* Add filter tag
* Fix tag
* test tag
* fix
* Changed tag
* Add test-e2e-chrome
* Filter by branch instead of tag
* Move tests to correct mv3 folder
* Remove ignore from e2e regular chrome job
* Remove filter, so it's run on all PRs
* Handling red X for MV3 e2e failures
Co-authored-by: Mark Stacey <markjstacey@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Mark Stacey <markjstacey@gmail.com>
The CI job for building storybook will fail occasionally, presumably
due to a Node.js process running out of heap memory. This job is the
only build job that runs with default Node.js memory settings.
It has been updated to use a larger instance size and to set the heap
size to 2GB, matching our other build jobs.
Validation has been added to the build script when the "prod" target is
selected. We now ensure that all expected environment variables are
set, and that no extra environment variables are present (which might
indicate that the wrong configuration file is being used).
The `prod` target uses a new `.metamaskprodrc` configuration file. Each
required variable can be specified either via environment variable or
via this config file. CI will continue set these via environment
variable, but for local manual builds we can use the config file to
simplify the build process and ensure consistency.
A new "dist" target has been added to preserve the ability to build a
"production-like" build without this validation.
The config validation is invoked early in the script, in the CLI
argument parsing step, so that it would fail more quickly. Otherwise
we'd have to wait a few minutes longer for the validation to run.
This required some refactoring, moving functions to the utility module
and moving the config to a dedicated module.
Additionally, support has been added for all environment variables to
be set via the config file. Previously the values `PUBNUB_PUB_KEY`,
`PUBNUB_SUB_KEY`, `SENTRY_DSN`, and `SWAPS_USE_DEV_APIS` could only be
set via environment variable. Now, all of these variables can be set
either way.
Closes#15003
This PR converts `generate-lavamoat-policies.sh` to `.js` using Yargs. This makes it easier to only generate policy files for a specific build type (using the `-t` flag), which is often useful during Flask development. In addition, the `lavamoat:background:auto` scripts are renamed, and the main readme is updated with some useful tips.
Note that `lavamoat:background:auto:dev` is removed and `lavamoat:background:auto` should be used during local development.
* User actions benchmark and artifacts
* Lint and fix identation
* Fix lint
* Updated path
* lint
* Add user actions benchmark to pre release job
* Remove title
* Out path updated
* See if url is finally fixed
* Adding some console logs
* lint
* fix lint
* fix lint
* Updated persisting and store artifacts path
* Added MetaMask bot correct link and remove console logs
* Remove console log
* Sort Imports
* Fix lint
* Update loadAccount function and prop name for clarity to loadNewAccount
* Run yarn setup
* Fix yarn
* Update Create Account element for Create account
* Remove unnecessary step on send
Co-authored-by: Jyoti Puri <jyotipuri@gmail.com>
An improper deploy key was used to deploy the TypeScript
migration dashboard. A new key has been created on the GitHub side for
the `metamask-extension-ts-migration-dashboard` repo and also added to
CircleCI. The new fingerprint for this key is provided in this commit.
This should hopefully make it possible for us to deploy to this repo
from CircleCI.
When the TypeScript migration dashboard is updated, it is built and
deployed in another repo, which is then deployed via GitHub Pages. To
push to this repo we have to set a Git username and email. This is
missing from the CircleCI config, so this commit uses the metamaskbot
GitHub account to do that.
As we convert parts of the codebase to TypeScript, we will want a way to
track progress. This commit adds a dashboard which displays all of the
files that we wish to convert to TypeScript and which files we've
already converted.
The list of all possible files to convert is predetermined by walking
the dependency graph of each entrypoint the build system uses to compile
the extension (the files that the entrypoint imports, the files that the
imports import, etc). The list should not need to be regenerated, but
you can do it by running:
yarn ts-migration:enumerate
The dashboard is implemented as a separate React app. The CircleCI
configuration has been updated so that when a new commit is pushed, the
React app is built and stored in the CircleCI artifacts. When a PR is
merged, the built files will be pushed to a separate repo whose sole
purpose is to serve the dashboard via GitHub Pages (this is the same
way that the Storybook works). All of the app code and script to build
the app are self-contained under
`development/ts-migration-dashboard`. To build this app yourself, you
can run:
yarn ts-migration:dashboard:build
or if you want to build automatically as you change files, run:
yarn ts-migration:dashboard:watch
Then open the following file in your browser (there is no server
component):
development/ts-migration-dashboard/build/index.html
Finally, although you shouldn't have to do this, to manually deploy the
dashboard once built, you can run:
git remote add ts-migration-dashboard git@github.com:MetaMask/metamask-extension-ts-migration-dashboard.git
yarn ts-migration:dashboard:deploy
* Automate the Flask release
A Flask release will now be published alongside each main extension
release. The version of each Flask release will be the same as the
extension version except it will have the suffix `-flask.0`.
* Programmatically remove build prefix
The create GH release Bash script derives the Flask version from the
Flask build filename by removing the build prefix, leaving just the
version. Rather than hard-coding the prefix size to remove, it is now
calculated programmatically so that it is easier to read and update.
* Fix tag publishing
The tab publishing step used the wrong credentials, and didn't properly
identify the commit author. This has now been fixed.
* Changed registryUrl for snaps only in firefox
Fixed getPlatform to only be imported into metamask-controller in flask
Removed snaps specific testrunner script and use run-all with a cli option
* Fixed flakey tests
* Removed unneeded await
* Added delay
* Fixed linting
# Permission System 2.0
## Background
This PR migrates the extension permission system to [the new `PermissionController`](https://github.com/MetaMask/snaps-skunkworks/tree/main/packages/controllers/src/permissions).
The original permission system, based on [`rpc-cap`](https://github.com/MetaMask/rpc-cap), introduced [`ZCAP-LD`](https://w3c-ccg.github.io/zcap-ld/)-like permissions to our JSON-RPC stack.
We used it to [implement](https://github.com/MetaMask/metamask-extension/pull/7004) what we called "LoginPerSite" in [version 7.7.0](https://github.com/MetaMask/metamask-extension/releases/tag/v7.7.0) of the extension, which enabled the user to choose which accounts, if any, should be exposed to each dapp.
While that was a worthwhile feature in and of itself, we wanted a permission _system_ in order to enable everything we are going to with Snaps.
Unfortunately, the original permission system was difficult to use, and necessitated the creation of the original `PermissionsController` (note the "s"), which was more or less a wrapper for `rpc-cap`.
With this PR, we shake off the yoke of the original permission system, in favor of the modular, self-contained, ergonomic, and more mature permission system 2.0.
Note that [the `PermissionController` readme](https://github.com/MetaMask/snaps-skunkworks/tree/main/packages/controllers/src/permissions/README.md) explains how the new permission system works.
The `PermissionController` and `SubjectMetadataController` are currently shipped via `@metamask/snap-controllers`. This is a temporary state of affairs, and we'll move them to `@metamask/controllers` once they've landed in prod.
## Changes in Detail
First, the changes in this PR are not as big as they seem. Roughly half of the additions in this PR are fixtures in the test for the new migration (number 68), and a significant portion of the remaining ~2500 lines are due to find-and-replace changes in other test fixtures and UI files.
- The extension `PermissionsController` has been deleted, and completely replaced with the new `PermissionController` from [`@metamask/snap-controllers`](https://www.npmjs.com/package/@metamask/snap-controllers).
- The original `PermissionsController` "domain metadata" functionality is now managed by the new `SubjectMetadataController`, also from [`@metamask/snap-controllers`](https://www.npmjs.com/package/@metamask/snap-controllers).
- The permission activity and history log controller has been renamed `PermissionLogController` and has its own top-level state key, but is otherwise functionally equivalent to the existing implementation.
- Migration number 68 has been added to account for the new state changes.
- The tests in `app/scripts/controllers/permissions` have been migrated from `mocha` to `jest`.
Reviewers should focus their attention on the following files:
- `app/scripts/`
- `metamask-controller.js`
- This is where most of the integration work for the new `PermissionController` occurs.
Some functions that were internal to the original controller were moved here.
- `controllers/permissions/`
- `selectors.js`
- These selectors are for `ControllerMessenger` selector subscriptions. The actual subscriptions occur in `metamask-controller.js`. See the `ControllerMessenger` implementation for details.
- `specifications.js`
- The caveat and permission specifications are required by the new `PermissionController`, and are used to specify the `eth_accounts` permission and its JSON-RPC method implementation.
See the `PermissionController` readme for details.
- `migrations/068.js`
- The new state should be cross-referenced with the controllers that manage it.
The accompanying tests should also be thoroughly reviewed.
Some files may appear new but have just moved and/or been renamed:
- `app/scripts/lib/rpc-method-middleware/handlers/request-accounts.js`
- This was previously implemented in `controllers/permissions/permissionsMethodMiddleware.js`.
- `test/mocks/permissions.js`
- A truncated version of `test/mocks/permission-controller.js`.
Co-authored-by: Mark Stacey <markjstacey@gmail.com>
* add storybook unit tests with CI integration
* fix command and fix casing for test
* change ci ordering for storybook tasks
* fix syntax error
* fix jest
* lint
* Add transaction-total-banner render test to Storybook (#12517)
* transaction-total-banner
* lint
* confirm to spec
* lint
* fix jest ocnfig for snapshot test failure
`improved-yarn-audit` has been updated so that it supports GitHub
advisories. Two new GitHub advisories have been ignored, as they are
both moderate RegExp DoS vulnerabilities that don't affect us, and they
are embedded deep within our dependency graph and are difficult to
update.
The beta and Flask builds are now built on CI and included in the
metamask bot comment alongside the main builds. The same sourcemap
linter and mozilla linter used for the prod builds is also run on the
beta and Flask builds.
Closes#12426
There are a few issues encountered when running `yarn setup` on new
Apple Silicon (aka M1, aka arm64) Macs:
* The script halts when attempting to run the install step for
the `chromedriver` package with the message "Only Mac 64 bits
supported". This is somewhat misleading as it seems to indicate that
chromedriver can only be installed on a 64-bit Mac. However, what I
think is happening is that the installation script for `chromedriver`
is not able to detect that an arm64 CPU *is* a 64-bit CPU. After
looking through the `chromedriver` repo, it appears that 87.0.1 is the
first version that adds a proper check ([1]).
Note that upgrading chromedriver caused the Chrome-specific tests to
fail intermittently on CI. I was not able to 100% work out the reason
for this, but ensuring that X (which provides a way for Chrome to run
in a GUI setting from the command line) is available seems to fix
these issues.
* The script also halts when attempting to run the install step for
the `electron` package. This happens because for the version of
`electron` we are using (9.4.2), there is no available binary for
arm64. It appears that Electron 11.x was the first version to support
arm64 Macs ([2]). This is a bit trickier to resolve because we don't
explicitly rely on `electron` — that's brought in by `react-devtools`.
The first version of `react-devtools` that relies on `electron` 11.x
is 4.11.0 ([3]).
[1]: 469dd0a6ee
[2]: https://www.electronjs.org/blog/apple-silicon
[3]: https://github.com/facebook/react/blob/main/packages/react-devtools/CHANGELOG.md#4110-april-9-2021
The benchmark script can now be set to retry upon failure, like the E2E
tests do. The default is zero, just as with the E2E tests. A retry of 2
has been set in CI to match the E2E tests as well.
The `retry` module had to be adjusted to throw an error in the case of
failure. Previously it just set the exit code, but that only worked
because it was the last thing called before the process ended. That is
no longer the case.
This script makes it easier to run an individual E2E test. In the past
I've run individual scripts by editing `run-all.sh` manually, but now
that can be done more easily with this script. It also allows setting
the number of retries to use and the browser to use from the CLI.
This script has been added as an npm script as well, called
'test:e2e:single'.
The `run-all.sh` script was rewritten in JavaScript to make it easier
to pass through a `--retries` argument.
The default number of retries has been set to zero to make local
testing easier. It has been set to 2 on CI.
This was mainly done to consolidate the code used to run an E2E test in
one place, to make later improvements easier.
Sentry is now configured with environment variables, rather than with
hard-coded values. This makes it easier to test Sentry functionality
using a different Sentry account, as we did recently during QA of
v9.5.1.
The only change for the normal build process is the introduction of the
`SENTRY_DSN_DEV` variable, which can be set via `.metamaskrc` or via an
environment variable. This determines where error reports are sent. It
still defaults to our team Sentry account's `metamask-testing` project.
The `sentry:publish` script now requires SENTRY_ORG and SENTRY_PROJECT
to be set in order to publish release artifacts. The CircleCI
configuration has been updated with these values, so it should act the
same as it did before. Previously we had used a CLI flag to specify the
organization and project, but Sentry already natively supports these
environment variables [1].
[1]: https://docs.sentry.io/product/cli/configuration/#configuration-values
The version field is now stored in the main `package.json` file rather
than in the base manifest. It is built into the final manifest during
the build script.
This makes it easier to communicate what the current version should be
to our `auto-changelog` script. It's also generally a more conventional
place to keep track of the version, even considering that we're not
publishing to npm.
Add changelog validation to CI, ensuring that the changelog follows the
KeepAChangelog format. Additionally, this will also ensure that all of
the auto-generated "Uncategorized" changelog entries on release
branches get categorized.
The check for the GITHUB_TOKEN environment variable was being done in
the wrong release script. It has been migrated to the relevant script.
A second check for the username has also been added, as it is also
required.
The SSH key used for Storybook deployments to `metamask-storybook` has
been updated. This new key is associated with `metamaskbot` rather than
a specific team member.
* Setup jest config
* Adjust test for jest.
* Adjust lint config
* Omit swaps ui folder for unit testing
* Omit swaps from test:unit:lax
* Add jest.config.js to script files
* Restore mocks rather than clearing them.
* Update jest config and adjust lint to include subdirs
* Convert view-quote-price-difference test to jest
* Add jest ci and ci coverage scripts. Add jest unit test to general test command
* Add test coverage to ci
* Use --ignore flag
* Fixup
* Add @metamask/eslint-config-jest
* Update .eslintrc.js
Co-authored-by: Mark Stacey <markjstacey@gmail.com>
* Adds jest-coverage/
Co-authored-by: Mark Stacey <markjstacey@gmail.com>
The changelog script now accepts an `--rc` flag to tell it whether to
add new changes to `Unreleased` or to the header for the current
version.
Previously this was inferred from whether the current version matched
the most recent tag. However this method only works for the first
update. Using a flag simplifies this logic, and makes it possible to
manually re-run this for further updates to a release candidate.
The changelog will now be automatically updated when a release branch
is created. A new release header along with changelog entries for any
new commits will be added.
Note that this changelog will still need to be manually cleaned up, but
it's one less manual step at least.
The old Bash script for adding a new release header to the changelog
has been removed, as that functionality is now built into the changelog
update script.
A new script has been added to commit any changes made to the manifest
and changelog. This step used to happen at the end of the bump manifest
version script, but now the changelog update relies upon the manifest
version bump happening first, so it needed to be re-ordered. The
changes should only be committed on the first run of the branch, as
it's contingent upon the manifest changing (due to the version bump).
Further changelog updates won't trigger new automatic commits.
The script responsible for creating the "Sync `master` with `develop`"
PR has been removed. We will soon be eliminating the need for a
`master` branch altogether, so we don't need this anymore. Also, this
script hasn't been running correctly in a long time. We've been
creating this PR manually.
New changelog release headers now omit the date. These headers are
added automatically when a new release branch is created, and that
rarely ends up being the actual date of the release, so these dates
have all been inaccurate anyway.
The date will be re-added to the changelog later as part of a new
script, after a release has been published.
The CI script to ensure no LavaMoat policy changes are required has
been failing despite there being no changes. It turns out that the
command used to check for changes (`git diff-index`) was failing
despite the lack of changes because the file was written again by
`yarn lavamoat:auto` but git hadn't gotten around to updating its index
since the write occurred, so it was considering it as changed until it
verified it wasn't [1].
The command has been replaced by `git diff --exit-code --quiet`, which
should do exactly the same thing except that it forces git to update
its internal cache to verify whether changes are present.
[1]: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/34807971/why-does-git-diff-index-head-result-change-for-touched-files-after-git-diff-or-g
A CI job has been added to ensure the `allow-scripts` config and the
LavaMoat auto-generated policy is up-to-date. This will only run on
release branches and the `master` branch, because it's too difficult a
requirement to meet for each PR for contributors on macOS, due to
differences in the dependency graph caused by optional dependencies.
The `allow-scripts` and LavaMoat policy have both been updated using
`yarn allow-scripts auto` and `yarn lavamoat:auto`.
The `.sh` file extension is now used for all Bash scripts. This ensures
the files are recognized as Bash scripts by the ShellCheck CI job, and
by editors/IDEs for improved syntax highlighting.
* ci - run storybook and add to build-artifacts
* ci/storybook - rename storybook build path and fix artifact upload
* ci/storybook - rename link text
* clean - remove accidently committed storybook build dir
* storybook - fix image path to relative (#10364)
* use @lavamoat/allow-scripts for package postinstall allow list
* dnode: set "weak" to false
Co-authored-by: kumavis <kumavis@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Erik Marks <25517051+rekmarks@users.noreply.github.com>
Dependencies are now cached between builds, using a checksum of the
`yarn.lock` file as the cache key. The `node_modules` directory and the
`.har` file from the install are cached and restored, so that we ensure
the record of the install is always preserved alongside the
dependencies.
The consolidation of the `collect-har-artifact` script was to make it
easier to cache the `.har` file along with the dependencies.
We don't look at coveralls very much. We might occasionally consult it
to see a report on our code coverage, but that report is already
generated entirely locally, and has been added to the MetaMask bot
comment in #10061.
The CI config has been updated to use CircleCI executors. This allows
us to define the container environments used in one place, and reuse
these environment definitions between jobs.
This should result in no functional changes.
The Firefox e2e tests now use the `.zip` file for testing the
extension. We've found this to produce more similar results to
production, compared to the old method of loading the unzipped
directory.
Passing in a `.zip` file to the Chrome driver didn't seem to work. I
didn't investigate this further to see if it was possible, but I'm not
sure it makes a difference on Chrome anyway.
An e2e test has been added that uses the new mock Segment server to
verify that the three initial page metric events are sent correctly.
Using the mock Segment server requires a special build with this mock
Segment server hostname embedded, so a distinct job for building and
running this test was required. As such, it was left out of the
`run-all.sh` script.
The sesify viz step of the build was broken in #9838 when
`eth-rpc-errors@4` was introduced to the project. `eth-rpc-errors@4`
uses inline sourcemaps without including the full source in the
sourcemap, which breaks `sesify`.
`sesify` has been fixed[1] (under its new name, `lavamoat-browserify`),
but it has been disabled temporarily until this fix is included in a
new release, and until we can update to use it.
[1]: https://github.com/LavaMoat/LavaMoat/pull/121
This reduces the footprint of each Node process in an attempt to try
and lower the failure rate.
> Expected behavior with –max-old-space-size within container constraints
>
> By default, Node.js (up to 11.x) uses a maximum heap size of 700MB and 1400MB
> on 32-bit and 64-bit platforms, respectively. For current defaults, see the
> reference mentioned at the end of blog.
[1]:https://developer.ibm.com/languages/node-js/articles/nodejs-memory-management-in-container-environments/
The remaining integration tests are all covered by e2e tests, so
they're no longer needed.
All associated scripts, fixtures, and dependencies have also been
removed.