* We can safely ignore this advisory because the affected package is only used in the ipfs cli, which our use of 3box does not use, therefore the vulnerable code is not included in our build.
* Updating account menu icon color
* Updating design-tokens and making appropriate updates to extension styles
* Adding more deprecated tags to colors
* Adding spinner and removing todo comment
* Remove comment
* Updates
* Updating snapshots
* More color and ui updates
* reverting transition change
* If there is no array of top assets in a response, use an empty array
* Set a default empty array for 2 functions, remove an unnecessary condition
* Redirect a user from Swaps to the homepage if they switch to a chain that is not supported in Swaps
* Fix errors in the UI Console when it's not a swaps chain
A patch has been added to ensure lavapack no longer includes the path
for each module as part of each serialized module. This path was
originally added for debugging purposes, and is not used for anything
at runtime. The module path was an absolute path, not a relative one,
so it was an obstacle to having reproducible builds between
environments.
A patch has been added to ensure lavapack no longer includes the path
for each module as part of each serialized module. This path was
originally added for debugging purposes, and is not used for anything
at runtime. The module path was an absolute path, not a relative one,
so it was an obstacle to having reproducible builds between
environments.
The phishing warning page URL environment variable has been renamed
from `PHISHING_PAGE_URL` to `PHISHING_WARNING_PAGE_URL`. We call this
page the "phishing warning page" everywhere else, and this name seemed
better suited (it's not a phishing page itself).
The variable has been listed and documented in `.metamaskrc.dist` as
well.
The e2e tests have been updated for `@metamask/phishing-warning@1.1.0`.
The iframe case was updated with a new design, which required test
changes. The third test that was meant to ensure the phishing page
can't redirect to an extension page has been updated to navigate
directly to the phishing warning page and setting the URL manually via
query parameters, as that was the only way to test that redirect.
* styling updates
Co-authored-by: Alex Donesky <adonesky@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: George Marshall <george.marshall@consensys.net>
Co-authored-by: David Walsh <davidwalsh83@gmail.com>
Two CI validation errors have been fixed:
* A duplcate entry has been removed from the lockfile
* `@metamask/phishing-warning` has been added to the depcheck config,
so that it knows that dependency is being used (in e2e tests)
* Create `.zip` files deterministically
Our build system now creates `.zip` archives deterministically.
Previously the `.zip` file would differ between builds even when the
files being archived were identical. This was because the order the
files were passed in was non-deterministic, and the `mtime` for each
file was different between builds.
The files are now sorted before being zipped, and the `mtime` for each
file has been set to the unix epoch.
* Update lavamoat build policy
An externally hosted phishing warning page is now used rather than the
built-in phishing warning page.The phishing page warning URL is set via
configuration file or environment variable. The default URL is either
the expected production URL or `http://localhost:9999/` for e2e testing
environments.
The new external phishing page includes a design change when it is
loaded within an iframe. In that case it now shows a condensed message,
and prompts the user to open the full warning page in a new tab to see
more details or bypass the warning. This is to prevent a clickjacking
attack from safelisting a site without user consent.
The new external phishing page also includes a simple caching service
worker to ensure it continues to work offline (or if our hosting goes
offline), as long as the user has successfully loaded the page at least
once. We also load the page temporarily during the extension startup
process to trigger the service worker installation.
The old phishing page and all related lines have been removed. The
property `web_accessible_resources` has also been removed from the
manifest. The only entry apart from the phishing page was `inpage.js`,
and we don't need that to be web accessible anymore because we inject
the script inline into each page rather than loading the file directly.
New e2e tests have been added to cover more phishing warning page
functionality, including the "safelist" action and the "iframe" case.