There is a SES bug that results in errors being printed to the console
as `{}`[1]. The known workaround is to print the error stack rather
than printing the error directly. This affects our build script when it
is run with LavaMoat.
We used this workaround in one place in the build script already, but
not in the handler for task errors. We now use it in both places.
The workaround has been moved to a function that we can use throughout
the build script.
[1]: https://github.com/endojs/endo/issues/944
#14583 broke the development build scripts (e.g. `yarn start`) by adding a positional argument to a package script (`build:dev`) that is used and passed positional arguments in the build script itself. This PR removes the positional argument from the `build:dev` script and `yarn start` now works again. In addition, the `--apply-lavamoat` flag is properly forwarded to child processes, which was not the case in the original implementation.
To test, `yarn start` should work and LavaMoat should _not_ be applied, in distinction to `yarn build:dev dev --apply-lavamoat=true`. Whether LavaMoat is applied can be determined by checking whether `Object.isFrozen(Object.prototype)` is `true` (with LavaMoat) or `false` (without LavaMoat).
The LavaMoat policy generation script would sporadically fail because
it ran the build concurrently three times, and the build includes
steps that delete the `dist` directory and write to it. So if one build
process tried to write to the directory after another deleted it, it
would fail.
This was solved by adding a new `--policy-only` flag to the build
script, and a new `scripts:prod` task. The `scripts:prod` task only
runs the script tasks for prod, rather than the entire build process.
The `--policy-only` flag stops the script tasks once the policy has
been written, and stops any other files from being written to disk.
This prevents the three concurrent build processes from getting in each
others way, and it dramatically speeds up the process.
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
Our build script waits for the `close` event to determine whether the
task has exited. The `exit` event is a better representation of this,
because if a stream is shared between multiple processes, the process
may exit without the `close` event being emitted.
We aren't sharing streams between processes, so this edge case doesn't
apply to us. This just seemed like a more suitable event to listen to,
since we care about the process exiting not the stream ending.
See this description of the `close` event from the Node.js
documentation [1]:
>The `'close'` event is emitted when the stdio streams of a child
>process have been closed. This is distinct from the `'exit'` event,
>since multiple processes might share the same stdio streams.
And see this description of the `exit` event:
>The `'exit'` event is emitted after the child process ends.
[1]: https://nodejs.org/docs/latest-v14.x/api/child_process.html#child_process_event_exit
* Freezeglobals: remove Promise freezing, add lockdown
* background & UI: temp disable sentry
* add loose-envify, dedupe symbol-observable
* use loose envify
* add symbol-observable patch
* run freezeGlobals after sentry init
* use require instead of import
* add lockdown to contentscript
* add error code in message
* try increasing node env heap size to 2048
* change back circe CI option
* make freezeGlobals an exported function
* make freezeGlobals an exported function
* use freezeIntrinsics
* pass down env to child process
* fix unknown module
* fix tests
* change back to 2048
* fix import error
* attempt to fix memory error
* fix lint
* fix lint
* fix mem gain
* use lockdown in phishing detect
* fix lint
* move sentry init into freezeIntrinsics to run lockdown before other imports
* lint fix
* custom lockdown modules per context
* lint fix
* fix global test
* remove run in child process
* remove lavamoat-core, use ses, require lockdown directly
* revert childprocess
* patch package postinstall
* revert back child process
* add postinstall to ci
* revert node max space size to 1024
* put back loose-envify
* Disable sentry to see if e2e tetss pass
* use runLockdown, add as script in manifest
* remove global and require from runlockdown
* add more memory to tests
* upgrade resource class for prep-build & prep-build-test
* fix lint
* lint fix
* upgrade remote-redux-devtools
* skillfully re-add sentry
* lintfix
* fix lint
* put back beep
* remove envify, add loose-envify and patch-package in dev deps
* Replace patch with Yarn resolution (#9923)
Instead of patching `symbol-observable`, this ensures that all
versions of `symbol-observable` are resolved to the given range, even
if it contradicts the requested range.
Co-authored-by: Mark Stacey <markjstacey@gmail.com>
On Windows, spawn fails if the exact filename
of a binary isn't passed. e.g. `spawn('yarn')` fails
because the binary is named `yarn.cmd`.
Instead, we depend on `cross-spawn` which handles differences
in `spawn` across platforms.