Now old vaults are recognized as an "Initialized" MetaMask instance.
Upon logging in, when fetching the initial password-derived key, if there is no new-style vault, but there is an old style vault, it is migrated to the new format before proceeding through the usual unlocking steps.
This contract hex does include the value `f4`, but it was compiled from a contract with no instance of `.delegatecall`. I believe `f4` in this case is part of some other value or contract address, and `ethBinToOps` has some error in how it skips pushed data.
@kumavis
SubmitPassword was not creating a new id-management
This is because I broke up the old "createIdmgmt" method to not perform as much conditional logic.
Now the pieces are reusable and do what they should do.
Fixed bug where the second new vault created in an IdStore would initially return the accounts from the original store.
Also fixed some tests that were incorrect.
eth-lightwallet was previously not salting vault passwords, potentially making it easier to crack them once obtained.
This branch incorporates the API changes to allow us to take advantage of the new salting logic.
This is still throwing deprecation warnings, but that's actually a bug in eth-lightwallet I wrote, [I've submitted a PR for that here](https://github.com/ConsenSys/eth-lightwallet/pull/116).
Fixes#555
* Add UI Testing Framework and Simple UI Test
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.
* Separate UI tests from normal unit test suite
* Add UI tests to CI test script
* Add testem and phantom to circleCI pre-script
* Fix circle pre script
* Move pre scripts to dependencies key
* Remove phantom from build deps
* Fix testem runner page
* Add promise polyfill for PhantomJS
* Skip PhantomJS in testem
* Run browser tests in parallel
* Fix promise usage?
* Correct skip usage
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.
* 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
Signing now always takes a 64 digit hex string, and returns a message signature which appropriately pads r, s, and v with zeroes.
Need to verify with Denis that this is the behavior he requires.
Fixes#197
Also as a side effect, by creating this `iconFactory.cache` object, we have a convenient place for specifying stock icons for known contracts!
We can just hard-code image addresses in the `ui/lib/icon-factory.js` cache instantiation, and those values will be injected into the identicon image tag `src` attributes.