* Revert "Revert "Add android license verification to doctor and some refactoring" (#14727)"
This reverts commit d260294752.
* Add tests, fix sdkManagerEnv and use it consistently, and rearrange Status object model
* AnsiSpinner needs to leave the cursor where it found it.
* fix tests
* Const constructor warning only shows up on windows...?
* Avoid crash if we can't find the home directory
* Make pathVarSeparator return a string in the mock
* Implement review comments
* Fix out-of-order problem on stop
Reports from that commit included:
* Doctor hanging
* Doctor prompting to install JDK
* AnsiStatus.cancel() printing elapsed time and extra newline
* Printing extra spinner character at the end of each line
* Initial version, seems to work
* Unit test for android license checker
* Cleanups
* Windows analyzer wants const.
* Refinements to timeout
* review comments
* Forgot a nit
The current ARM64 back end generates code that crashes on some devices,
including Pixel phones. With this change, the android-arm64 target will
not be used by "flutter run" unless explicitly requested.
This is intended as a workaround until we can roll out an engine with the
required Dart VM fix.
See https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/14454
By default flutter run will build a 64-bit APK if the attached Android device
is 64-bit. Specifying --target-platform=android-arm will deploy a 32-bit APK
to a 64-bit device.
Fixes https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/14526
flutter doctor --android-licenses requires Android sdkmanager version 26
or later. When sdkmanager is not available (SDKs earlier than v25),
direct users to SDK upgrade instructions. When it's installed but not
v26 or later, emit instructions to run sdkmanager --update.
Convenience getters for the the path to the Android SDK manager and the
currently installed version of the tool.
Pre-factoring to support better checks around the --android-licenses
command, which uses a feature of the SDK manager that is unsupported in
older versions of the tool.
* Plumb a --strong option through to the front end server and the engine
so that we can run flutter apps in preview-dart-2 and strong mode
* - Address analyzer lint issues
*- correctly set up strong mode option in the case of AOT builds
* Add support for NDK discovery and add --prefer-shared-library option
We would like to be able to use native tools (e.g. simpleperf, gdb) with
precompiled flutter apps. The native tools work much better with *.so
files instead of the custom formats the Dart VM uses by default.
The reason for using blobs / instruction snapshots is that we do not
want to force flutter users to install the Android NDK.
This CL adds a `--prefer-shared-library` flag to e.g. `flutter build
apk` which will use the NDK compiler (if available) to turn the
precompiled app assembly file to an `*.so` file. If the NDK compiler is
not available it will default to the default behavior.
* Rebase, add test for NDK detection, augment flutter.gradle with @Input for flag
* Use InMemoryFileSystem for test
* Remove unused import
* Address some analyzer warnings
Previously, we were mapping certain named platforms
(e.g. `android-stable`) to their corresponding version.
this had two problems:
1. The version could become out of date. For instance, we had
mapped `android-stable` to version 24, but the stable version
is now 27.
2. The list of possible named versions wasn't comprehensive.
Some Android SDKs just list the platform as `stable`, or
`experimental`, etc.
This change updates the platform version detection to use
the `build.prop` file that exists in the platform directory
(only for cases where the version number is not encoded into
the directory name).
* executable.dart#main() depends on runner.dart#run()
* Refactor code such that non-commands don't depend on commands.
No code was actually changed in this PR - code was merely moved from
point A to point B.
This CL introduces 2 hidden options to 'flutter build aot' and 'flutter run' for passing arbitrary arguments to front-end server and to gen_snapshot tool when building and running flutter app in --profile or --release modes.
The ability to pass arbitrary options simplifies various experiments, as it removes the need to change defaults and rebuild flutter engine for every tested configuration.