Added a PluginRegistry to the new project template. The registry files will be automatically updated at build time to register the native plugins.
Fixes#7814.
This yak shave went as follows:
Fix https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/8795 by adding stocks to
the examples README.
Notice the layers entry in that README isn't quite right either.
Update that.
Check the layers/README file is worth pointing at.
Update the layers/README.
Let's run some of the layer tests to see if they still work.
Oops, need to update them to gradle.
Ok let's try running them again.
Oops, sector is broken.
Add a test for sector.
Fix sector. Find you need to add an assert to a const constructor.
Notice we need to turn const asserts on for the analyzer.
Notice the analysis_options files are out of sync with each other and
with the full list of lints.
Turn on the lints that should be on.
Fix the bugs that finds.
Uninstalling the app removes the data and cache directories, so this
allows application data to persist across multiple flutter run
invocations.
This also handles the edge case where the app fails to install due to an
error in installation (e.g. debug keystore changes, switching from a
release keystore to a debug keystore, etc.).
Xcode builds depend on the Python 'six' module. If not present, exit
immediately with a useful error message.
The six module is included in the system default Python installation. We
perform this check in case a custom Python install has higher priority
on $PATH; e.g., due to a Homebrew or MacPorts installation.
This extracts an existing doctor check to use it during the build step
as well.
Plugin projects are created by running `flutter create --plugin <name>`.
An example app is also created in the plugin project, using the normal 'create' template, which has been modified to allow for conditional plugin code.
Modified the android package name to match package naming conventions (all lower-case, and must match the directory name).
* Bump to Dart SDK 1.23.0-dev.10
* allows us to understand flutter usage via telemetry
* brings in `@immutable`
Fixes: #9042
* completer fix
* Update to platform 1.1.1.
The very first time `pod install` is invoked, CocoaPods downloads the master spec repository, which takes quite a while. Before this change, the build appeared to have stalled. With this change, at least the spinner is moving.
Added `pod setup` to the install instructions for CocoaPods, so the spec repo is downloaded while setting up Flutter, instead of during the first build.
Old Android Stuio versions pior to 2.2.0 didn't come with Java bundled. Make sure flutter doesn't crash when we try to determine the Java version of those old Android Studio installations.
Go through all packages brought in by pub, and write the name and path of every one that is a flutter plugin into .flutter-plugins.
In android/settings.gradle and ios/Podfile, read in .flutter-plugins, if that file exists. The Android / iOS code from the plugins is automatically added as dependencies of the native code of the app.
**THIS IS A BREAKING CHANGE.** See below for migration steps for
existing projects.
Previously, Flutter app code was built as a raw dylib on iOS. Dynamic
libraries outside of a framework bundle are not supported on iOS, except
for the system Swift libraries provided by Xcode.
See:
https://developer.apple.com/library/content/technotes/tn2435/_index.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/DTS40017543-CH1-TROUBLESHOOTING_BUNDLE_ERRORS-EMBEDDED__DYLIB_FILES
* Migrates Xcode build from app.dylib to App.framework
* Migrates flutter create template
* Migrates example projects
Migration steps for existing projects
=====================================
The following steps should be taken from the root of your Flutter
project:
1. Edit `ios/.gitignore`: add `/Flutter/App.framework` on a new line.
2. In the Xcode project navigator, remove `app.dylib` from the Flutter
folder. Delete this file from the `ios/Flutter` directory in your project.
3. Run a build to generate `ios/Flutter/App.framework`. From the command
line, run `flutter build ios`. If you have not configured app signing
in Xcode, an alternative method is to open the simulator, then run
`flutter run -d iP`.
4. In the Xcode project navigator, select the `Runner` project. In the
project settings that are displayed in the main view, ensure that the
`Runner` target is selected. You can verify this by exposing the
sidebar using the [| ] icon in the upper-left corner of the main
view.
5. Select the *General* tab in the project settings. Under the
*Embedded Binaries* section, click '+' to add `App.framework`. In the
sheet that drops down, click the *Add Other...* button. Navigate to
the `ios/Flutter` directory and select `App.framework`. Click *Open*.
In the sheet that drops down, select *Create folder references*, then
click *Finish*.
6. In the project settings, verify that `App.framework` has been added to the
*Embedded Binaries* and *Linked Frameworks and Libraries* lists.
7. In the Xcode project navigator, drag `App.framework` under the
Flutter folder.
8. In the Xcode project navigator, select `Flutter` then from the
*File* menu, select *Add Files to "Runner"...*. Navigate to the
`ios/Flutter` directory, select `AppFrameworkInfo.plist` and click
the *Add* button.
9. From the command line, in your project directory, run
`flutter build clean`, then `flutter run`.
At this point your project should be fully migrated.
* 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
The old `whichAll` implementation was not considering different extensions for executables on Windows. By defering to OS-built-in tools we avoid implementing it.
Fixes#8882.
* Remove legacy .apk build.
Print out an error message telling the user to upgrade the project if
it's not Gradle-based. Removed all the obvious traces of the legacy
build.
Added support for Dart VM kernel snapshots in Gradle builds.
Fixed Android installs to verify that the app is actually installed, and
not just rely on the presence of the .sha1 file.
The problem has been fixed upstream in the Dart VM.
This simplifies our setup instructions on Windows (will update the wiki).
Furthermore, this also means that going forward there is no diffrence between PowerShell and Cmd for the Flutter experience on Windows.
Function keys don't work great on any platform we support:
* Mac doesn't have first-class function keys.
* On Ubuntu: F1 opens the system help and F10 opens the file dialog.
* ... and Windows is a mess as well.
* Only run pod install if CocoaPods v1.0.0 or greater is installed.
Avoid issues with older versions of CocoaPods breaking the build. Users who genuinely use older versions of CocoaPods will have to run pod install manually when required.
* Make ProcessSignals portable
This removes the need to wrap unsupported signals with in `if (!platform.isWindows) ..`.
It also allows us to implement a work around for breaking the Windows console when flutter is exited with Ctrl+C.
* review comments
* adding tests
* add license header
Changed the default build output directory in the new project template
to build/, instead of android/build/ and android/app/build/.
Updated tools to ask the Gradle scripts what the build directory is,
since this is configurable in the build scripts, and we need to know
where the build output actually is.
Silenced output from 'flutter build aot' when invoked from Gradle, since
the output was confusing in this case.
Fixes#8723Fixes#8656Fixes#8138
1. Add `PortScanner` abstraction so that we don't do actual port scanning
in tests.
2. Don't change the real `cwd` of the isolate during tests, as it affects
all tests, not just the current running test.
Fixes#8761
- [x] Add custom logic on MacOS to determine if Java is installed before invoking `java`.
- [x] Check JAVA_HOME, platform specific logic, and finally PATH to locate the `java` executable.
- [x] Improved doctor messages.
Fixes#8508Fixes#8521
* Use snapshot's .d file as source inputs in Gradle build.
If we don't yet have a .d file (first build), fall back to using the
.dart files in the current directory. This enables us to detect changes
in dependent source files (Flutter framework, packages outside the
source directory, etc.), and re-generate the snapshots as needed.
Unfortunately, Gradle requires knowing the source files before executing
the task, and can't update them after building, so Gradle considers the
second build to be out-of-date (because it has more input files than the
first build). Sub-sequent builds have the correct dependency
information, and will be skipped if the source files haven't changed.
Also added a dependency on gen_snapshot. The snapshot ABI isn't stable,
so we need to re-generate the snapshots when we roll the Dart SDK
dependency.
Fixes#8315Fixes#8687Fixes#8607
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.
* Revert "Eliminate CocoaPods install step (#8694)"
This reverts commit f4a13bc72b.
If the developer is relying on CocoaPods and hasn't done a pod install, we will do it for them. This is needed for a smooth native plugin experience, similar to what Gradle is doing on the Android side.
There's no hard dependency on CocoaPods. We only run pod install if the project uses CocoaPods, so developers are still free to use alternatives if they prefer (and if they don't want to use native plugins).
Fixes#8685Fixes#8657Fixes#8526
* Require CocoaPods 1.0.0 or newer.
And make sure we don't get a crash if running `pod install` fails.
* Address review feedback
If the developer is relying on CocoaPods and hasn't done a pod install,
they'll get a build failure indicating the issue.
This also avoids a hard dependency on CocoaPods in the tool and allows
developers to customize their Xcode steps to use alternatives such as
Carthage if they prefer.
As of the latest Xcode versions, the latest published libimobiledevice
is out-of-date and build from HEAD is required.
This fixes two bugs:
1. Update initial install instructions to add --HEAD flag.
2. Update uninstall, reinstall instructions to include
--ignore-dependencies flag, since other brew formulae depend on
libimobiledevice.
Since iOS builds are CocoaPods enabled by default, we should make sure to run `pod install` to get pods wired up before building the app.
Also added a check to `flutter doctor` to verify CocoaPods is installed.
I'm passing FLUTTER_FRAMEWORK_DIR to the `pod install` command, so we can have the app's Podfile link in Flutter.framework as a pod instead of having to copy it over in xcode_backend.sh.
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.
* add crash reporting without enabling it
* do not drop futures on the floor
* return exitCode from executable run
* debug travis
* remove unnecessary todo
* rename local fs getter
* 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
The gradle build scripts can be configured to output different
application IDs for different build types, so we need to examine the
built .apk to figure out the name of the package and activity.
Re-landing this change, updated to only get information from the .apk
if it exists.
Since the tools create an AndroidApk instance early, even before we've
actually built an .apk, we have to create a new instance after building,
so we can start the right app/activity.
Fixes#8327.
* [devFS] Use URI to represent paths on device
Previosuly, regular file paths in the format of the host platform were used to represent paths on device. That works when host and device share the same (POSIX) file path format. With a Windows host, this breaks. URIs are the solution as they are platform independent and the VM service on the device already interpreted the file paths as URIs anyways.
* review comments
* switch to file paths
* fix tests on Windows
* review comments
* 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
This adds support for a `--bug-report` flag, which is a recording
that:
- includes the arguments that were passed to the command runner
- is zipped up for easy attachment in Guthub issues
* Simplify path handling logic in dependency checker and devFS
Simplification will make it easier to port this to Windows.
* Roll Engine to 0a7b177c330367904597a6129b3eb653d29dfca0
The gradle build scripts can be configured to output different
application IDs for different build types, so we need to examine the
built .apk to figure out the name of the package and activity.
Fixes#8327
It's not just $HOME/.AndroidStudio2.2, it might also be
.AndroidStudioPreview2.3, or .AndroidStudioFooBar1.7, or whatever.
Made the Version parser less throw-happy, and relaxed the directory name
checks to allow for the above.
Fixes#8353.
If a target file is specified on the flutter tools command line, pass it
through to Gradle.
It is still possible to statically specify a target file in the flutter
section of build.gradle, but it is now possible to specify it on the
command line as well. The command line option takes precedence.
Fixes#8175.
Only implemented for Android devices for now. Compare the installed SHA1
to the latest build. If they match, there's no reason to reinstall the
build.
Fixes#8295