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OnChainTrust Snap

The OnChainTrust Snap brings Verified Smart Contract Owner information to the Transaction Confirmation Screen. Users can easily verify that they are interacting with a smart contract associated with a legitimate legal entity that has undergone KYB-verification.

Users can verify their addresses using the OnChainTrust Dapp

Development

Prerequisites

  • MetaMask Flask
    • ⚠️ You cannot have other versions of MetaMask installed
  • Nodejs ^18.16.0.
    • Once installed, you should also install Yarn with npm i -g yarn to make working with this repository easiest.

Installing

yarn install && yarn start

Testing and Linting

Run yarn test to run the tests once.

Run yarn lint to run the linter, or run yarn lint:fix to run the linter and fix any automatically fixable issues.

Running

Snap

⚠️ When snap updates you will need to still reconnect from the dapp to see changes

# Running Snap via watch mode
yarn workspace @onchaintrust/onchaintrust-snap watch

Alternatively you can build and serve the snap manually. This can sometimes be more stable than watch mode but requires a manual rebuild and serve anytime there is a change on the snap.

# Building and serving snap manually
yarn workspace @onchaintrust/onchaintrust-snap build
yarn workspace @onchaintrust/onchaintrust-snap serve

Site

yarn workspace site start

All packages (Site + Snap)

yarn start

Dapp intergation Guide

How to install

From the dApp, issue the following RPC request to install the Snap, make sure it is using the latest version

provider.request({
  method: 'wallet_requestSnaps',
  params: {
    ['npm:@onchaintrust/onchaintrust-snap']: { version: '1.0.0' }, //Snap's version
  },
});

Releasing & Publishing

The project follows the same release process as the other libraries in the MetaMask organization. The GitHub Actions action-create-release-pr and action-publish-release are used to automate the release process; see those repositories for more information about how they work.

  1. Choose a release version.
  • The release version should be chosen according to SemVer. Analyze the changes to see whether they include any breaking changes, new features, or deprecations, then choose the appropriate SemVer version. See the SemVer specification for more information.
  1. If this release is backporting changes onto a previous release, then ensure there is a major version branch for that version (e.g. 1.x for a v1 backport release).
  • The major version branch should be set to the most recent release with that major version. For example, when backporting a v1.0.2 release, you'd want to ensure there was a 1.x branch that was set to the v1.0.1 tag.
  1. Trigger the workflow_dispatch event manually for the Create Release Pull Request action to create the release PR.
  • For a backport release, the base branch should be the major version branch that you ensured existed in step 2. For a normal release, the base branch should be the main branch for that repository (which should be the default value).
  • This should trigger the action-create-release-pr workflow to create the release PR.
  1. Update the changelog to move each change entry into the appropriate change category (See here for the full list of change categories, and the correct ordering), and edit them to be more easily understood by users of the package.
  • Generally any changes that don't affect consumers of the package (e.g. lockfile changes or development environment changes) are omitted. 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.).
  • Try to explain each change in terms that users of the package would understand (e.g. avoid referencing internal variables/concepts).
  • Consolidate related changes into one change entry if it makes it easier to explain.
  • Run yarn auto-changelog validate --rc to check that the changelog is correctly formatted.
  1. Review and QA the release.
  • 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.
  1. Squash & Merge the release.
  • This should trigger the action-publish-release workflow to tag the final release commit and publish the release on GitHub.
  1. Publish the release on npm.
  • Be very careful to use a clean local environment to publish the release, and follow exactly the same steps used during CI.
  • Use npm publish --dry-run to examine the release contents to ensure the correct files are included. Compare to previous releases if necessary (e.g. using https://unpkg.com/browse/[package name]@[package version]/).
  • Once you are confident the release contents are correct, publish the release using npm publish.

Licence

This project is licensed under Apache 2.0 terms:

Copyright (c) 2024 OnChainTrust.