We have too many loggers, and the logger construction rules are too complicated to be untested. Capture these in a LoggerFactory and test that construction is correct.
On Windows, Process.run assumes the output uses the system codepage by default. This allows specifying it in our wrapper, and sets the encoding for vswhere to UTF-8 since we're passing a flag that forces it to use UTF-8 output.
Fixes#53515
A frequent request from the last Flutter developer survey was for an easier method of testing light/dark mode changes. Currently, a user needs to manually change the theme settings or adjust phone settings to see the difference. Instead we should add a toggle from the CLI, and eventually devtools/Intellij/Vscode that allows developers to override the current setting.
Fixes#59495
Adds flutter.ext.brightnessOverride service protocol which either queries the current platform brightness, or overrides it to a new value. This accepts either Brightness.light or Brightness.dark as a value.
Adds a CLI toggle b which allows the setting to be toggled manually.
Requires an update to the MediaQuery, to conditionally use a debug override when not in release mode
Updates the tooling to use the GTK embedding, rather than the GLFW embedding:
- Adds new requirements to `doctor`
- Updates the app and plugin templates to make GTK-based runners and plugins
- Stops downloading and installing the GLFW artifacts
Final part of #54860, other than cleanup.
The tool was setting the output preferences in a sub-context. Originally these were not injected before the arg parsers were created, though that was fixed by the lazy command creation. Once local engine is removed, the inner flutter_command Zone can be removed.
Current versions of the Windows desktop build files don't require a specific Windows 10 SDK version, but doctor still checks for one since vswhere doesn't allow for flexible queries. This has been a common source of issues for people setting up on Windows for the first time, because the current VS installer by default only includes a newer version of the SDK than what doctor is looking for.
This removes the vswhere SDK check, and instead uses a manual check for SDKs. Since this uses undocumented (although fairly widely used, so relatively unlikely to change) registry information, the check is non-fatal, so that builds can progress even if the SDK isn't found by doctor; in practice, it's very unlikely that someone would install the C++ Windows development workload but remove the selected-by-default SDK from the install.
Now that all requirements are default, the instructions when missing VS have been simplified so that they no longer list individual components, and instead just say to include default items.
Fixes#50487
Work towards removal of package:archive and ideally more stable unzipping of artifacts. These commands are available in Powershell 5+, which we already require for windows.
Updates the Linux templates to use CMake+ninja, rather than Make, and updates the tooling to generate CMake support files rather than Make support files, and to drive the build using cmake and ninja.
Also updates doctor to check for cmake and ninja in place of make.
Note: While we could use CMake+Make rather than CMake+ninja, in testing ninja handled the tool_backend.sh call much better, calling it only once rather than once per dependent target. While it does add another dependency that people are less likely to already have, it's widely available in package managers, as well as being available as a direct download. Longer term, we could potentially switch from ninja to Make if it's an issue.
Fixes#52751