Part of https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/143404
We currently drop the first N frames of all benchmarks. For the app based benchmarks (not microbenchmarks) this is harmful as we miss first time initialization costs in our CI.
Still need to do this with flutter/gallery, but that lives in a different repo.
This is an attempt at a reland of https://github.com/flutter/flutter/pull/141396
The main changes here that are different than the original PR is fixes to wire up the `flutter test` command properly with the web renderer.
This is a direct revert of (the revert of (the reland of (the policy pr))): https://github.com/flutter/flutter/pull/143132.
The only change is:
1. to put a conditional all on one line, because the packages repository has a test that uses an old flutter project to make sure nothing regresses. The old project uses an old gradle version, and the old gradle version bundles an old groovy version, and the old groovy version has a bug where lines that start with `&&` don't always work: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/GROOVY-7218 (I enjoy that the revert reason ends up providing another strong justification to go forward with the policy). Also thanks to @reidbaker for pointing out this bug.
2. I also made a slight formatting change to the messages that print when out of the support bounds, which I think looks slightly better.
I tested this with on a branch that included a revert of https://github.com/flutter/flutter/pull/142008, and was able to recreate the failure and verify that it was resolved by 1).
Re land of https://github.com/flutter/flutter/pull/142000.
Differences:
1. Fixed the test that was failing in postsubmit. The reason was that the Flutter Gradle Plugin was being applied after KGP in that test, so we couldn't find the KGP version. This caused a log, and the test expects no logs. I moved FGP to after KGP
2. Added to the logs for when we can't find AGP. Change is from
> "Warning: unable to detect project AGP version. Skipping version checking."
to
> ~"Warning: unable to detect project AGP version. Skipping version checking. \nThis may be because you have applied the Flutter Gradle Plugin after AGP."~
update: the above is wrong, changed to
> "Warning: unable to detect project KGP version. Skipping version checking. \nThis may be because you have applied AGP after the Flutter Gradle Plugin."
3. Added a note to the app-level build.gradle templates that FGP must go last
> // The Flutter Gradle Plugin must be applied after the Android and Kotlin Gradle plugin.
Dual Web Compile has had some issues where `flutter test` is not respecting the `--web-renderer` flag for some reason. I haven't gotten entirely to the bottom of the issue, but for now we need to rever these changes while I investigate. This reverts the following PRs:
https://github.com/flutter/flutter/pull/143128https://github.com/flutter/flutter/pull/141396
While doing this revert, I had a few merge conflicts with https://github.com/flutter/flutter/pull/142760, and I tried to resolve the merge conflicts within the spirit of that PR's change, but @chingjun I might need your input on whether the imports I have modified are okay with regards to the change you were making.
Re-sets two jvmargs that were getting cleared because we set a value for `-Xmx`. Could help with https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/142957. Copied from comment here https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/142957:
>Two random things I ran into while looking into this that might help:
>
>1. Gradle has defaults for a couple of the jvmargs, and setting any one of them clears those defaults for the others (bug here https://github.com/gradle/gradle/issues/19750). This can cause the "Gradle daemon to consume more and more native memory until it crashes", though the bug typically has a different associated error. It seems worth it to re-set those defaults.
>2. There is a property we can set that will give us a heap dump on OOM ([-XX:HeapDumpOnOutOfMemoryError](https://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/technotes/guides/troubleshoot/clopts001.html))
Mostly just a find and replace from `find . -name gradle.properties -exec sed -i '' 's/\-Xmx4G/-Xmx4G\ \-XX:MaxMetaspaceSize=2G\ \-XX:+HeapDumpOnOutOfMemoryError/g' {} \;`, with the templates and the one test that writes from a string replaced by hand. I didn't set a value for `MaxMetaspaceSize` in the template files because I want to make sure this value doesn't cause problems in ci first (changes to the templates are essentially un-revertable for those who `flutter create` while the changes exist).
Previously, we were comparing the signed int `target_length` (returned by WideCharToMultiByte) to a size_t string length, resulting in a signed/unsigned comparison warning as follows:
```
windows\runner\utils.cpp(54,43): warning C4018: '>': signed/unsigned mismatch
```
WideCharToMultiByte returns:
* 0 on error
* the number of bytes written to the buffer pointed to by its fifth parameter, lpMultiByteStr, on success.
As a result it's safe to store the return value in an unsigned int, which eliminates the warning.
No changes to tests since this is dependent on end-user project settings/modifications and does not trigger a warning with default project settings.
Fixes: https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/134227
This PR updates almost* all Gradle buildscripts in the Flutter repo the `example` and `dev` (in particular, in `dev/integration_tests` and in `dev/benchmarks`) directories to apply Flutter's Gradle plugins using the declarative `plugins {}` block.
*almost, because:
- add-to-app (aka hybrid) apps are not migrated (related https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/138756)
- apps that purposefully use build files to ensure backward compatibility (e.g. [`gradle_deprecated_settings`](https://github.com/flutter/flutter/tree/3.16.0/dev/integration_tests/gradle_deprecated_settings))
This implements dual compile via the newly available flutter.js bootstrapping APIs for intelligent build fallback.
* Users can now use the `FlutterLoader.load` API from flutter.js
* Flutter tool injects build info into the `index.html` of the user so that the bootstrapper knows which build variants are available to bootstrap
* The semantics of the `--wasm` flag for `flutter build web` have changed:
- Instead of producing a separate `build/web_wasm` directory, the output goes to the `build/web` directory like a normal web build
- Produces a dual build that contains two build variants: dart2wasm+skwasm and dart2js+CanvasKit. The dart2wasm+skwasm will only work on Chrome in a cross-origin isolated context, all other environments will fall back to dart2js+CanvasKit.
- `--wasm` and `--web-renderer` are now mutually exclusive. Since there are multiple build variants with `--wasm`, the web renderer cannot be expressed via a single command-line flag. For now, we are hard coding what build variants are produced with the `--wasm` flag, but I plan on making this more customizable in the future.
* Build targets now can optionally provide a "build key" which can uniquely identify any specific parameterization of that build target. This way, the build target can invalidate itself by changing its build key. This works a bit better than just stuffing everything into the environment defines because (a) it doesn't invalidate the entire build, just the targets which are affected and (b) settings for multiple build variants don't translate well to the flat map of environment defines.
This PR increases Android's `minSdkVersion` to 21.
There are two changes in this PR aside from simply increasing the number
from 19 to 21 everywhere.
First, tests using `flutter_gallery` fail without updating the
lockfiles. The changes in the PR are the results of running
`dev/tools/bin/generate_gradle_lockfiles.dart` on that app.
Second, from
[here](https://developer.android.com/build/multidex#mdex-pre-l):
> if your minSdkVersion is 21 or higher, multidex is enabled by default
and you don't need the multidex library.
As a result, the `multidex` option everywhere is obsolete. This PR
removes all logic and tests related to that option that I could find.
`Google testing` and `customer_tests` pass on this PR, so it seems like
this won't be too breaking if it is at all. If needed I'll give this
some time to bake in the framework before landing the flutter/engine
PRs.
Context: https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/138117,
https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/141277, b/319373605
Work towards https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/142178.
---
This PR makes no _behavioral_ changes to executed code, and instead
focuses on organization and naming:
1. Extended the README to explain the intent of the test, as well as how
to run it
1. Renamed `main.dart` and `main_test.dart` to `frame_rate_main.dart`
and `frame_rate_test.dart` (we'll add more)
1. Did some refactoring of the test to make it more obvious what is
being asserted (i.e. `widgetBuilds` and friends)
Reverts flutter/flutter#142062
Initiated by: eliasyishak
This change reverts the following previous change:
Original Description:
This PR makes no _behavioral_ changes to executed code, and instead focuses on organization and naming:
1. Almost[^1] anything named `external_ui` is renamed `external_textures`
1. Extended the README to explain the intent of the test, as well as how to run it
1. Renamed `main.dart` and `main_test.dart` to `frame_rate_main.dart` and `frame_rate_test.dart` (we'll add more)
1. Did some refactoring of the test to make it more obvious what is being asserted (i.e. `widgetBuilds` and friends)
Given how complex (and in-flux) this directory is, I'm also requesting either John, Jonah or I review any changes.
[^1]: Except the name of the `.ci.yaml` task, i.e. `name: Linux_pixel_7pro external_ui_integration_test` because I'm apparently not able to change that without creating a new task as `bringup: true` and playing a bit of a dance. Maybe that's worth doing though (in future PRs)?
This PR makes no _behavioral_ changes to executed code, and instead
focuses on organization and naming:
1. Almost[^1] anything named `external_ui` is renamed
`external_textures`
1. Extended the README to explain the intent of the test, as well as how
to run it
1. Renamed `main.dart` and `main_test.dart` to `frame_rate_main.dart`
and `frame_rate_test.dart` (we'll add more)
1. Did some refactoring of the test to make it more obvious what is
being asserted (i.e. `widgetBuilds` and friends)
Given how complex (and in-flux) this directory is, I'm also requesting
either John, Jonah or I review any changes.
[^1]: Except the name of the `.ci.yaml` task, i.e. `name:
Linux_pixel_7pro external_ui_integration_test` because I'm apparently
not able to change that without creating a new task as `bringup: true`
and playing a bit of a dance. Maybe that's worth doing though (in future
PRs)?
`swift-format` alphabetizes imports. Alphabetize them in swift template files and integration tests.
I found this as part of https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/41129 running `swift-import` on packages.
Added missing required newline at end of some `.gitignore` files. All other `.gitignore` files ends with a newline except the changed ones, hence the PR.
> *List which issues are fixed by this PR. You must list at least one issue. An issue is not required if the PR fixes something trivial like a typo.*
**Not listing any issues because of trivial fixes as mentioned above.**
Change the following in the `flutter create` templates. I didn't make any auto-migrations for existing apps because none seem that critical:
1. Turn on `ASSETCATALOG_COMPILER_GENERATE_SWIFT_ASSET_SYMBOL_EXTENSIONS` in iOS and macOS.
1. Turn on `BuildIndependentTargetsInParallel` in macOS template. https://github.com/flutter/flutter/pull/125827/files#r1181817619
1. Turn on `DEAD_CODE_STRIPPING` in macOS template.
1. Set `ENABLE_USER_SCRIPT_SANDBOXING=NO` in iOS and macOS template. `flutter` scripts don't work with this on. This might require a migration in the future to explicitly turn this one off. However at least for now if the setting isn't present it defaults to `NO`.
Add migration for `LastUpgradeVersion` so users won't see these validation issues in Xcode.
Run migrator on all the example apps. A few aren't Flutter apps so I edited them in Xcode.
Fixes https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/140253
See also https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/125817 and https://github.com/flutter/flutter/pull/90304.
Partially resolves[^1] https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/139774.
Effectively reverts https://github.com/flutter/flutter/pull/125581.
The main change here is that I deleted and recreated the macos Xcode project for this integration test (hence the large diff). I tried fixing the existing project first, but it was set up quite differently, andâfor whatever reasonâthe integration test would get stuck trying to load `dev/integration_tests/flavors/integration_test/integration_test.dart`.
I verified that this works locally, but I don't know if it's possible to run this on the devicelab try pool to verify that it works on devicelab hardware.
[^1]: I would not close the issue until 1) this PR lands, 2) the integration test consistently passes on CI, and 3) macOS support for flavors is publicly documented.
1. Move leak_tracker and leak_tracker_testing out of direct dependencies.
2. Move leak_tracker_flutter_testing from dev to prod dependencies for flutter_test
It is prerequisite for https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/135856
Pinning the package:web dependency constrains downstream packages from
using newer versions and making sure they support the version pinned in
Flutter. Since the usage of package:web in Flutter is light, we should
instead have a small shim like the engine and keep package:web as a dev
dependency only.
Reverts flutter/flutter#132985
Initiated by: christopherfujino
This change reverts the following previous change:
Original Description:
Provides support for conditional bundling of assets through the existing `--flavor` option for `flutter build` and `flutter run`. Closes https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/21682. Resolves https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/136092
## Change
Within the `assets` section pubspec.yaml, the user can now specify one or more `flavors` that an asset belongs to. Consider this example:
```yaml
# pubspec.yaml
flutter:
assets:
- assets/normal-asset.png
- path: assets/vanilla/ice-cream.png
flavors:
- vanilla
- path: assets/strawberry/ice-cream.png
flavors:
- strawberry
```
With this pubspec,
* `flutter run --flavor vanilla` will not include `assets/strawberry/ice-cream.png` in the build output.
* `flutter run --flavor strawberry` will not include `assets/vanilla/ice-cream.png`.
* `flutter run` will only include `assets/normal-asset.png`.
## Open questions
* Should this be supported for all platforms, or should this change be limited to ones with documented `--flavor` support (Android, iOS, and (implicitly) MacOS)? This PR currently only enables this feature for officially supported platforms.
## Design thoughts, what this PR does not do, etc.
### This does not provide an automatic mapping/resolution of asset keys/paths to others based on flavor at runtime.
The implementation in this PR represents a simplest approach. Notably, it does not give Flutter the ability to dynamically choose an asset based on flavor using a single asset key. For example, one can't use `Image.asset('config.json')` to dynamically choose between different "flavors" of `config.json` (such as `dev-flavor/config.json` or `prod-flavor/config.json`). However, a user could always implement such a mechanism in their project or in a library by examining the flavor at runtime.
### When multiple entries affect the same file and 1) at least one of these entries have a `flavors` list provided and 2) these lists are not equivalent, we always consider the manifest to be ambiguous and will throw a `ToolExit`.
<details>
For example, these manifests would all be considered ambiguous:
```yaml
assets:
- assets/
- path: assets/vanilla.png
flavors:
- vanilla
assets:
- path: assets/vanilla/
flavors:
- vanilla
- path: assets/vanilla/cherry.png
flavor:
- cherry
# Thinking towards the future where we might add glob/regex support and more conditions other than flavor:
assets:
- path: assets/vanilla/**
flavors:
- vanilla
- path: assets/**/ios/**
platforms:
- ios
# Ambiguous in the case of assets like "assets/vanilla/ios/icon.svg" since we
# don't know if flavor `vanilla` and platform `ios` should be combined using or-logic or and-logic.
```
See [this review comment thread](https://github.com/flutter/flutter/pull/132985#discussion_r1381909942) for the full story on how I arrived at this decision.
</details>
### This does not support Android's multidimensional flavors feature (in an intuitive way)
<details>
Conder this excerpt from a Flutter project's android/app/build.gradle file:
```groovy
android {
// ...
flavorDimensions "mode", "api"
productFlavors {
free {
dimension "mode"
applicationIdSuffix ".free"
}
premium {
dimension "mode"
applicationIdSuffix ".premium"
}
minApi23 {
dimension "api"
versionNameSuffix "-minApi23"
}
minApi21 {
dimension "api"
versionNameSuffix "-minApi21"
}
}
}
```
In this setup, the following values are valid `--flavor` are valid `freeMinApi21`, `freeMinApi23`, `premiumMinApi21`, and `premiumMinApi23`. We call these values "flavor combinations". Consider the following from the Android documentation[^1]:
> In addition to the source set directories you can create for each individual product flavor and build variant, you can also create source set directories for each combination of product flavors. For example, you can create and add Java sources to the src/demoMinApi24/java/ directory, and Gradle uses those sources only when building a variant that combines those two product flavors.
>
> Source sets you create for product flavor combinations have a higher priority than source sets that belong to each individual product flavor. To learn more about source sets and how Gradle merges resources, read the section about how to [create source sets](https://developer.android.com/build/build-variants#sourcesets).
This feature will not behave in this way. If a user utilizes this feature and also Android's multidimensional flavors feature, they will have to list out all flavor combinations that contain the flavor they want to limit an asset to:
```yaml
assets:
- assets/free/
flavors:
- freeMinApi21
- freeMinApi23
```
This is mostly due to a technical limitation in the hot-reload feature of `flutter run`. During a hot reload, the tool will try to update the asset bundle on the device, but the tool does not know the flavors contained within the flavor combination (that the user passes to `--flavor`). Gradle is the source of truth of what flavors were involved in the build, and `flutter run` currently does not access to that information since it's an implementation detail of the build process. We could bubble up this information, but it would require a nontrivial amount of engineering work, and it's unclear how desired this functionality is. It might not be worth implementing.
</details>
See https://flutter.dev/go/flavor-specific-assets for the (outdated) design document.
<summary>Pre-launch Checklist</summary>
</details>
[^1]: https://developer.android.com/build/build-variants#flavor-dimensions
Provides support for conditional bundling of assets through the existing `--flavor` option for `flutter build` and `flutter run`. Closes https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/21682. Resolves https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/136092
## Change
Within the `assets` section pubspec.yaml, the user can now specify one or more `flavors` that an asset belongs to. Consider this example:
```yaml
# pubspec.yaml
flutter:
assets:
- assets/normal-asset.png
- path: assets/vanilla/ice-cream.png
flavors:
- vanilla
- path: assets/strawberry/ice-cream.png
flavors:
- strawberry
```
With this pubspec,
* `flutter run --flavor vanilla` will not include `assets/strawberry/ice-cream.png` in the build output.
* `flutter run --flavor strawberry` will not include `assets/vanilla/ice-cream.png`.
* `flutter run` will only include `assets/normal-asset.png`.
## Open questions
* Should this be supported for all platforms, or should this change be limited to ones with documented `--flavor` support (Android, iOS, and (implicitly) MacOS)? This PR currently only enables this feature for officially supported platforms.
## Design thoughts, what this PR does not do, etc.
### This does not provide an automatic mapping/resolution of asset keys/paths to others based on flavor at runtime.
The implementation in this PR represents a simplest approach. Notably, it does not give Flutter the ability to dynamically choose an asset based on flavor using a single asset key. For example, one can't use `Image.asset('config.json')` to dynamically choose between different "flavors" of `config.json` (such as `dev-flavor/config.json` or `prod-flavor/config.json`). However, a user could always implement such a mechanism in their project or in a library by examining the flavor at runtime.
### When multiple entries affect the same file and 1) at least one of these entries have a `flavors` list provided and 2) these lists are not equivalent, we always consider the manifest to be ambiguous and will throw a `ToolExit`.
<details>
For example, these manifests would all be considered ambiguous:
```yaml
assets:
- assets/
- path: assets/vanilla.png
flavors:
- vanilla
assets:
- path: assets/vanilla/
flavors:
- vanilla
- path: assets/vanilla/cherry.png
flavor:
- cherry
# Thinking towards the future where we might add glob/regex support and more conditions other than flavor:
assets:
- path: assets/vanilla/**
flavors:
- vanilla
- path: assets/**/ios/**
platforms:
- ios
# Ambiguous in the case of assets like "assets/vanilla/ios/icon.svg" since we
# don't know if flavor `vanilla` and platform `ios` should be combined using or-logic or and-logic.
```
See [this review comment thread](https://github.com/flutter/flutter/pull/132985#discussion_r1381909942) for the full story on how I arrived at this decision.
</details>
### This does not support Android's multidimensional flavors feature (in an intuitive way)
<details>
Conder this excerpt from a Flutter project's android/app/build.gradle file:
```groovy
android {
// ...
flavorDimensions "mode", "api"
productFlavors {
free {
dimension "mode"
applicationIdSuffix ".free"
}
premium {
dimension "mode"
applicationIdSuffix ".premium"
}
minApi23 {
dimension "api"
versionNameSuffix "-minApi23"
}
minApi21 {
dimension "api"
versionNameSuffix "-minApi21"
}
}
}
```
In this setup, the following values are valid `--flavor` are valid `freeMinApi21`, `freeMinApi23`, `premiumMinApi21`, and `premiumMinApi23`. We call these values "flavor combinations". Consider the following from the Android documentation[^1]:
> In addition to the source set directories you can create for each individual product flavor and build variant, you can also create source set directories for each combination of product flavors. For example, you can create and add Java sources to the src/demoMinApi24/java/ directory, and Gradle uses those sources only when building a variant that combines those two product flavors.
>
> Source sets you create for product flavor combinations have a higher priority than source sets that belong to each individual product flavor. To learn more about source sets and how Gradle merges resources, read the section about how to [create source sets](https://developer.android.com/build/build-variants#sourcesets).
This feature will not behave in this way. If a user utilizes this feature and also Android's multidimensional flavors feature, they will have to list out all flavor combinations that contain the flavor they want to limit an asset to:
```yaml
assets:
- assets/free/
flavors:
- freeMinApi21
- freeMinApi23
```
This is mostly due to a technical limitation in the hot-reload feature of `flutter run`. During a hot reload, the tool will try to update the asset bundle on the device, but the tool does not know the flavors contained within the flavor combination (that the user passes to `--flavor`). Gradle is the source of truth of what flavors were involved in the build, and `flutter run` currently does not access to that information since it's an implementation detail of the build process. We could bubble up this information, but it would require a nontrivial amount of engineering work, and it's unclear how desired this functionality is. It might not be worth implementing.
</details>
See https://flutter.dev/go/flavor-specific-assets for the (outdated) design document.
<summary>Pre-launch Checklist</summary>
</details>
[^1]: https://developer.android.com/build/build-variants#flavor-dimensions
Updates Gradle version for Flutter project templates and integration tests to at least 7.6.3 (changed all of those with versions below it) to fix security vulnerability.
Part of fix for https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/138336.
Upgrades agp versions and lockfiles for `dev/`. Also changes the lockfile generation script to represent the newer form of the `settings.gradle` template, and therefore also propagates these changes.
~~Potentially related to https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/134419~~, but worth doing anyways. (not actually related)
Addresses #63507, and is a follow up to the engine PR https://github.com/flutter/engine/pull/46857
Changes the font family string when attempting to use Apple system fonts to the new proxies added by the engine. For the "Text" font this will be more secure in the future against possible changes to Apple's API. For the "Display" font, this will now work correctly when it didn't before.
I checked the letter spacing values against a native app for all font sizes between 17-28. I made a few adjustments to better match native, but especially for the "Text" font we were either really close, or close enough to not make a large breaking change to default fonts worth it.
| Before | After |
| ------------- | ------------- |
| <img width="466" alt="Screenshot 2023-11-02 at 11 45 12â¯AM" src="https://github.com/flutter/flutter/assets/58190796/627ed8ac-d848-4f71-aa62-a467b8aac62d"> | <img width="383" alt="Screenshot 2023-11-02 at 11 46 25â¯AM" src="https://github.com/flutter/flutter/assets/58190796/9a502021-7d2b-4e14-98f1-86971b3830a5"> |
The smaller text in both the before and after should be the same. The large system font that Flutter used before was incorrect, which caused it to look more spread out. Now we use the correct font.
Reverts flutter/flutter#139101
Initiated by: jonahwilliams
This change reverts the following previous change:
Original Description:
Reland of https://github.com/flutter/flutter/pull/138837
I reverted too many config files, the app needed the pbx project file in order to find the new class I added. Instead, just put the new platform view in the app delegate so it builds.
I previously made a PR (#136140) that used `switch` expressions to make some parts of the Flutter codebase easier to understand. It was assigned to the framework team, and @christopherfujino let me know that it was too large to effectively review and recommended breaking it up into smaller pull requests.
Here's a PR that only targets files in the `dev/` directory. Hopefully this will be easier to work with!
(solves issue https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/136139)
Reland of https://github.com/flutter/flutter/pull/138837
I reverted too many config files, the app needed the pbx project file in order to find the new class I added. Instead, just put the new platform view in the app delegate so it builds.
Reverts flutter/flutter#138837
Initiated by: jonahwilliams
This change reverts the following previous change:
Original Description:
In https://github.com/flutter/engine/pull/48190 I discovered that overlay surfaces were not constructed with wide gamut settings. This adds a test that will fail until this is fixed.
In https://github.com/flutter/engine/pull/48190 I discovered that overlay surfaces were not constructed with wide gamut settings. This adds a test that will fail until this is fixed.
This version is needed so that dart:js_interop can move to extension
types. Also adds some code to handle some breaking changes:
- Body -> Response. Body was an IDL interface mixin type we exposed in
dart:html. Going forward, users should either use Request or Response.
- Casts to JSAny. These are temporary until we move package:web types to
extension types. Currently, package:web types can't implement JSObject
as JSObject will move to be an extension type itself.
Co-authored-by: Kevin Moore <kevmoo@users.noreply.github.com>
Reverts flutter/flutter#137191
Initiated by: camsim99
This change reverts the following previous change:
Original Description:
Adds support for Android 34 in the following ways:
- Bumps integration tests compile SDK versions 33 --> 34
- Bumps template compile SDK version 33 --> 34
- Also changes deprecated `compileSdkVersion` to `compileSdk`
Part of https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/134220
Adds support for Android 34 in the following ways:
- Bumps integration tests compile SDK versions 33 --> 34
- Bumps template compile SDK version 33 --> 34
- Also changes deprecated `compileSdkVersion` to `compileSdk`
Part of https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/134220
Fixes in preparation for https://dart-review.googlesource.com/c/sdk/+/330561.
The change referenced above tightens the `use_build_context_synchronously` to ensure that `mounted` is checked on the appropriate `BuildContext` or `State`. This change fixes up the flutter/flutter in preparation of this new enforcement.
Analyzer's dependency on autosnapshotting causes issues.
Because every version of integration_test from sdk depends on leak_tracker from hosted and autosnapshotting depends on leak_tracker from path, integration_test from sdk is forbidden.
So, because autosnapshotting depends on integration_test from sdk, version solving failed.
## Description
This PR adds a `nonce` parameter to flutter.js' `loadEntrypoint` method.
When set, loadEntrypoint will add a `nonce` attribute to the `main.dart.js` script tag, which allows Flutter to run in environments slightly more restricted by CSP; those that don't add `'self'` as a valid source for `script-src`.
----
### CSP directive
After this change, the CSP directive for a Flutter Web index.html can be:
```
script-src 'nonce-YOUR_NONCE_VALUE' 'wasm-unsafe-eval';
font-src https://fonts.gstatic.com;
style-src 'nonce-YOUR_NONCE_VALUE';
```
When CSP is set via a `meta` tag (like in the test accompanying this change), and to use a service worker, the CSP needs an additional directive: [`worker-src 'self';`](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Headers/Content-Security-Policy/worker-src)
When CSP set via response headers, the CSP that applies to `flutter_service_worker.js` is determined by its response headers. See **Web Workers API > [Content security policy](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Web_Workers_API/Using_web_workers#content_security_policy)** in MDN.)
----
### Initialization
If the CSP is set to disallow `script-src 'self'`, a nonce needs to also be passed to `loadEntrypoint`:
```javascript
_flutter.loader.loadEntrypoint({
nonce: 'SOME_NONCE',
onEntrypointLoaded: (engineInitializer) async {
const appRunner = await engineInitializer.initializeEngine({
nonce: 'SOME_NONCE',
});
appRunner.runApp();
},
});
```
(`nonce` shows twice for now, because the entrypoint loader script doesn't have direct access to the `initializeEngine` call.)
----
## Tests
* Added a smoke test to ensure an app configured as described above starts.
## Issues
* Fixes https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/126977