A few inconsistencies in JSDoc formatting have been fixed throughout
the project. Many issues remain; these were just the few things that
were easy to fix with a regular expression.
The changes include:
* Using lower-case for primitive types, but capitalizing non-primitive
types
* Separating the parameter identifier and the description with a dash
* Omitting a dash between the return type and the return description
* Ensuring the parameter type is first and the identifier is second (in
a few places it was backwards)
* Using square brackets to denote when a parameter is optional, rather
than putting "(optional)" in the parameter description
* Including a type and identifier with every parameter
* Fixing inconsistent spacing, except where it's used for alignment
* Remove incorrectly formatted `@deprecated` tags that reference non-
existent properties
* Remove lone comment block without accompanying function
Additionally, one parameter was renamed for clarity.
Refs #9663
See [`node/no-deprecated-api`][1] for more information.
This change enables `node/no-deprecated-api` and fixes the issues raised by the rule.
[1]:https://github.com/mysticatea/eslint-plugin-node/blob/v11.1.0/docs/rules/no-deprecated-api.md
The change to the way that `punycode` is imported is to address the fact that
third-party module is hidden by the built-in. This is a silly hack but it works.
Our ENS resolver for the browser address bar was incorrectly resolving
addresses that included query strings. We were concatenating the `path`
property with the `search` property, despite the fact that the `path`
property already contains `search`. As a result, `search` was
duplicated in the resolved addresses.
For example, if an IPFS content ID was found for this address, the
resolved address for `metamask.eth/?foo=bar` would have the path
`/?foo=bar?foo=bar`
The original intent was likely to use `pathname` in place of `path`.
The resolver has been updated to use `pathname`, and the query string
now appears only once in the resolved address.
Previously all browser globals were allowed to be used anywhere by
ESLint because we had set the `env` property to `browser` in the ESLint
config. This has made it easy to accidentally use browser globals
(e.g. #8338), so it has been removed. Instead we now have a short list
of allowed globals.
All browser globals are now accessed as properties on `window`.
Unfortunately this change resulted in a few different confusing unit
test errors, as some of our unit tests setup assumed that a particular
global would be used via `window` or `global`. In particular,
`window.fetch` didn't work correctly because it wasn't patched by the
AbortController polyfill (only `global.fetch` was being patched).
The `jsdom-global` package we were using complicated matters by setting
all of the JSDOM `window` properties directly on `global`, overwriting
the `AbortController` for example.
The `helpers.js` test setup module has been simplified somewhat by
removing `jsdom-global` and constructing the JSDOM instance manually.
The JSDOM window is set on `window`, and a few properties are set on
`global` as well as needed by various dependencies. `node-fetch` and
the AbortController polyfill/patch now work as expected as well,
though `fetch` is only available on `window` now.