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 f4a13bc72b0d0a6f08592a24a61cc92f86e62061.
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is out-of-date and build from HEAD is required.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.
This should make our scripts compatible with PowerShell 2 or newer. PowerShell 2 was released in October 2009 and shipped with Windows 7 as default. (I suspect the scripts are now also compatible with PowerShell 1, but that's unconfirmed). This fixes#8606.
The PR also introduces better error handling when Flutter fail to download the Dart SDK to fix#8627.
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.