It appears that the encoding Apple is using to ensure their syslog
conforms with the syslog requirement for seven-bit ASCII encoding (see:
RFC 5424) is `vis`.
Details: https://www.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=vis&sektion=3
These are essentially self-inflicted race conditions. Instead of timeouts we're going to try a more verbose logging mechanism that points out when things are taking a long time.
* Remove many timeouts.
These are essentially self-inflicted race conditions. Instead of timeouts we're going to try a more verbose logging mechanism that points out when things are taking a long time.
* Get the attach tests to pass.
* Apply review comments from Todd
* More review comment fixes
* Put back the extended timeouts here now that I know why we have them...
Disallow calling stop() or cancel() multiple times. This means that
when you use startProgress you have to more carefully think about what
exactly is going on.
Properly cancel startProgress in non-ANSI situations, so that
back-to-back startProgress calls all render to the console.
Disallow calling stop() or cancel() multiple times. This means that
when you use startProgress you have to more carefully think about what
exactly is going on.
Properly cancel startProgress in non-ANSI situations, so that
back-to-back startProgress calls all render to the console.
ios-deploy relies on LLDB.framework, which relies on /usr/bin/python and
the 'six' module that's installed on the system. However, it appears to
use the first version of Python on PATH, rather than explicitly
specifying the system install. If a user has a custom install of Python
(e.g., via Homebrew or MacPorts) ahead of the system Python on their
PATH, LLDB.framework will pick up that version instead. If the user
hasn't installed the 'six' module, ios-deploy will fail with a
relatively cryptic error message.
This patch pushes /usr/bin to the front of PATH for the duration of the
ios-deploy run to avoid this scenario.
This patch also removes checks for package six.
Neither Flutter nor any of its direct dependencies/tooling relies on
package six. ios-deploy depends on LLDB.framework (included with Xcode),
which relies on a Python script that imports this package but uses
whichever Python is at the front of the path. Flutter now invokes
ios-deploy with a PATH with /usr/bin forced to the front in order to
avoid this problem.
We could have retained the check out of paranoia, but this seems
unnecessary since it's entirely possible LLDB.framework may one day drop
this dependency, in which case I'd expect the base system install of
Python would likely drop it as well.
* Created plumbing but has stream problem
* testing with makePipe
* Trying pipe but not really getting anywhere
* works by repeatedly reading line
* Minor cleanup
* works
* Clean up pipe after use.
* Move the last status forward
* Make sure failed script commands bubble up
* Revert "Revert "Reduce xcodebuild noise #2" (#14641)"
This reverts commit 2d47481f1e48d744bcbd7d4b33ab9cc5ef2de8e1.
* Stop scrapping xcodebuild output, get the right build settings
* clone the command params first
Apple encodes syslog entries using a 7-bit encoding where input UTF-8 bytes
are encoded as follows:
1. 0x00 to 0x19: non-printing range. Some ignored, some encoded as <...>.
2. 0x20 to 0x7f: as-is, with the exception of 0x5c (backslash).
3. 0x5c (backslash): octal representation \134.
4. 0x80 to 0x9f: \M^x (using control-character notation for range 0x00 to 0x40).
5. 0xa0: octal representation \240.
6. 0xa1 to 0xf7: \M-x (where x is the input byte stripped of its high-order bit).
7. 0xf8 to 0xff: unused in 4-byte UTF-8.
As there doesn't appear to be a system tool to decode these strings, we
implement here in Dart. If we're unable to decode a string (e.g.
decoding results in an invalid UTF-8 string), we fall back to emitting
the log line as-is.
* Add --trace-skia parameter to flutter run
Skia tracing is extremely useful for internal debug, but reduces the
amount of space available in the Dart Timeline buffers.
Disable skia tracing by default and expose them via the --trace-skia
flag.
* Roll Engine to 57a1445a45964d386500c39f5e8d06db060abadb
This was introduced to suppress libMobileGestalt noise originating from
libsystem_asl.dylib. Commit 39680ebfbdf787f81b5765236af0bdce9b64c9c7
suppresses all application log messages not originating from the
app/engine iteself on iOS 10 and above. Since the log message in
question is only emitted on devices running iOS >= 10.3.0, this
blacklist no longer necessary.
On iOS 10 and above, suppress engine log messages from system components
other than Flutter. This eliminates a large amount of keyboard/plugin
related noise during edit-refresh development.
This patch migrates iOS device listing from using Xcode instruments to
using the libimobiledevice tools idevice_id and ideviceinfo.
ideviceinfo was previously incompatible with iOS 11 physical devices;
this has now been fixed.
In 37bb5f1300e67fe590c44bb9ecda653b2967e347 flutter_tools migrated from
libimobiledevice-based device listing on iOS to using Xcode instruments
to work around the lack of support for iOS 11. Using instruments entails
several downsides, including a significantly higher performance hit, and
leaking hung DTServiceHub processes in certain cases when a simulator is
running, necessitating workarounds in which we watched for, and cleaned
up leaked DTServiceHub processes. This patch returns reverts the move to
instruments now that it's no longer necessary.
This patch supports basic filtering of log lines from physical iOS
devices, similar to existing functionality for iOS simulator logging.
This patch also suppresses the following two log messages which are
emitted at app startup on iOS 10.3 devices:
libMobileGestalt MobileGestaltSupport.m:153: pid 123 (Runner) does not have sandbox access for frZQaeyWLUvLjeuEK43hmg and IS NOT appropriately entitled
libMobileGestalt MobileGestalt.c:550: no access to InverseDeviceID (see <rdar://problem/11744455>)