* 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.
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
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
* Teach flutter tools to find gradle
Flutter tools will now use Gradle from Android Studio, which is now found automatically.
flutter doctor will verify that Android Studio has been installed, and that the included Gradle is at least version 2.14.1.
It is still possible to manually configure the path to Android Studio (flutter config --android-studio-dir=XXX) or Gradle (flutter config --gradle-dir=XXX), but this should only be necessary if they're installed somewhere non-standard.
Only tested on Linux and macOS for now.
Fixes#8131
* Make new project template gradle-based for Android.
With this change, the 'new project' template uses the same gradle-based build for Android as the hello_services example. This has some implications on build performance, since we're now building a complete Android app instead of just combining a pre-compiled .dex with the Flutter assets.
The very first build is a little over 2x slower, since it needs to download gradle and build the build scripts before getting to the actual code. Subsequent builds with changes to the code are comparable to the old builds. Null builds are faster. Enabling the gradle daemon speeds up subsequent builds by around 5s.
* Move Flutter Gradle plugin to Flutter root.
* Update gradle example to support x86 in debug mode.
Changed the Flutter Gradle plugin a bit to better fit in with the
Android build.
Fixes#6136Fixes#6864Fixes#7539
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.
* 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