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Migrate to the current provider API

In January 2021, MetaMask made a number of breaking changes to the provider API, and removed the injected window.web3. These changes are live on all platforms as of version:

  • 9.0.2 of the MetaMask browser extension.
  • 1.0.9 of MetaMask Mobile.

This guide describes how to migrate to the new provider API, and how to replace window.web3. To understand why MetaMask made these changes, please see this blog post.

note

If you're a MetaMask user attempting to use a legacy Ethereum website that hasn't migrated to the new API, please see the MetaMask legacy Web3 extension.

Except for such legacy websites, no action is required for MetaMask users.

Summary of breaking changes

window.web3 removal

As part of the breaking changes, MetaMask stopped injecting web3.js version 0.20.7 as window.web3 into web pages. MetaMask still injects a dummy object at window.web3, in order to issue warnings when websites attempt to access window.web3.

window.ethereum API changes

MetaMask made the following breaking changes to the window.ethereum API:

  • Ensure that chain IDs returned by eth_chainId are not 0-padded.
    • For example, instead of 0x01, we always return 0x1, wherever the chain ID is returned or accessible.
  • Stop emitting chainIdChanged, and instead emit chainChanged.
  • Remove the following experimental methods:
    • ethereum._metamask.isEnabled
    • ethereum._metamask.isApproved
  • Remove the ethereum.publicConfigStore object.
    • This object was, despite its name, never intended for public consumption. Its removal may affect those who do not use it directly, for example, if another library you use relies on the object.
  • Remove the ethereum.autoRefreshOnNetworkChange property.
    • Consumers can still set this property on the provider, it just won't do anything.
  • Deprecate the web3.currentProvider method.

Replace window.web3

Pages no longer reload on chain changes

Since we removed window.web3, MetaMask no longer automatically reloads the page on chain/network changes.

Please see Handling the removal of ethereum.autoRefreshOnNetworkChange for details.

For historical reasons, MetaMask injected web3@0.20.7 into all web pages. That version of web3 is deprecated, has known security issues, and is no longer maintained by the web3.js team. Therefore, we decided to remove this library.

If your website relied on our window.web3 object, you have to migrate. Please continue reading to understand your options. Some are as simple as a one-line change.

tip

Regardless of how you choose to migrate, you may want to read the web3@0.20.7 documentation, which you can find here.

Use window.ethereum directly

For many web3 sites, the API provided by window.ethereum is sufficient. Much of the web3 API simply maps to RPC methods, all of which can be requested using ethereum.request(). For example, here are a couple of actions performed using first window.web3, and then their equivalents using window.ethereum.

/**
* Getting Accounts
*/

// window.web3
const accounts = web3.eth.accounts;

// window.ethereum
const accounts = await ethereum.request({ method: 'eth_accounts' });

/**
* Sending a Transaction
*/

// window.web3
web3.eth.sendTransaction(
{
to: '0x...',
'from': '0x...',
value: '0x...',
// And so on...
},
(error, result) => {
if (error) {
return console.error(error);
}
// Handle the result
console.log(result);
}
);

// window.ethereum
try {
const transactionHash = await ethereum.request({
method: 'eth_sendTransaction',
params: [
{
to: '0x...',
'from': '0x...',
value: '0x...',
// And so on...
},
],
});
// Handle the result
console.log(transactionHash);
} catch (error) {
console.error(error);
}

Use an updated convenience library

If you decide that you need a convenience library, you have to convert your usage of window.web3 to an updated convenience library. We recommend ethers (documentation).

Use @metamask/legacy-web3

caution

We strongly recommend that you consider one of the other two migration paths before resorting to this one. It is not future-proof, and we will not add new features to it.

Finally, if you just want your web3 site to continue to work, we created @metamask/legacy-web3. This package is a drop-in replacement for our window.web3 that you can add to your website even before remove window.web3 on all platforms.

@metamask/legacy-web3 should work exactly like our injected window.web3, including by refreshing the page on chain/network changes, but we cannot guarantee that it works perfectly. We will not fix any future incompatibilities between web3@0.20.7 and MetaMask itself, nor will we fix any bugs in web3@0.20.7 itself.

For installation and usage instructions, please see the npm listing.

Use the MetaMask legacy Web3 extension

We created the MetaMask Legacy Web3 Extension for any users of websites that still expect window.web3 to be injected. If you install this extension alongside the regular MetaMask wallet extension, websites that rely on our old window.web3 API should start working again.

As with the regular extension, it’s critical that you only install from the official browser extension stores. Please follow the relevant link below to install the Legacy Web3 extension in your browser:

Migrate to the new provider API

Handle eth_chainId return values

The eth_chainId RPC method now returns correctly formatted values, e.g. 0x1 and 0x2, instead of incorrectly formatted values, e.g. 0x01 and 0x02. MetaMask's implementation of eth_chainId used to return 0-padded values for the default Ethereum chains except Kovan. If you expect 0-padded chain ID values from eth_chainId, make sure to update your code to expect the correct format instead.

For more details on chain IDs and how to handle them, see the chainChanged event.

Handle the removal of chainIdChanged

chainIdChanged is a typo of chainChanged. To migrate, simply listen for chainChanged instead:

// Instead of this:
ethereum.on('chainIdChanged', (chainId) => {
/* handle the chainId */
});

// Do this:
ethereum.on('chainChanged', (chainId) => {
/* handle the chainId */
});

Handle the removal of isEnabled() and isApproved()

Before the new provider API shipped, we added the _metamask.isEnabled and _metamask.isApproved methods to enable web3 sites to check if they have access to the user's accounts. isEnabled and isApproved functioned identically, except that isApproved was async. These methods were arguably never that useful, and they became completely redundant with the introduction of MetaMask's permission system.

We recommend that you check for account access in the following ways:

  1. You can call the wallet_getPermissions RPC method and check for the eth_accounts permission.
  2. You can call the eth_accounts RPC method and the ethereum._metamask.isUnlocked() method.
    • MetaMask has to be unlocked before you can access the user's accounts. If the array returned by eth_accounts is empty, check if MetaMask is locked using isUnlocked().
    • If MetaMask is unlocked and you still aren't receiving any accounts, it's time to request accounts using the eth_requestAccounts RPC method.

Handle the removal of ethereum.publicConfigStore

How to handle this change depends on if and how you relied on the publicConfigStore. We have seen examples of listening for provider state changes the publicConfigStore data event, and accessing the publicConfigStore internal state directly.

We recommend that you search your code and its dependencies for references to publicConfigStore. If you find any references, you should understand what it's being used for, and migrate to one of the recommended provider APIs instead. If you don't find any references, you should not be affected by this change.

Although it is possible that your dependencies use the publicConfigStore, we have confirmed that the latest versions (as of January 2021) of the following common libraries were not affected by this change:

  • ethers
  • web3 (web3.js)

Handle the removal of ethereum.autoRefreshOnNetworkChange

The ethereum.autoRefreshOnNetworkChange was a mutable boolean property used to control whether MetaMask reloaded the page on chain/network changes. However, it only caused the page to be reloaded if the script access a property on window.web3. Therefore, this property was removed along with window.web3.

Despite this, we still recommend reloading the page on chain changes. Some convenience libraries, such as ethers, will continue to reload the page by default. If you don't use such a convenience library, you'll have to reload the page manually. Please see the chainChanged event for details.