Both the primary and secondary balance components on `EthOverview` now
have `data-testid` props, so that they can be more easily referenced in
e2e tests.
This required the addition of a `data-testid` prop to the component
`UserPreferencedCurrencyDisplay`, which is passed through to the
underlying `CurrencyDisplay` component.
The e2e test helper function `withFixtures` now includes verbose
reporting on failure. Whenever a test fails, debugging information will
be saved to disk, just as with the other e2e test modules.
e2e test that use the `withFixtures` helper now check for console
errors after each successful test. If any errors are found, the test
fails.
It's currently enabled for Chrome only, because the Firefox driver
throws an error when you attempt to get the browser logs. Not sure why
exactly, but it's a long-standing problem.
The webdriver method `verboseReportOnFailure` had previously taken a
single parameter, `test`, which was an object representing the current
Mocha test. However, only one property was used (`title`).
Instead the `title` is now passed through directly. This was done to
make this function easier to use outside of a Mocha context.
It seems that this blocklist checker never worked correctly. Ever since
the initial commit, it was comparing the Number `1` to the `networkId`,
which is a string. Additionally, even if it did throw, the transaction
continued unhindered. The user could still approve it, and there was no
indication shown to the user that anything went wrong. Also some of the
blocklist entries were incorrectly mixed-case, and were never hit.
We can remove this for now, and re-add it later on after we rewrite the
transaction controller.
The `metamaskNetworkId` property in the `txMeta` for incoming
transactions was incorrectly set as a Number instead of a String. This
change was made accidentally as part of #8627.
As a result incoming transactions were being excluded from the
transaction list, as they didn't have a matching network ID.
`metamaskNetworkId` is now set to a string, and a migration has been
added to ensure `metamaskNetworkId` is converted to a string for any
incoming transactions in state.
The 'Expand view' button in the 'Account Options' menu was still being
shown on the fullscreen UI. This button is not useful in fullscreen, as
all it does is open the fullscreen UI. It is now hidden on the
fullscreen UI.
Imported accounts can be removed, but the permissions controller is not
informed when this happens. Permissions are now removed as part of the
account removal process.
Additionally, the `getPermittedIdentitiesForCurrentTab` selector now
filters out any non-existent accounts, in case a render occurs in the
middle of an account removal.
This was resulting in a render crash upon opening the popup on a site
that was connected to the removed account.
'Activity' is a better name for this tab because it contains more than
just transactions. Signature requests are also included, and more non-
transaction activity may be included in the future.
The `TokenRatesController` was accidentally broken in #8744, when the
logic for starting and stopping polling was moved from the `isActive`
property to start/stop functions.
A reference to the now-obsolete `isActive` property was accidentally
left behind, resulting in no exchange rate updates.
The entry for imported accounts in the account menu looked wrong with
the new connected site icon - there was no padding between the site
icon and the 'imported' label. The entry was pretty crowded with these
three symbols as well (the third being the 'x' used to remove the
account).
The site icon has been made the right-most icon, so that it lines up
with the site icons shown for other accounts, and spacing has been
added between the site icon and the 'imported' label.
The 'x' used to remove accounts has been removed. Accounts can still be
removed from the 'Account Options' menu on the Home screen. This seemed
like the wrong place for this button to exist, as it's the only action
that can be taken from that menu aside from navigation.
* refactor asset items to use list-item
Refactors the asset-list-item and token-cell to rely on the list-item
component for UI. Little changes were needed to the list-item code
to make this work! The result should be lots of eliminated code
Co-authored-by: Mark Stacey <markjstacey@gmail.com>
The "the transaction has the expected gas price" test was assuming the
fifth element with the `transaction-breakdown__value` class was the
element with the gas price. In practice that was sometimes not the
case, because some transaction detail fields would not be present, or
would appear after the first render.
The field is now looked up with a test id, ensuring it always finds the
correct field.
The e2e test for the "Hide token" functionality was incorrectly
clicking "Cancel" on the "Hide token" modal, thus not actually testing
that that token was hidden at all.
The "Confirm" button is now selected using a test id, to ensure the
wrong button isn't selected.
A new page has been created for viewing assets. This replaces the old
`selectedToken` state, which previously would augment the home page
to show token-specific information.
The new asset page shows the standard token overview as seen previously
on the home page, plus a history filtered to show just transactions
relevant to that token.
The actions that were available in the old token list menu have been
moved to a "Token Options" menu that mirrors the "Account Options"
menu.
The `selectedTokenAddress` state has been removed, as it is no longer
being used for anything.
`getMetaMetricState` has been renamed to `getBackgroundMetaMetricState`
because its sole purpose is extracting data from the background state
to send metrics from the background. It's not really a selector, but
it was convenient for it to use the same selectors the UI uses to
extract background data, so I left it there for now.
A new Redux store has been added to track state related to browser history.
The most recent "overview" page (i.e. the home page or the asset page) is
currently being tracked, so that actions taken from the asset page can return
the user back to the asset page when the action has finished.
The fullscreen UI now shows roughly the same design as the popup UI.
A few additional changes depicted in the new fullscreen designs will
be implemented in subsequent PRs (e.g. the inline buttons on assets)
This was done now to make asset pages easier to implement. Implementing
asset pages solely for the popup UI would have been complicated by the
fact that we use viewport size to switch between the two layouts, so we
would have had to re-route upon resizing the window.
The `AccountDetailsDropdown` component has been rewritten to use the
new `Menu` component, and to follow the latest designs.
This should be functionally equivalent. A couple of the icons have
changed, but that's about it.
Support for a subtitle was added to `MenuItem` to support the `origin`
subtitle used for the explorer link for custom RPC endpoints.
A few adjustments were required to `test/helper.js` to accommodate
the use of `Menu` from a JSDOM context (this is the first time it's
been used in a unit test). A `popover-content` element was added to the
fake DOM, and another global was added that `react-popper` used
internally.
An additional driver method (`clickPoint`) was added to the e2e driver
to allow clicking the background behind the menu to dismiss it. This
wasn't possible using the `clickElement` method, because that method
would refuse to click an obscured element. The only non-obscured
element to click was the menu backdrop, and that didn't work either
because the center was obscured by the menu (Selenium clicks the center
of whichever element is targeted).
The `TransactionViewBalance` component has been split into three
separate components. This was done primarily to make the asset page
easier to implement. Also the name `TransactionViewBalance` didn't
describe this component very well anymore.
Instead of the Ethereum and token-specific logic being in the same
component, the two cases were split into the `EthOverview` and
`TokenOverview` components respectively. They both use the
`WalletOverview` component, which has the structure shared by both
cases.
CSF = Storybook’s Component Story Format (CSF)
See https://storybook.js.org/docs/formats/component-story-format/
Note that the migrations still use CommonJS require, so the default export as
an object is quite ergonomic (& I don't want to touch the migrations).