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Mobile web browser providing access to websites that use the Ethereum blockchain

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MetaMask logo

MetaMask

CI CLA

MetaMask is a mobile web browser that provides easy access to websites that use the Ethereum blockchain.

For up to the minute news, follow our Twitter or Medium pages.

To learn how to develop MetaMask-compatible applications, visit our Developer Docs.

MetaMask Mobile

Building Locally

The code is built using React-Native and running code locally requires a Mac or Linux OS.

  • Install sentry-cli tools: brew install getsentry/tools/sentry-cli

  • Install Node.js version 14 (latest stable) and yarn@1 (latest)

    • If you are using nvm (recommended) running nvm use will automatically choose the right node version for you.
  • Install the shared React Native dependencies (React Native CLI, not Expo CLI)

  • Install cocoapods by running:

sudo gem install cocoapods
  • MetaMask Only: Rename the .*.env.example files (remove the .example) in the root of the project and fill in the appropriate values for each key. Get the values from another MetaMask Mobile developer.

  • Clone this repo and install our dependencies:

git clone ...
cd metamask-mobile
yarn setup # not the usual install command, this will run a lengthy postinstall flow
cd ios && pod install && cd .. # install pods for iOS
  • Non-MetaMask Only: In the project root folder run
  cp .ios.env.example .ios.env && \
  cp .android.env.example .android.env && \
  cp .js.env.example .js.env
  • Non-MetaMask Only: Create an account and generate your own API key at Infura in order to connect to main and test nets. Fill MM_INFURA_PROJECT_ID in .js.env. (App will run without it, but will not be able to connect to actual network.)

  • Then, in one terminal, run:

yarn watch

Android

  • Install the Android SDK, via Android Studio.
    • MetaMask Only: To create production builds, you need to install Google Play Licensing Library via the SDK Manager in Android Studio.
  • Install the Android NDK, via Android Studio's SDK Manager.
    • In the SDK Manager, select the SDK Tools tab and install NDK version 17.2.4988734. You'll need to click "Show Package Details" in order to select the appropriate version.
      • In the android directory, update the local.properties file by adding line:
      ndk.dir=/Users/YOUR_HOME_DIRECTORY/Library/Android/sdk/ndk/17.2.4988734
      
      (You may have to create local.properties if it doesn't exist.)
  • Linux only:
    • Ensure that you have the secret-tool binary on your machine.
      • Part of the libsecret-tools package on Debian/Ubuntu based distributions.
  • Install the correct emulator
  • Finally, start the emulator from Android Studio, and run:
yarn start:android

iOS

  • Install the iOS dependencies
  • Install the correct simulator
    • iOS OS Version: Latest, unless told otherwise
    • Device: iPhone 11 Pro
yarn start:ios

Build Troubleshooting

Unfortunately, the build system may fail to pick up local changes, such as installing new NPM packages or yarn linking a dependency. If the app is behaving strangely or not picking up your local changes, it may be due to build issues. To ensure that you're starting with a clean slate, close all emulators/simulators, stop the yarn watch process, and run:

yarn clean

# if you're going to `yarn link` any packages,
# do that here, before the next command

yarn watch:clean

# ...and then, in another terminal

yarn start:ios

# or

yarn start:android

If yarn link fails after going through these steps, try directly yarn adding the local files instead.

Debugging

First, make sure you have the following running:

  • yarn watch
  • Your Android emulator or iOS simulator
  • yarn start:android or yarn start:ios

Next, check that the React Native Debugger is working:

  • Open your emulator or simulator, and select Debug JS Remotely (or something similar) from its developer menu
  • To open the developer menu:
    • iOS Simulator: Cmd + D
    • Android Emulator
      • macOS: Cmd + M - Windows, Linux: Ctrl + M
  • If it doesn't open automatically, try navigating to this URL in Chrome: http://localhost:8081/debugger-ui/
  • If these steps do not take you to the React Native Debugger, something is wrong

Debugging iOS (macOS Only)

For more details, see this page.

  • You should be able to inspect the mobile app using the console in the React Native Debugger in Chrome
  • To debug a website (dapp) in the browser:
    • Navigate to the website in the app's browser
    • Open Safari
      • Go to: Preferences -> Advanced and select Show Develop menu in menu bar
    • Select Develop in the menu bar
      • Find your simulator in the second section from the top
      • Select the relevant WebView from the list
        • The simulator will highlight the WebView when you hover over it in Safari

Debugging Android

For more details, see this page.

  • You should be able to inspect the mobile app using the console in the React Native Debugger in Chrome
  • To debug a website (dapp) in the browser:
    • Navigate to the website in the app's browser
    • Go to chrome://inspect
    • Select the relevant WebView under Remote Target

Miscellaneous

Running Tests

Unit Tests

yarn test:unit

E2E Tests (iOS)

First, follow the instructions here to install applesimutils. Then:

yarn test:e2e:ios

E2E Tests (Android)

yarn test:e2e:android

Changing dependencies

Whenever you change dependencies (adding, removing, or updating, either in package.json or yarn.lock), there are various files that must be kept up-to-date.

  • yarn.lock:
    • Run yarn setup again after your changes to ensure yarn.lock has been properly updated.
  • The allow-scripts configuration in package.json
    • Run yarn allow-scripts auto to update the allow-scripts configuration automatically. This config determines whether the package's install/postinstall scripts are allowed to run. Review each new package to determine whether the install script needs to run or not, testing if necessary.
    • Unfortunately, yarn allow-scripts auto will behave inconsistently on different platforms. macOS and Windows users may see extraneous changes relating to optional dependencies.

Architecture

To get a better understanding of the internal architecture of this app take a look at this diagram.

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