#![cfg(target_arch = "wasm32")] use subxt_signer::{ecdsa, eth, sr25519}; use wasm_bindgen_test::*; wasm_bindgen_test::wasm_bindgen_test_configure!(run_in_browser); // Run the tests by calling: // // ```text // wasm-pack test --firefox --headless` // ``` // // These are independent of any other package to ensure that nothing // else enabled the same feature flag that subxt-signer needs to work ok // (subxt seems to, for instance). #[wasm_bindgen_test] async fn wasm_sr25519_signing_works() { let alice = sr25519::dev::alice(); // There's some non-determinism in the signing, so this ensures that // the rand stuff is configured properly to run ok in wasm. let signature = alice.sign(b"Hello there"); assert!(sr25519::verify( &signature, b"Hello there", &alice.public_key() )); } #[wasm_bindgen_test] async fn wasm_ecdsa_signing_works() { let alice = ecdsa::dev::alice(); // There's some non-determinism in the signing, so this ensures that // the rand stuff is configured properly to run ok in wasm. let signature = alice.sign(b"Hello there"); assert!(ecdsa::verify( &signature, b"Hello there", &alice.public_key() )); } #[wasm_bindgen_test] async fn wasm_eth_signing_works() { let alice = eth::dev::alith(); // There's some non-determinism in the signing, so this ensures that // the rand stuff is configured properly to run ok in wasm. let signature = alice.sign(b"Hello there"); assert!(eth::verify(&signature, b"Hello there", &alice.public_key())); }