`DartDevelopmentServiceLauncher` was created to share the DDS launch
logic from flutter_tools with other Dart tooling.
---------
Co-authored-by: Andrew Kolos <andrewrkolos@gmail.com>
Reverts: flutter/flutter#152487
Initiated by: gmackall
Reason for reverting: I forgot that I need to override the compileSdkVersion in the AGP 8.0 [instance of this test](ef9cd32f5a/dev/devicelab/bin/tasks/android_java17_dependency_smoke_tests.dart (L19))
Original PR Author: gmackall
Reviewed By: {reidbaker}
This change reverts the following previous change:
Updates `compileSdk`, `targetSdk`, and `ndk` versions (former 2 to latest, latter to the version of the ndk we are hosting on CIPD).
Summary of changes:
- Updates mentioned template values
- `compileSdk` 35 requires AGP 8.0+, so updated to 8.1 in many places.
- This also necessitated Gradle upgrades in most places
- This also necessitated moving the `package` xml attribute to the AGP `namespace` field in a couple places (test + template).
- Some tests use the output of `flutter create` but then use intentionally lower AGP versions. [I downgraded the `compileSdk` in these tests.](fee34fd61a)
- [Stopped lockfile generation](82324a2570) script from hitting the `hello_world` example because it uses `.kts` gradle files.
- One test needed [some Gradle options we had already added to templates](6aa187b4b6).
Updates `compileSdk`, `targetSdk`, and `ndk` versions (former 2 to latest, latter to the version of the ndk we are hosting on CIPD).
Summary of changes:
- Updates mentioned template values
- `compileSdk` 35 requires AGP 8.0+, so updated to 8.1 in many places.
- This also necessitated Gradle upgrades in most places
- This also necessitated moving the `package` xml attribute to the AGP `namespace` field in a couple places (test + template).
- Some tests use the output of `flutter create` but then use intentionally lower AGP versions. [I downgraded the `compileSdk` in these tests.](fee34fd61a)
- [Stopped lockfile generation](82324a2570) script from hitting the `hello_world` example because it uses `.kts` gradle files.
- One test needed [some Gradle options we had already added to templates](6aa187b4b6).
Sets up tests that verify we can build a fresh counter app across our Gradle/AGP/Kotlin support range.
Post submit only, because the suite takes ~30 minutes to run, and I expect it to be _somewhat_ rare that we break only one of these versions (and therefore it doesn't get caught by existing presubmits).
This reverts commit 7cdc23b3e1bae2bc7bc2d1f34773eaa3629d4fcc.
The failure in the `native_assets_test` integration test on Windows was caused by the DevTools process not being shutdown by the `ColdRunner` when running the profile mode portion of the test. This resulted in the test being unable to clean up the project created by the test as DevTools was still holding onto a handle within the directory. This PR adds back the mistakenly removed DevTools shutdown logic in the `ColdRunner`.
Reverts: flutter/flutter#146593
Initiated by: zanderso
Reason for reverting: Consistently failing `Windows_android native_assets_android` as in https://ci.chromium.org/ui/p/flutter/builders/prod/Windows_android%20native_assets_android/2533/overview
Original PR Author: bkonyi
Reviewed By: {christopherfujino, kenzieschmoll}
This change reverts the following previous change:
This change is a major step towards moving away from shipping DDS via Pub.
The first component of this PR is the move away from importing package:dds to launch DDS. Instead, DDS is launched out of process using the `dart development-service` command shipped with the Dart SDK. This makes Flutter's handling of DDS consistent with the standalone Dart VM.
The second component of this PR is the initial work to prepare for the removal of instances of DevTools being served manually by the flutter_tool, instead relying on DDS to serve DevTools. This will be consistent with how the standalone Dart VM serves DevTools, tying the DevTools lifecycle to a live DDS instance. This will allow for the removal of much of the logic needed to properly manage the lifecycle of the DevTools server in a future PR. Also, by serving DevTools from DDS, users will no longer need to forward a secondary port in remote workflows as DevTools will be available on the DDS port.
There's two remaining circumstances that will prevent us from removing DevtoolsRunner completely:
- The daemon's `devtools.serve` endpoint
- `flutter drive`'s `--profile-memory` flag used for recording memory profiles
This PR also includes some refactoring around `DebuggingOptions` to reduce the number of debugging related arguments being passed as parameters adjacent to a `DebuggingOptions` instance.
This change is a major step towards moving away from shipping DDS via
Pub.
The first component of this PR is the move away from importing
package:dds to launch DDS. Instead, DDS is launched out of process using
the `dart development-service` command shipped with the Dart SDK. This
makes Flutter's handling of DDS consistent with the standalone Dart VM.
The second component of this PR is the initial work to prepare for the
removal of instances of DevTools being served manually by the
flutter_tool, instead relying on DDS to serve DevTools. This will be
consistent with how the standalone Dart VM serves DevTools, tying the
DevTools lifecycle to a live DDS instance. This will allow for the
removal of much of the logic needed to properly manage the lifecycle of
the DevTools server in a future PR. Also, by serving DevTools from DDS,
users will no longer need to forward a secondary port in remote
workflows as DevTools will be available on the DDS port. This code is currently
commented out and will be enabled in a future PR.
There's two remaining circumstances that will prevent us from removing
DevtoolsRunner completely:
- The daemon's `devtools.serve` endpoint
- `flutter drive`'s `--profile-memory` flag used for recording memory
profiles
This PR also includes some refactoring around `DebuggingOptions` to
reduce the number of debugging related arguments being passed as
parameters adjacent to a `DebuggingOptions` instance.
While exploring https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/107607, I noticed that flutter_tools test results change based on whether `dart test` is run from a terminal or from a process (such as a Dart program). I also ran into this while writing tests for https://github.com/flutter/flutter/pull/150667.
This is due to tests that rely on the global `Stdio` instance, on which the `hasTerminal` property depends on whether the tool is being invoked from a terminal.
Ideally, `testUsingContext` would require any tests that depend on `globals.stdio` to define an override for `Stdio`, but this is not the case. Until a solution to this more general problem is figured out, I think we should have `testUsingContext` always provide a `Stdio` override by default.
This PR adds initial support for Swift Package Manager (SPM). Users must opt in. Only compatible with Xcode 15+.
Fixes https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/146369.
## Included Features
This PR includes the following features:
* Enabling SPM via config
`flutter config --enable-swift-package-manager`
* Disabling SPM via config (will disable for all projects)
`flutter config --no-enable-swift-package-manager`
* Disabling SPM via pubspec.yaml (will disable for the specific project)
```
flutter:
disable-swift-package-manager: true
```
* Migrating existing apps to add SPM integration if using a Flutter plugin with a Package.swift
* Generates a Swift Package (named `FlutterGeneratedPluginSwiftPackage`) that handles Flutter SPM-compatible plugin dependencies. Generated package is added to the Xcode project.
* Error parsing of common errors that may occur due to using CocoaPods and Swift Package Manager together
* Tool will print warnings when using all Swift Package plugins and encourage you to remove CocoaPods
This PR also converts `integration_test` and `integration_test_macos` plugins to be both Swift Packages and CocoaPod Pods.
## How it Works
The Flutter CLI will generate a Swift Package called `FlutterGeneratedPluginSwiftPackage`, which will have local dependencies on all Swift Package compatible Flutter plugins.
The `FlutterGeneratedPluginSwiftPackage` package will be added to the Xcode project via altering of the `project.pbxproj`.
In addition, a "Pre-action" script will be added via altering of the `Runner.xcscheme`. This script will invoke the flutter tool to copy the Flutter/FlutterMacOS framework to the `BUILT_PRODUCTS_DIR` directory before the build starts. This is needed because plugins need to be linked to the Flutter framework and fortunately Swift Package Manager automatically uses `BUILT_PRODUCTS_DIR` as a framework search path.
CocoaPods will continue to run and be used to support non-Swift Package compatible Flutter plugins.
## Not Included Features
It does not include the following (will be added in future PRs):
* Create plugin template
* Create app template
* Add-to-App integration
This pull request fixes#143803 by taking advantage of Dart's null-aware operators.
And unlike `switch` expressions ([9 PRs](https://github.com/flutter/flutter/pull/143634) and counting), the Flutter codebase is already fantastic when it comes to null-aware coding. After refactoring the entire repo, all the changes involving `?.` and `??` can fit into a single pull request.
Add a new `BuildTargets` class that provides commonly used build targets. And avoid importing files from `build_system/targets` except from the top level entrypoints or from top level commands.
Also move `scene_importer.dart` and `shader_compiler.dart` into `build_system/tools` because they are not `Target` classes, but wrapper for certain tools.
With this change, we can ignore all files in `build_system/targets` internally and make PR #142709 easier to land internally. See cl/603434066 for the corresponding internal change.
Related to:
https://github.com/flutter/flutter/pull/142709https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/142041
Also note that I have opted to add a new variable in `globals.dart` for `BuildTargets` in this PR, but I know that we are trying to get rid of globals. Several alternatives that I was considering:
1. Add a new field in `BuildSystem` that returns a `BuildTargets` instance. Since `BuildSystem` is already in `globals`, we can access build targets using `globals.buildSystem.buildTargets` without adding a new global variable.
2. Properly inject the `BuildTargetsImpl` instance from the top level `executable.dart` and top level commands.
Let me know if you want me to do one of the above instead. Thanks!
Part of work on [#101077](https://github.com/flutter/flutter/pull/141194). This is done as a separate PR to avoid a massive diff.
## Context
1. The `FakeCommand` class accepts a list of patterns that's used to match a command given to its `FakeProcessManager`. Since `FakeCommand` can match a list of patterns, not just specifically strings, it can be used to match commands where the exact value of some arguments can't (easily) known ahead of time. For example, a part of the tool may invoke a command with an argument that is the path of a temporarily file that has a randomly-generated basename.
2. The `FakeCommand` class provides on `onRun` parameter, which is a callback that is run when the `FakeProcessManager` runs a command that matches the `FakeCommand` in question.
## Issue
In the event that a `FakeCommand` is constructed using patterns, the test code can't know the exact values used for arguments in the command. This PR proposes changing the type of `onRun` from `VoidCallback?` to `void Function(List<String>)?`. When run, the value `List<String>` parameter will be the full command that the `FakeCommand` matched.
Example:
```dart
FakeCommand(
command: <Pattern>[
artifacts.getArtifactPath(Artifact.engineDartBinary),
'run',
'vector_graphics_compiler',
RegExp(r'--input=/.*\.temp'),
RegExp(r'--output=/.*\.temp'),
],
onRun: (List<String> command) {
final outputPath = (() {
// code to parse `--output` from `command`
})();
testFileSystem.file(outputPath).createSync(recursive: true);
},
)
```
Related to tracker issue:
- https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/128251
This updates the `Analytics` constructor to provide it with the enabled features for the flutter-tool. This will be sent with each event for the flutter-tool.