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contributing.md

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Contributing to the monorepo

Getting started

  • Install Node.js version 16.
    • If you're using NVM (recommended), nvm use will ensure that the right version is installed.
  • Install Yarn v3.
  • Run yarn install to install dependencies and run any required post-install scripts.

Testing

  • Run yarn workspace <workspaceName> run test to run all tests for a package.
  • Run yarn workspace <workspaceName> run jest --no-coverage <file> to run a test file within the context of a package.
  • Run yarn test to run tests for all packages.

Note

workspaceName in these commands is the name field within a package's package.json, e.g., @metamask/snaps-controllers, not the directory where it is located, e.g., packages/snaps-controllers.

Linting

Run yarn lint to lint all files and show possible violations.

Run yarn lint:fix to fix any automatically fixable violations.

Performing operations across the monorepo

This repository relies on Yarn's workspaces feature to provide a way to work with packages individually and collectively. Refer to the documentation for the following Yarn commands for usage instructions:

Using packages in other projects during development/testing

When developing changes to packages within this repository that a different project depends upon, you may wish to load those changes into the project and test them locally or in CI before publishing proper releases of those packages. To solve that problem, this repository provides a mechanism to publish "preview" versions of packages to GitHub Package Registry. These versions can then be used in the project like any other version, provided the project is configured to use that registry.

Publishing preview builds as a MetaMask contributor

If you are a member of the MetaMask organization, you can create branches directly on this repository rather than using a fork. This allows you to use our preview build GitHub Action.

Post a comment on the PR with the text @metamaskbot publish-preview (This triggers the publish-preview GitHub action). After a few minutes, you will see a new comment indicating that all packages have been published with the format <package name>-<commit id>.

Publishing preview builds as an independent contributor

If you're a contributor and you've forked this repository, you can create preview versions for a branch by following these steps:

  1. Open the package.json for each package that you want to publish and change the scope in the name from @metamask to @<your GitHub username>.

  2. From your local fork of the repository, run yarn prepare-preview-builds "$(git rev-parse --short HEAD)" && yarn build && yarn publish-previews to generate preview versions for all packages based on the current branch and publish them to GitHub Package Registry.

    • Take note of the version that is published; it should look like 1.2.3 -e2df9b4 instead of 1.2.3.

Using preview builds

Warning

There is a known problem with the preview build workflow. It relies upon you having a local cache of any non-preview @metamask/-scoped packages.

If you encounter problems installing non-preview @metamask/-scoped packages when using this workflow, you can work around the problem by first installing dependencies without preview builds enabled (e.g. by temporarily removing the .npmrc or unsetting the required environment variables) to install the missing packages. Once they are installed, preview build installations should work (the non-preview @metamask/-scoped packages will be found in your local cache).

See issue #1075 for more details.

Preview builds should automatically work in CI on the MetaMask extension and MetaMask mobile repositories, as long as the PR is in draft.

To use preview builds locally, follow these steps:

  1. Navigate to your settings within GitHub and create a classic access token. Make sure to give this token the read:packages scope.

  2. Follow these steps in the project using the preview builds:

  • Yarn 1 (classic) or NPM

    Add the following in .npmrc

    @metamask:registry=https://npm.pkg.github.com
    //npm.pkg.github.com/:_authToken=<your personal access token>
    
  • Yarn >= 2 (berry):

    Ensure that the project .yarnrc.yml file has the following contents:

    npmRegistries:
      'https://npm.pkg.github.com':
        npmAlwaysAuth: true
        npmAuthToken: '${GITHUB_NPM_TOKEN-}'
    
    npmScopes:
      metamask:
        npmRegistryServer: '${METAMASK_NPM_REGISTRY:-https://registry.yarnpkg.com}'

    The METAMASK_NPM_REGISTRY environment variable lets you control which registry is used for @metamask-scoped packages. Set this environment variable to https://npm.pkg.github.com to use preview builds. The GITHUB_NPM_TOKEN environment variable is where your token is set (the one created in step 1).

    For example, in Bash or ZSH, you can set both of these environment variables when installing dependencies:

    GITHUB_NPM_TOKEN=<your personal access token> METAMASK_NPM_REGISTRY=https://npm.pkg.github.com yarn install
    • It's recommended to use your machine's local keychain to store the token, and retrieve it from there. For example on macOS, you can use:
      GITHUB_NPM_TOKEN=$(security find-generic-password -s 'GitHub NPM Token' -w) METAMASK_NPM_REGISTRY=https://npm.pkg.github.com yarn install
  1. Update package.json with the new preview build versions

    • Each preview build package should have a version matching (e.g., 1.2.3-e2df9b4 instead of ~1.2.3), then run yarn install.
  2. Repeat step 3 each time you publish new preview builds.

Releasing

The create-release-branch tool and action-publish-release GitHub action are used to automate the release process.

  1. Create a release branch.

    Run yarn create-release-branch. This tool generates a file and opens it in your editor, where you can specify which packages you want to include in the next release and which versions they should receive. Instructions are provided for you at the top; read them and update the file accordingly.

    When you're ready to continue, save and close the file, and run the tool again. This time, it will create a new branch for the release.

  2. Update changelogs for relevant packages.

    At this point you will be on a new release branch, and a new section will have been added to the changelog of each package you specified in the previous step.

    For each changelog, review the new section and make the appropriate changes:

  • Move each entry into the appropriate category (review the "Keep a Changelog" spec for the full list of categories and the correct ordering of all categories).

  • Remove any changelog entries that don't affect consumers of the package (e.g., lockfile changes or development environment changes). Exceptions may be made for changes that might be of interest despite not having an effect upon the published package (e.g., major test improvements, security improvements, improved documentation, etc.).

  • Reword changelog entries to explain changes in terms that users of the package will understand (e.g., avoid referencing internal variables/concepts).

  • Consolidate related changes into one change entry if it makes it easier to comprehend.

    Run yarn lint:changelogs to check that all changelogs are correctly formatted.

    Commit and push the branch.

  1. Submit a pull request for the release branch so that it can be reviewed and tested.

    Make sure the title of the pull request follows the pattern "Release <new version>".

    If changes are made to the base branch, the release branch will need to be updated with these changes and review/QA will need to restart again. As such, it's probably best to avoid merging other PRs into the base branch while review is underway.

  2. "Squash & Merge" the release.

    This step triggers the publish-release GitHub action workflow to tag the final release commit and publish the release on GitHub.

    Pay attention to the box you see when you press the green button and ensure that the final name of the commit follows the pattern "Release <new version>".

  3. Publish the release on NPM.

    The publish-release GitHub Action workflow runs the publish-npm job, which publishes relevant packages to NPM. It requires approval from the npm-publishers team to complete. If you're not on the team, ask a member to approve it for you; otherwise, approve the job.

    Once the publish-npm job has finished, check NPM to verify that all relevant packages has been published.