When a lot of transactions are occurring on the network, such as during
an NFT drop, it drives gas fees up. When this happens, we want to not
only inform the user about this, but also dissuade them from using a
higher gas fee (as we have proved in testing that high gas fees can
cause bidding wars and exacerbate the situation).
The method for determining whether the network is "busy" is already
handled by GasFeeController, which exposes a `networkCongestion`
property within the gas fee estimate data. If this number exceeds 0.66 —
meaning that the current base fee is above the 66th percentile among the
base fees over the last several days — then we determine that the
network is "busy".
The ESLint config for the extension explicitly includes support for
Prettier. However, this is already being provided by our global ESLint
config (`@metamask/eslint-config`). Therefore there is no need to
include it here. In fact, this is causing weird issues where the `curly`
option is getting overridden somehow. After this change, these syntaxes
are invalid:
``` javascript
if (foo) return;
```
``` javascript
if (foo) return 'bar';
```
A propType error was showing up during e2e tests with a `testDev`
build. It was caused by `process.env.IN_TEST` being treated as a
boolean, when in fact it is either the string `'true'` or a boolean.
`IN_TEST` has been updated to always be a boolean. `loose-envify` has
no trouble injecting boolean values, so there's no reason to treat this
as a string.