* fix nonce issues by locking populate and send transaction
Concurrent asynchronous population of transactions cause issues with nonces not being in sync with the transaction count for an account on chain. This was being mitigated by tracking a "last seen" nonce and locking inside of `populateTransaction` so that the nonce could be populated in a concurrent fashion. However, if there was an async cancellation before the transaction was sent, then the nonce would become out of sync. One solution was to decrease the nonce if a cancellation occurred. The other solution, in this commit, is simply to lock the populate and sendTransaction calls together, so that there will not be concurrent nonce discrepancies. This removes the need for "lastSeenNonce" and is overall more simple.
* remove lastSeenNonce
Internal nonce tracking is no longer needed since populate/sendTransaction is now locked. Even if cancelled midway, the nonce will get a refreshed value from the number of transactions from chain.
* chronos v4 exception tracking
* Add tests
* Add json de/serialization lib from codex to handle conversions
json-rpc now requires nim-json-serialization to convert types to/from json. Use the nim-json-serialization signatures to call the json serialization lib from nim-codex (should be moved to its own lib)
* Add ethers implementation for setMethodHandler
Was removed in json-rpc
* More json conversion updates
* Fix json_rpc.call returning JsonString instead of JsonNode
* Update exceptions
Use {.async: (raises: [...].} where needed
Annotate provider with {.push raises:[].}
Format signatures
* Start fixing tests (mainly conversion fixes)
* rename sender to `from`, update json error logging, add more conversions
* Refactor exceptions for providers and signers, fix more tests
- signer procs raise SignerError, provider procs raise ProviderError
- WalletError now inherits from SignerError
- move wallet module under signers
- create jsonrpo moudle under signers
- bump nim-json-rpc for null-handling fixes
- All jsonrpc provider tests passing, still need to fix others
* remove raises from async annotation for dynamic dispatch
- removes async: raises from getAddress and signTransaction because derived JsonRpcSigner methods were not being used when dynamically dispatched. Once `raises` was removed from the async annotation, the dynamic dispatch worked again. This is only the case for getAddress and signTransaction.
- add gcsafe annotation to wallet.provider so that it matches the base method
* Catch EstimateGasError before ProviderError
EstimateGasError is now a ProviderError (it is a SignerError, and SignerError is a ProviderError), so EstimateGasErrors were not being caught
* clean up - all tests passing
* support nim 2.0
* lock in chronos version
* Add serde options to the json util, along with tests
next step is to:
1. change back any ethers var names that were changed for serialization purposes, eg `from` and `type`
2. move the json util to its own lib
* bump json-rpc to 0.4.0 and fix test
* fix: specify raises for getAddress and sendTransaction
Fixes issue where getAddress and sendTransaction could not be found for MockSigner in tests. The problem was that the async: raises update had not been applied to the MockSigner.
* handle exceptions during jsonrpc init
There are too many exceptions to catch individually, including chronos raising CatchableError exceptions in await expansion. There are also many other errors captured inside of the new proc with CatchableError. Instead of making it more complicated and harder to read, I think sticking with excepting CatchableError inside of convertError is a sensible solution
* cleanup
* deserialize key defaults to serialize key
* Add more tests for OptIn/OptOut/Strict modes, fix logic
* use nim-serde instead of json util
Allows aliasing of de/serialized fields, so revert changes of sender to `from` and transactionType to `type`
* Move hash* shim to its own module
* address PR feedback
- add comments to hashes shim
- remove .catch from callback condition
- derive SignerError from EthersError instead of ProviderError. This allows Providers and Signers to be separate, as Ledger does it, to isolate functionality. Some signer functions now raise both ProviderError and SignerError
- Update reverts to check for SignerError
- Update ERC-20 method comment
* rename subscriptions.init > subscriptions.start