These are essentially self-inflicted race conditions. Instead of timeouts we're going to try a more verbose logging mechanism that points out when things are taking a long time.
* Remove many timeouts.
These are essentially self-inflicted race conditions. Instead of timeouts we're going to try a more verbose logging mechanism that points out when things are taking a long time.
* Get the attach tests to pass.
* Apply review comments from Todd
* More review comment fixes
* Put back the extended timeouts here now that I know why we have them...
This attempts to re-land #22656.
There are two changes from the original:
I turned off wrapping completely when not sending output to a terminal. Previously I had defaulted to wrapping at and arbitrary 100 chars in that case, just to keep long messages from being too long, but that turns out the be a bad idea because there are tests that are relying on the specific form of the output. It's also pretty arbitrary, and mostly people sending output to a non-terminal will want unwrapped text.
I found a better way to terminate ANSI color/bold sequences, so that they can be embedded within each other without needed quite as complex a dance with removing redundant sequences.
As part of these changes, I removed the Logger.supportsColor setter so that the one source of truth for color support is in AnsiTerminal.supportsColor.
* Turn on line wrapping again in usage and status messages, adds ANSI color to doctor and analysis messages. (#22656)
This turns on text wrapping for usage messages and status messages. When on a terminal, wraps to the width of the terminal. When writing to a non-terminal, wrap lines at a default column width (currently defined to be 100 chars). If --no-wrap is specified, then no wrapping occurs. If --wrap-column is specified, wraps to that column (if --wrap is on).
Adds ANSI color to the doctor and analysis output on terminals. This is in this PR with the wrapping, since wrapping needs to know how to count visible characters in the presence of ANSI sequences. (This is just one more step towards re-implementing all of Curses for Flutter. :-)) Will not print ANSI sequences when sent to a non-terminal, or of --no-color is specified.
Fixes ANSI color and bold sequences so that they can be combined (bold, colored text), and a small bug in indentation calculation for wrapping.
Since wrapping is now turned on, also removed many redundant '\n's in the code.
This turns on text wrapping for usage messages and status messages. When on a terminal, wraps to the width of the terminal. When writing to a non-terminal, wrap lines at a default column width (currently defined to be 100 chars). If --no-wrap is specified, then no wrapping occurs. If --wrap-column is specified, wraps to that column (if --wrap is on).
Adds ANSI color to the doctor and analysis output on terminals. This is in this PR with the wrapping, since wrapping needs to know how to count visible characters in the presence of ANSI sequences. (This is just one more step towards re-implementing all of Curses for Flutter. :-)) Will not print ANSI sequences when sent to a non-terminal, or of --no-color is specified.
Fixes ANSI color and bold sequences so that they can be combined (bold, colored text), and a small bug in indentation calculation for wrapping.
Since wrapping is now turned on, also removed many redundant '\n's in the code.
* `flutter analyze` cleanup
* Make `--dartdocs` work in all modes.
* Make `analyze-sample-code.dart` more resilient.
* Add a test for `analyze-sample-code.dart`.
* Minor cleanup in related code and files.
* Apply review comments
* Fix tests
Disallow calling stop() or cancel() multiple times. This means that
when you use startProgress you have to more carefully think about what
exactly is going on.
Properly cancel startProgress in non-ANSI situations, so that
back-to-back startProgress calls all render to the console.
Disallow calling stop() or cancel() multiple times. This means that
when you use startProgress you have to more carefully think about what
exactly is going on.
Properly cancel startProgress in non-ANSI situations, so that
back-to-back startProgress calls all render to the console.
fuchsia_tester.dart still assumes Dart 1. Previously, it ran tests directly
from source, flutter_platform.dart automatically runs a kernel compile when
operating in Dart 2 mode, but this assumes a functional Dart SDK is available
in the artifacts directly, and fuchsia_tester.dart mocks out the artifacts
directory with an empty temp dir.
Remaining work is:
1. Get the frontend server building as a dependency on Fuchsia.
2. Patch fuchsia_tester.dart to use a valid Dart SDK and frontend server.
This also reverts migration to Dart 2 typedef syntax.
This reverts commit 6c56bb2. (#18362)
This reverts commit 3daebd0. (#18316)
Now that Dart 1 is turned off, reapplying my change to turn on the prefer_generic_function_type_aliases analysis option, and fix all the typedefs to Dart 2 preferred syntax.
Also eliminated the unused analysis_options_repo.yaml file and turned on public_member_api_docs in analysys_options.yaml.
No logic changes, just changing the typedef syntax for all typedefs, and updating analysis options.
* It's time to #deleteDart1 (#18293)
Eliminates support for Dart 1 in flutter_tools, and drops our Dart 1
benchmarks. All commands now run in Dart 1 mode only.
Eliminates --preview-dart-2 / --no-preview-dart-2 support.
* Fix indentation, remove no longer necessary .toList()
* Only push udpated kernel if >0 invalidated srcs
Eliminates support for Dart 1 in flutter_tools, and drops our Dart 1
benchmarks. All commands now run in Dart 1 mode only.
Eliminates --preview-dart-2 / --no-preview-dart-2 support.
Adds a class `PubContext` with a fixed set of allowed values
Make it clear these values should not be changed casually
Fixed one inconsistency already: update_packages vs update_pkgs
Provide more information for verify calls
Eliminate `ctx_` prefix.
The purpose of this PR is to make it so that when the user runs 'flutter', if they have a .pub-cache directory in their flutter root, we use that instead of the default location for the pub cache. Otherwise, it should act as before.
The eventual goal is to support a pre-populated flutter .zip/.tar.gz file that has everything the developer needs in one bundle. In order for that to actually work, we need to have the pub cache be self-contained, and not in the user's home dir.
Another advantage of this is that if you have multiple flutter repos that you're switching between, then the versions in the pub cache will remain static when you switch between them.
This is an attempt to re-land: #13248. Includes a fix for the test that makes it work on bots in the presence of PUB_CACHE being set, and no other changes.
* Revert "Add tests."
This reverts commit 31bad961ff.
* Revert "Use .pub-cache from Flutter root, if it exists. (#13248)"
This reverts commit 72d6bcc3f7.
The purpose of this PR is to make it so that when the user runs 'flutter', if they have a .pub-cache directory in their flutter root, we use that instead of the default location for the pub cache. Otherwise, it should act as before.
The eventual goal is to support a pre-populated flutter .zip/.tar.gz file that has everything the developer needs in one bundle. In order for that to actually work, we need to have the pub cache be self-contained, and not in the user's home dir.
Another advantage of this is that if you have multiple flutter repos that you're switching between, then the versions in the pub cache will remain static when you switch between them.
* Teach flutter_tools to populate PUB_ENVIRONMENT
Will allow telemetry reporting on pub.dartlang.org once
flutter moves to 1.23.0-dev.10.0
* review changes
It was resulting in weird situations where the tool would dump an
error message and stack but not quit, or would fail hard but then just
hang.
Instead, specifically catch errors you expect. As an example of this,
there's one error we expect from the DartDependencySetBuilder, so we
catch that one, turn it into a dedicated exception class, then in the
caller catch that specific exception.
This implements the `DartDependencySetBuilder` completely in Dart instead of calling out to `sky_snapshot` (Linux/Mac) or `gen_snapshot` (Windows) and allows us to use the same code path on all supported host platforms.
It also slightly reduces hot reload times on Linux from ~750ms to ~690ms for the unchanged flutter_gallery app and significantly reduces hot reload times on Windows from almost 1.5s to just slightly slower than on Linux.
This change will also allow us to retire `sky_snapshot` completely in the future.
* Enable Hot Reload on Windows (backed by gen_snapshot)
\o/
Two caveats:
* Hot Reload on Windows is slower than on other platforms because gen_snapshot is slower then sky_snapshot
* We currently cannot hot reload projects with spaces in the path
* enable tests
* Revert "Revert "Simplify path handling logic in dependency checker and devFS (#8414)" (#8467)"
This reverts commit 96ba7f76d2.
* Intentionally use a self-package URI in flutter_gallery
* tests to catch problems with self-package imports
* Simplify path handling logic in dependency checker and devFS
Simplification will make it easier to port this to Windows.
* Roll Engine to 0a7b177c330367904597a6129b3eb653d29dfca0
Artifacts are now located in a central place.
This will enable us to downlaod artifacts when we need them (instead of
downloading them all upfront).
This also makes replacing sky_snapshot with gen_snapshot easier.
Stop building (unused) unlinked summaries for packages.
Improves update speed considerably (for `n` packages it saves us `n` needless calls to `pub get`).
This removes direct file access from within flutter_tools
in favor of using `package:file` via a `FileSystem` that's
accessed via the `ApplicationContext`.
This lays the groundwork for us to be able to easily swap
out the underlying file system when running Flutter tools,
which will be used to provide a record/replay file system,
analogous to what we have for process invocations.
- [x] Introduce DependencyChecker which can determine if any dependencies have been modified.
- [x] Move the DartDependencyBuilder into a separate file.
- [x] Add unit tests for DartDependencyBuilder.
- [x] Add unit tets for DependencyChecker
Part of #7014
* convert pubGet to throw ToolExit on non-zero exit code
* convert commandValidator to throw ToolExit for non-zero exit code
* convert flutter commands to throw ToolExit for non-zero exit code
* use convenience method throwToolExit
* only show "if this problem persists" for unusual exceptions
I was in here trying to figure out why we rebuild sky_services (the
answer is, because we rebuild every package we've ever downloaded, but
that's not really a problem for new users so whatever), and while I
was here I did some cleanup.
Bump to latest Dart SDK dev build (`1.21.0-dev.0.0`).
* updates to analyzer w/ support for bazel workspaces
* removes deprecated analysis `cacheSize` variable access
* Bump Dart SDK to `1.20.0-dev.10.0`.
`1.20.0-dev.10.0` corresponds to `1.20-RC0`.
* pubspec.lock cleanup
* check for pubspec.lock existence
* cleaned up conditional remove
This rewrites imports of various mojom.dart files from the Flutter
engine repo to instead import normal-looking dart files from the
(new) flutter_services package. This package handles exporting the
correct symbols from generated code wherever that may live.
Includes an engine roll to 3551e7a48e2e336777b15c7637af92fd7605b6c5
which contains the new flutter_services package.
This makes the about page show the licenses of all the Dart packages that a Flutter app uses.
Issues that this does not yet resolve:
- I'm still working on getting the full list of licenses for the sky_engine package.
- Some of the licenses don't print very readably.
- There's no scrollbar on the license page.
I'll provide fixes for the first two in the coming days, but this should unblock anyone who is wanting to see something here, even if it's not quite complete. :-)
----
The patch makes the following changes:
- The license registry is now asynchronous, since the data comes from disk.
- I moved the default license collector from the foundation package to the services package since it uses the default asset bundle now.
- The FLX builder now includes the LICENSE files of each Dart package mentioned in the `.packages` file.
* brings in analyzer version (`0.27.4-alpha.14`) corresponding to current Dart SDK (`1.18.0-dev.2.0`).
* updates analysis to use prefered API for embedder URI resolution
* adds trampolines to `State` and `StatelessWidget` to allow for warning-free within-library @protected access (needed since we closed off access to @protected closures from outside subclasses).
* turns off cache dependency tracking for analysis (in DDC this amounted to a 10% speed improvement).
* refactor the --resident run option into a separate file
* update daemon to run --resident apps
* re-plumbing daemon start
* send app logs
* update tests
* review changes
* fix test runner
* remove PackageMap.createGlobalInstance; rely on the ctor
* review comments
Cleans up 3 of the 4 violations of the `overriden_field` lint.
The last one is more interesting and I'll defer to someone closer to that code:
[lint] Do not override fields. (packages/flutter/test/rendering/rendering_tester.dart, line 91, col 14)
The latest dev build has stable summaries so we should start using them.
(Also ensures that analysis options are propogating to the SDK analysis context --- see: https://github.com/dart-lang/sdk/issues/26129.)
Package mapping is already done by the `PackageDependencyTracker` so this extra check is at best not needed. (At worst could cause an unneeded and costly call to `pub list-package-dirs`!)
Updates the analyze command to pass a package map to analysis rather than a file path.
This allows us to avoid creating a needless temporary `.packages` file and host directory and saves us a trip to disk to retrieve the contents when building our URI resolvers for analysis.
Introduces a new Dart analysis wrapper that works directly with the analyzer API (in favor of shelling out to a separate process).
Some consequences:
* we no longer need to fear parts (simplifying our dart file gathering)
* we can filter by error code (when needed), rather than by error strings
* no more IO scraping
* no need to generate `main()` or to run with `--package-warnings`
* we now specify an analyzer (and linter) version in the pubspec (we’ll want to make sure this doesn’t diverge too far from the analyzer shipped with the SDK but it does give us some room to play with experimental builds)
* no more (re)scanning of error source files (and so no more source cache)
* should generally be a bit simpler and easier to maintain
* runs a bit faster :)
Now that we don't require the Dart SDK to be in your path, it's hard to run
./dev/update_packages.dart. Instead, you can now run `flutter update-packages`.
Fixes#1906