XPCOM/Language_Bindings/Components.utils.exportFunction
Allows you to expose an object from one scope to another. There was even talk of creating a polyfill for it that does virtually what we do, message passing between contexts.
Added a Testem configuration that launches a Qunit page with an iFrame that builds and loads our mock-dev page and can interact with it and run tests on it.
Wrote a simple test that accepts the terms and conditions and transitions to the next page.
I am not doing any fancy redux-hooks for the async waiting, I've simply added a `tests/integration/helpers.js` file with a `wait()` function that returns a promise that should wait long enough.
Long term we should hook into the app lifecycle by some means for testing, so we only wait the right amount of time, and wait long enough for slower processes to complete, but this may work for the time being, just enough to run some basic automated browser tests.
* WIP: Buy button link
* Add buy eth and the buy eth warning message
* Add css
* Move the opening of coinbase page to background
and send to faucet if on test net
* Create a Warning about storeing eth
* Finish Buy button and Eth store warning screen
* Add to CHANGELOG
* fix frankies deletion and change chrome to extension
* Add mozilla plugin key to manifest
* Move all chrome references into platform-checking module
Addresses #453
* Add chrome global back to linter blacklist
* Add tests
Now from the UI console, you can always call `logState()`, and it will print the state stringified into the console, ready to drop into the ui dev mode states folder, or other inspection.
This should make it easier to diagnose user bugs in the future.