* Reland "Re-enable the Dart Development Service (DDS) (#64671)"
This reverts commit 2ae25cc2d7.
* Fix MDNS building Observatory URI with port 0 instead of forwarding the device port
* Added MDNS test
This change re-enables DDS and outputs the DDS URI in place of the VM
service URI on the console. If --disable-dds is not provided,
--host-vmservice-port will be used to determine the port for DDS rather
than the host port for the VM service, which will instead be randomly
chosen.
Avoid creating AndroidDevice discovery if the SDK cannot be located. Previously the tool would use which/where adb, however this required us to handle the AndroidSdk class being potentially null - which required an additional layer of indirection around all access. Sometimes these were forgotten leading to NPEs.
In general, not much can be done with an Android Device if the actual SDK is not installed.
Reland with fixed code + tests for null SDK + adb in AndroidDeviceDiscovery
Avoid creating AndroidDevice discovery if the SDK cannot be located. Previously the tool would use which/where adb, however this required us to handle the AndroidSdk class being potentially null - which required an additional layer of indirection around all access. Sometimes these were forgotten leading to NPEs.
In general, not much can be done with an Android Device if the actual SDK is not installed.
Adds support for size analysis on iOS, macOS, linux, and Windows - using an uncompressed directory based approach. The output format is not currently specified.
Adds support for size analysis on android on windows, switching to package:archive
Updates the console format to display as a tree, allowing longer paths. Increases the number of dart libraries shown (to avoid only ever printing the flutter/dart:ui libraries, which dominate the size)
Attempt to simplify the Android SDK interface ahead of refactoring it. The locateAndroidSdk static method is called at startup to locate the android SDK, returning null if it cannot be found. These helper methods attempted to first look up the AndroidSDK if it was already null - which could only cover the case where someone installed the Android SDK while flutter was running (possibly through an IDE)
Add feature flags for android, ios, and fuchsia (on by default). After updating the g3 rollers, the fuchsia feature will be turned off by default. Creates a simpler base type of feature flags for g3 to extend.
Updates android, ios, fuchsia workflows to use feature flags check.
Removes concept of stable artifacts and checks on flutter version.
Fixes#58999#52859#12768
The global packages path could cause tests to fail when it would be overriden to unexpected (in test setup) values. Remove most usage and make it a configuration on buildInfo, along with most other build information. Cleanup the asset builder to require the .packages path and the resident runners to no longer require it, since they already have the information in build_info.
It needs to stick around for the fuchsia deps we do not control.
Filled #60232 for remaining work.
instead of restricting profile/release mode based on whether the tool thinks the device is an emulator, restrict based on the device target architecture and the requested build mode. Notably, this enables release mode on x86_64 Android emulators, but not x86 emulators since we do not support that as an AOT target.
This does not add release mode support for simulators, since this requires us to build and upload artifacts for simulator/x86_64
Also combines experiments into extraGenSnapshot/ExtraFrontEndOptions. Allows providing --no-sound-null-safety to allow out of order migration and running.
Ensure iOS and android builds can be correctly cached. Use the performance-measurement-file to verify that all targets were skipped on the second invocation. This is only run on the flutter_gallery build.
Support bundling SkSL shaders into an android APK or appbundle via the --bundle-sksl-path command line options. If provided, these are validated for platform engine revision and then placed in flutter_assets/io.flutter.shaders.json
The resident runner does not check if the ApplicationPackage is null when trying to stop the app. Update AndroidDevice.stopApp to handle this case by returning false.
The package will be null when flutter attach is used.
This will allow experimenting with the remove to string transformer before we're ready to turn it on by default. This doesn't work for web yet since we use dart2js instead of the frontend_server for producing kernel
When the AndroidDevice checks for the current API version, it isn't handling a null response. While we can refuse to run on API levels that are unsupported, we should probably assume that a null response = lowest possible API level and allow these to run.
Previously the AdbLogReader did async setup in the StreamController.onListen callback, specifically it would query the api version and start the adb process. If the log subscription was cancelled before this setup completed, then the log output could (haven't confirmed) get added to a closed controller, causing the above state error.
* Update project.pbxproj files to say Flutter rather than Chromium
Also, the templates now have an empty organization so that we don't cause people to give their apps a Flutter copyright.
* Update the copyright notice checker to require a standard notice on all files
* Update copyrights on Dart files. (This was a mechanical commit.)
* Fix weird license headers on Dart files that deviate from our conventions; relicense Shrine.
Some were already marked "The Flutter Authors", not clear why. Their
dates have been normalized. Some were missing the blank line after the
license. Some were randomly different in trivial ways for no apparent
reason (e.g. missing the trailing period).
* Clean up the copyrights in non-Dart files. (Manual edits.)
Also, make sure templates don't have copyrights.
* Fix some more ORGANIZATIONNAMEs
* Generate projects using the new Android embedding
* Add comment about usesNewEmbedding:true
* Feedback
* Rework way to detect new embedding in new apps
Originally we wanted to cast as wide of a net and make the warning as
prominent as possible. Recently we've received feedback that the false
positives are more harmful than not, so downgrading the loud message to
a single line warning.
We were using the `defaults` command-line utility to parse
Plist files, but it was never supported by Apple, and it
appears that in an upcoming OS release, it will be less likely
to work:
> WARNING: The defaults command will be changed in an upcoming
> major release to only operate on preferences domains. General
> plist manipulation utilities will be folded into a different
> command-line program.
Fixes https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/37701
`flutter build aar`
This new build command works just like `flutter build apk` or `flutter build appbundle`, but for plugin and module projects.
This PR also refactors how plugins are included in app or module projects. By building the plugins as AARs, the Android Gradle plugin is able to use Jetifier to translate support libraries into AndroidX libraries for all the plugin's native code. Thus, reducing the error rate when using AndroidX in apps.
This change also allows to build modules as AARs, so developers can take these artifacts and distribute them along with the native host app without the need of the Flutter tool. This is a requirement for add to app.
`flutter build aar` generates POM artifacts (XML files) which contain metadata about the native dependencies used by the plugin. This allows Gradle to resolve dependencies at the app level. The result of this new build command is a single build/outputs/repo, the local repository that contains all the generated AARs and POM files.
In a Flutter app project, this local repo is used by the Flutter Gradle plugin to resolve the plugin dependencies. In add to app case, the developer needs to configure the local repo and the dependency manually in `build.gradle`:
repositories {
maven {
url "<path-to-flutter-module>build/host/outputs/repo"
}
}
dependencies {
implementation("<package-name>:flutter_<build-mode>:1.0@aar") {
transitive = true
}
}
`flutter build aar`
This new build command works just like `flutter build apk` or `flutter build appbundle`, but for plugin and module projects.
This PR also refactors how plugins are included in app or module projects. By building the plugins as AARs, the Android Gradle plugin is able to use Jetifier to translate support libraries into AndroidX libraries for all the plugin's native code. Thus, reducing the error rate when using AndroidX in apps.
This change also allows to build modules as AARs, so developers can take these artifacts and distribute them along with the native host app without the need of the Flutter tool. This is a requirement for add to app.
`flutter build aar` generates POM artifacts (XML files) which contain metadata about the native dependencies used by the plugin. This allows Gradle to resolve dependencies at the app level. The result of this new build command is a single build/outputs/repo, the local repository that contains all the generated AARs and POM files.
In a Flutter app project, this local repo is used by the Flutter Gradle plugin to resolve the plugin dependencies. In add to app case, the developer needs to configure the local repo and the dependency manually in `build.gradle`:
repositories {
maven {
url "<path-to-flutter-module>build/host/outputs/repo"
}
}
dependencies {
implementation("<package-name>:flutter_<build-mode>:1.0@aar") {
transitive = true
}
}
This is done via `flutter build bundle`. As a consequence, this PR introduces a new way to disable analytics via the `FLUTTER_SUPPRESS_ANALYTICS` env flag.
* Gradle generates ELF shared libraries instead of AOT snapshots.
* `flutter build apk/appbundle` supports multiple `--target-platform` and defaults to `android-arm` and `android-arm64`.
* `flutter build apk` now has a flag called `--split-per-abi`.
* Gradle generates ELF shared libraries instead of AOT snapshots.
* `flutter build apk/appbundle` supports multiple `--target-platform` and defaults to `android-arm` and `android-arm64`.
* `flutter build apk` now has a flag called `--split-per-abi`.
This is a replacement for the old implementation of --build-shared-library
that emits an AOT assembly snapshot and feeds it to the Android NDK toolchain.
Some parts of the appbundle build process were based on the logic for building
APK packages. However, these steps (copying to a directory shared by all
build variants, and calculating a SHA) are not necessary for an appbundle.
* Added support for authentication codes for the VM service.
Previously, a valid web socket connection would use the following URI:
`ws://127.0.0.1/ws`
Now, by default, the VM service requires a connection to be made with a
URI similar to the following:
`ws://127.0.0.1:8181/Ug_U0QVsqFs=/ws`
where `Ug_U0QVsqFs` is an authentication code generated and shared by
the
service.
This behavior can be disabled with the `--disable-service-auth-codes`
flag.
* Use source list from the compiler to track invalidated files.
* Revert accidental change
* Fix first-time-seen-the-file logic
* Fix/simplify invalidate logic now that we can rely on compiler to let us know what is the cut-off point for invalidation.
* Update devfs mock to accommodate for new fields
* Fix deleted files case
* Analyzer found missing final
* some space formattings
* always use blocks in if-else if a block is used
* format spaces in for and while
* allow multiline if conditions
* fix missing space
* add trailing commas on list/map/parameters
* add trailing commas on Invocation with nb of arg>1
* add commas for widget containing widgets
* add trailing commas if instantiation contains trailing comma
* revert bad change