* 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>
Internal network controller methods and fields are now private fields,
using the JavaScript `#` syntax rather than the `private` TypeScript
keyword or a leading underscore.
The one reference to a private field was in the preferences controller
unit tests. Fortunately it was being used to create a test fixture that
was unused. The unnecessary test fixtures have been removed from that
test suite.
Fixes https://github.com/MetaMask/metamask-extension/issues/18588
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>
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.
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.
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>
The controllers package has been updated to v33. The only breaking
change in this release was to rename the term "collectible" to "NFT"
wherever it appeared in the API.
Changes in this PR have been kept minimal; additional renaming can be
done in separate PRs. This PR only updates the controller names,
controller state, controller methods, and any direct references to
these things. NFTs are still called "collectibles" in most places.
* 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
The `nodeify` utility is no longer needed for the background API.
Instead each method is assumed to be either synchronous or Promise-
returning.
The error handling was updated to at least log the error in the case
where a method fall fails after the connection is broken.
* 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.