Set Ganache as a blockchain client that doesn't need to be started.
Set it as the default client, at least for development.
Move all blockchain related stuff in the blockchain component
Includes a fix by @emmizle to fix the WS connection in the proxy
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
This commit adds a convenience API `artifacts.require(name)` that aims to make
requiring artifacts a little bit more straight forward.
Usage:
```
const SimpleStorage = artifacts.require('SimpleStorage');
const EmbarkJS = artifacts.require('EmbarkJS');
```
Enable putting `$accounts[i]` in subdomain registrations, where `i`
is the index of the `getAccounts` array.
This is the same behaviour we have for contract deployement
Before, `embark build` would wait at the end if there was an
afterDeploy, because there was no way with the old string and array
syntax to know when the commands were done.
Now, with the function syntax, we can wait for the end.
This way, we can exit the build at the end if it is a function
afterDeploy.
Otherwise, we show a message saying that they should update
registerSubDomain didn't work in tests because it used the old way
of checking the env, which is checking the `this.env` string, but in
tests, we use the `test` env. So instead, we now check if it is a
known network using the network ID (like we do for other place)
Also, in `dapps/tests/contracts` move the `this.timeout(0);` inside the
`it(...)` for the expensive gas esimation (involving
`SimpleStorage.methods.set`) because it otherwise doesn't seem to have an
effect on the default 15 second timeout.
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.
This commit adds two new configuration settings for Smart Contract configuration:
- `interfaces` - Any Smart Contract that represent an interface or is used for inheritance
- `libraries` - Any Smart Contract that is used as a library
This makes the configuration less redundant in cases where otherwise the `deploy`
property has been set to `false`, such as:
```
deploy: {
Ownable: {
deploy: false
},
...
}
```
The above can now be done via:
```
interfaces: ['Ownable'],
deploy: {
...
}
```
## Problem
When using `embark test —node=embark` with the test app, the test that listens for contract events would always fail after timing out. Funnily enough, after the timeout, the subsequent test would run, executing a method that would ulimately fire the event listened for in the previous test, causing the second test to fail as well.
## Solution (workaround)
Update the contract events listener test in the test app to execute the `set2` method twice, successfully working around the issue.
## NOTES
The cause of the issue is unknown and why the workaround works is also unknown.
This change works with both `embark test` and `embark test —node=embark`.
This commit introduces a new `global.getEvmVersion()` that can be used to
conditionally run tests, such as when tests rely on RPC APIs that are only
available in specific evm nodes.
For the test DApp, when ENS is enabled, ENS controls were not showing in Cockpit (under Utils), nor were they available to test in the DApp interface as they did not exist.
Fix ENS controls not showing in Cockpit when enabled.
Add ENS tab to Test DApp for ENS UI.
During `embark test`, the contracts dapp was throwing an error:
```
connection not open on send()
Error: Invalid JSON RPC response: ""
at Object.InvalidResponse (/Users/michael/repos/embark/node_modules/web3-core-helpers/src/errors.js:42:16)
at XMLHttpRequest.request.onreadystatechange (/Users/michael/repos/embark/node_modules/web3-providers-http/src/index.js:92:32)
at XMLHttpRequestEventTarget.dispatchEvent (/Users/michael/repos/embark/node_modules/xhr2-cookies/xml-http-request-event-target.ts:44:13)
at XMLHttpRequest._setReadyState (/Users/michael/repos/embark/node_modules/xhr2-cookies/xml-http-request.ts:219:8)
at XMLHttpRequest._onHttpRequestError (/Users/michael/repos/embark/node_modules/xhr2-cookies/xml-http-request.ts:379:8)
at ClientRequest.<anonymous> (/Users/michael/repos/embark/node_modules/xhr2-cookies/xml-http-request.ts:266:37)
at ClientRequest.emit (events.js:198:13)
at Socket.socketErrorListener (_http_client.js:392:9)
at Socket.emit (events.js:198:13)
at emitErrorNT (internal/streams/destroy.js:91:8)
at emitErrorAndCloseNT (internal/streams/destroy.js:59:3)
at process._tickCallback (internal/process/next_tick.js:63:19)
(node:75120) UnhandledPromiseRejectionWarning: Error: Provider not set or invalid
...
```
This was due to the fact that during testing, the Ganache VM **provider** is used as the blockchain node, instead of spinning up an instance of Ganache. Due to this, there is no HTTP nor WebSockets RPC endpoint opened on the VM node, and the contracts dapp was not able to connect to the node during tests.
Add `$EMBARK` to the contract config’s `dappConnection` list, so that the contract test dapp can successfully connect to Embark’s proxy, which ultimately communicates with the Ganache VM.
As a side note, without `$EMBARK` in the `dappConnection` list, the tests could run successfully when using `embark test —node=embark`. This succeeds because the geth node exposes the RPC WebSockets endpoint that the contracts app connects to on `ws://localhost:8546`.