Only the first parameter, `type`, was ever passed in. The others are
superfluous. The defaults have been set directly instead.
It's a bit silly to set the `rpcUrl` and `nickname` to an empty string,
but to make this more sensible would take much more effort. This at
least is simpler and guaranteed to be equivalent.
* Moving RPC Urls to network constants
* Including RPC url in switchEthereumChain requestData
* Setting project id to var
* Fix built-in networks switch-ethereum-chain
`switch-ethereum-chain` did not work correctly with built-in networks.
It was treating them as custom networks, rather than as built-in
networks. This affected how they were displayed in the network
dropdown, and resulted in slight differences to the network stack used
as well.
The problem was that `updateRpcTarget` was used, which was meant for
custom networks only. Now that `setProviderType` is used in the case of
a built-in network, the behaviour should match the network switcher
exactly.
Co-authored-by: Mark Stacey <markjstacey@gmail.com>
* Moving RPC Urls to network constants
* Including RPC url in switchEthereumChain requestData
* Setting project id to var
* Fix built-in networks switch-ethereum-chain
`switch-ethereum-chain` did not work correctly with built-in networks.
It was treating them as custom networks, rather than as built-in
networks. This affected how they were displayed in the network
dropdown, and resulted in slight differences to the network stack used
as well.
The problem was that `updateRpcTarget` was used, which was meant for
custom networks only. Now that `setProviderType` is used in the case of
a built-in network, the behaviour should match the network switcher
exactly.
Co-authored-by: Mark Stacey <markjstacey@gmail.com>
The CLA bot had its write permissions revoked recently when our
organization-wide settings were updated to restrict actions to read
access by default. This PR restores write access to PRs and to the
repository itself for the CLA bot. It needs PR write access to leave
comments, and needs write access to the repo itself to commit new
signatures.
* Removing support notification from what's new
* Adding migration for support notification removal
* Expanding test cases, using async/await for storage comparison
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