This commit introduces support for using `embark.config.js` to calculate the
embark configuration object that is otherwise provided via `embark.json`.
If an `embark.config.js` file is present, it will be used over the
`embark.json` file. The `embark.config.js` module needs to export either an
object or a function that can be asynchronous and has to return or resolve with
an embark configuration object:
```js
// embark.config.js
module.exports = async function () {
let config = ...; // do lazy calculation of `embarkConfig`;
return config;
}
```
Managing account details inside of the RPC Manager became a bit convulted and difficult to follow due to any web3 requests inside of an `RpcModifier` communicating over the proxy and therefore to other `RpcModifier`’s or itself. It also created cases where node accounts were duplicated by way of running the `eth_accounts` modifier multiple times (the first time getting accounts from the node and subsequent times getting accounts from the modified `eth_accounts` response.
This has been simplified by having the entry point of the `rpc-manager` (`index.js`) talk directly to the node via `web3`. This allowed account/nodeAccount management to also be handled by the entry point, removing the need for each individual `RpcModifier` from having to handle these account details. The result is a much more simplified and and much easier to maintain code for RPC Manager.
The cases for which accounts can be modified (via `personal_newAccount` RPC call, and via test configuration change) are now handled in one place (the entry point) and propagated to the each `RpcModifier`.
Add `blockchain:started` command to request when the blockchain has been started. In this case, this is needed so that we know when we can create a direct connection to the node, instead of the proxy (as is the case in almost all other modules).
Extend action timeout when in debug mode.
1. These changs have made the `RpcModifier` base class essentially useless, however, it has been kept in place because it will be used for future DRY improvements to the `rpc-manager`.
2. These changes have been tested with the following DApps:
- Demo
- Test DApp
- Contracts test DApp
- Teller
This commit introduces a new feature that enables users to calculate Smart Contract
constructor arguments lazily using an (async) function. Similar to normal Smart Contract
configurations, the return or resolved value from that function has to be either a list
of arguments in the order as they are needed for the constructor, or as an object with
named members that match the arguments individually.
```
...
development: {
deploy: {
SimpleStorage: {
args: async ({ contracts, web3, logger}) => {
// do something with `contracts` and `web3` to determine
// arguments
let someValue = await ...;
return [someValue];
// or
return {
initialValue: someValue
};
}
}
}
}
...
```
Closes#2270
Many packages in the monorepo did not specify all of their dependencies; they
were effectively relying on resolution in the monorepo's root
`node_modules`. In a production release of `embark` and `embark[js]-*` packages
this can lead to broken packages.
To fix the problem currently and to help prevent it from happening again, make
use of the `eslint-plugin-import` package's `import/no-extraneous-dependencies`
and `import/no-unresolved` rules. In the root `tslint.json` set
`"no-implicit-dependencies": true`, wich is the tslint equivalent of
`import/no-extraneous-dependencies`; there is no tslint equivalent for
`import/no-unresolved`, but we will eventually replace tslint with an eslint
configuration that checks both `.js` and `.ts` files.
For `import/no-unresolved` to work in our monorepo setup, in most packages add
an `index.js` that has:
```js
module.exports = require('./dist'); // or './dist/lib' in some cases
```
And point `"main"` in `package.json` to `"./index.js"`. Despite what's
indicated in npm's documentation for `package.json`, it's also necessary to add
`"index.js"` to the `"files"` array.
Make sure that all `.js` files that can and should be linted are in fact
linted. For example, files in `packages/embark/src/cmd/` weren't being linted
and many test suites weren't being linted.
Bump all relevant packages to `eslint@6.8.0`.
Fix all linter errors that arose after these changes.
Implement a `check-yarn-lock` script that's run as part of `"ci:full"` and
`"qa:full"`, and can manually be invoked via `yarn cylock` in the root of the
monorepo. The script exits with error if any specifiers are found in
`yarn.lock` for `embark[js][-*]` and/or `@embarklabs/*` (with a few exceptions,
cf. `scripts/check-yarn-lock.js`).
feat(@embark/utils): add method to verify if a plugin is installed & configured
feature(@embark/utils): add method to verify if a plugin is installed & configured
feature: warn about packages that will be independent plugins and are not configured
chore: update templates to specify plugins
refactor: add to plugin api params so that blockchain plugins no longer need to be passed options
address changes in code review
remove unneded space
Update packages/core/utils/src/index.ts
Co-Authored-By: Jonathan Rainville <rainville.jonathan@gmail.com>
Update packages/core/utils/src/index.ts
Co-Authored-By: Michael Bradley <michaelsbradleyjr@gmail.com>
fix linting issue
add missing import
update dependency
fix plugins object
add missing whitespace
Adds back the watch on contract events and writes them to a file
with the same method as contract logs from transaction-logger, so
I extracted those methods to utils/file so that both could use the
same functions.
For all instances where a `Contract` instance is serialized using `JSON.stringify`, the `logger` property was being stringified and written to logs and contract artifact files.
Add Serializer class that allows ignoring of class properties during serialization when using `JSON.stringify`.
NOTE: The `Serializer` relies on TypeScript’s decorators which are still listed as experimental (requiring the necessary compiler flag) despite being around for several years. Decorators are a stage 2 proposal for JavaScript.
Remove `bignumber.js` workaround (in the root, from PR #2152) because it's no
longer needed (verified locally).
Remove the `"skipLibCheck"` workaround (in `packages/plugins/solidity-tests`,
from PR #2152) because it's no longer needed (verified locally).
Refactor a typing in `packages/plugins/geth`. What's happening is that in web3
v1.2.4 `sendTransaction` has a return type of `PromiEvent<TransactionReceipt>`
but in v1.2.6 it has a return type of `PromiEvent<TransactionReceipt |
TransactionRevertInstructionError>`.
Compare:
* [v1.2.4/packages/web3-eth/types/index.d.ts#L291-L294](https://github.com/ethereum/web3.js/blob/v1.2.4/packages/web3-eth/types/index.d.ts#L291-L294)
* [v1.2.6/packages/web3-eth/types/index.d.ts#L295-L298](https://github.com/ethereum/web3.js/blob/v1.2.6/packages/web3-eth/types/index.d.ts#L295-L298)
The problem is that the `TransactionRevertInstructionError` type doesn't have a
`transactionHash` property. Since at present the code in
`packages/plugins/geth/src/devtxs.ts` only deals with the success case re:
`sendTransaction`, import the `TransactionReceipt` type from `web3-eth` and
cast the resolved return value's type using TypeScript's `as` operator.
Remove the `<12.0.0` restriction re: Node.js version in the `"engines"`
settings for all the packages in the monorepo that had that restriction.
Add missing `"engines"` settings in `packages/plugins/snark/package.json`.
Adjust the Azure Pipelines config to include builds for Node.js v12.x and
v13.x.
Bump `solc` to `0.4.26` in `dapps/tests/app` and `dapps/tests/contracts`. It
was discovered that older versions suffered a fatal `Maximum call stack size
exceeded` error when run on Windows with Node.js v12.x or newer. Display a
warning re: the bad combo (solc version + Windows + Node version) if it's
detected at runtime.
Adjust the root `yarn.lock` so that the `sha3` transitive dependency resolves
to a newer version that is compatible with Node v13.x.
Refactor typings as necessary. In order for `bignumber.js` in the root
`node_modules` to not conflict with `@types/bignumber.js`, specify
`"bignumber.js": "5.0.0"` in `devDependencies` and `"embark-ui/bignumber.js"`
in `nohoist` of the root `package.json`.
In `packages/plugins/rpc-manager` switch from callback to promise usage with
respect to `web3.eth.accounts.signTransaction` because of a [bug][bug]
discovered in web3 v1.2.4.
In `packages/plugins/solidity-tests` specialize the tsc compiler options with
`"skipLibCheck": true` because of a problematic web3-related typing in the
`.d.ts` files of the remix-tests package.
Bump ganache-cli from 6.4.3 to 6.7.0 (latest) because 6.4.3 doesn't support
`eth_chainId` but web3 1.2.4 makes use of the `eth_chainId` RPC method (EIP
695).
BREAKING CHANGE: bump embark's minimum supported version of parity from
`>=2.0.0` to `>=2.2.1`. This is necessary since web3 1.2.4 makes use of the
`eth_chainId` RPC method (EIP 695) and that parity version is the earliest one
to implement it.
[bug]: https://github.com/ethereum/web3.js/issues/3283
Was caused by the fact that each rpc-modifier got its own node
accounts, but once the eth_accounts modifier is enabled, the
"node" accounts are always going to contain the custom accounts too
Now, the node accounts are set once eth_accounts is initiated, so
that every modifier is on the same page
Also implement a second layer of protection to make sure that if a
duplication happens, it is gotten rid of