* Add doctor check for Python 'six' module
Required as part of Xcode lldb module. In all likelihood, if we
encounter this situation, the developer is using a custom Python install
(e.g., via MacPorts or Homebrew).
* Add a check in case the flutter directory in .packages no longer exists. Clean up and prompt user
* Update documentation to use flutter packages get for end-users instead of flutter update-packages.
* Merge missing sdk error with the multiple sdk error. They're really the same thing.
* Use flutterPath in both checks.
* Change file_system’s copy folder to copy director which takes into account the file system
* Test support files
* Add test and split into 2 messages again.
* Move tests to run in memory file system's copy. Tested with dev/bots/test.sh
* Change file_system’s copy folder to copy director which takes into account the file system
* Address review comments.
Test with 2 different instances of file systems.
Refactor DevFS so that it's easier to add new types of content such as kernel code
* add tests for DevFS package scanning
* add tests for DevFS over VMService protocol
* which covers _DevFSHttpWriter and ServiceProtocolDevFSOperations
* replace AssetBundleEntry and DevFSEntry with DevFSContent
* refactor to cleanup common code and replace some fields with locals
* rework .package file generation refactor away DevFSOperations.writeSource
* only update .package file if it has changed
* only write/delete/evict assets that have been changed/removed
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
With this change, they're run via instance methods on an object
obtained through the context. This will allow us to substitute
that object in tests with replay/record versions to allow us to
mock out the os-layer in tests.
* Remove the workaround that pinned args to v0.13.6
This reverts most of the changes in commit 6331b6c8b5
* throw exception if exit code is not an integer
* rework command infrastructure to throw ToolExit when non-zero exitCode
* convert commands to return Future<Null>
* cleanup remaining commands to use throwToolExit for non-zero exit code
* remove isUnusual exception message
* add type annotations for updated args package
* iOS tools cleanup
1) Fix `flutter install` on both device and simulator to refer to the actual
bundle and not just the .generated folder
2) Fix `flutter run` on device to actually run vs just installing
Still TODO:
1) Discovered that isAppInstalled on iOS simulator always reports true,
meaning it'll never actually try to install the app.
Fixes#3947Fixes#1823
Host tools can be found in the artifact cache directory for the host platform.
If a developer wants to use a local engine build instead, then provide an
--engine-build flag that selects the specific engine build variant.
* add google analytics
* send in the run target type
* track device type targets
* use the real GA code
* review comments
* rev to usage 2.0
* rev to 2.2.0 of usage; add tests
* review comments
flutter start's method of finding devices to run the app on is not suitable for flutter drive.
This commit also refactors several tool services to allow mocking in unit tests.
1) Moved basic utility code into base/ directory to make it clear which code
doesn't depend on Flutter-specific knowldge.
2) Move the CommandRunner subclasses into a runner/ directory because these
aren't commands themselves.
This patch makes `flutter start` work without a clone of the engine git
repository. Making this work pulled a relatively large refactor of how the
commands interact with application packages and devices. Now commands that want
to interact with application packages or devices inherit from a common base
class that holds stores of those objects as members.
In production, the commands download and connect to devices based on the build
configuration stored on the FlutterCommandRunner. In testing, these fields are
used to mock out the real application package and devices.