This class lives in the Context and allows callers to "inject"
flag values, where flag values are first extracted from the
command arguments, then from the global arguments as a fallback.
This yak shave went as follows:
Fix https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/8795 by adding stocks to
the examples README.
Notice the layers entry in that README isn't quite right either.
Update that.
Check the layers/README file is worth pointing at.
Update the layers/README.
Let's run some of the layer tests to see if they still work.
Oops, need to update them to gradle.
Ok let's try running them again.
Oops, sector is broken.
Add a test for sector.
Fix sector. Find you need to add an assert to a const constructor.
Notice we need to turn const asserts on for the analyzer.
Notice the analysis_options files are out of sync with each other and
with the full list of lints.
Turn on the lints that should be on.
Fix the bugs that finds.
This adds support for a `--bug-report` flag, which is a recording
that:
- includes the arguments that were passed to the command runner
- is zipped up for easy attachment in Guthub issues
Artifacts are now located in a central place.
This will enable us to downlaod artifacts when we need them (instead of
downloading them all upfront).
This also makes replacing sky_snapshot with gen_snapshot easier.
* 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
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.
This argument will enable mocking of os-layer process invocations,
where the mock behavior will come from replaying a previously-
recorded set of invocations. At the point of process invocation,
the key metadata for the invocation will be looked up in the
recording's manifest, and iff a matching record exists in the
manifest, the process will be mocked out with data derived from
the corresponding recorded process (e.g. stdout, stderr, exit code).
* Add --record-to option to flutter tools
This option will cause flutter tools to record all process
invocations that occur and serialize their stdout and stderr
to files that get added to a "recording" ZIP file. This is
part of an effort to be able to test flutter tools in a hermetic
environment.
As a side-benefit, this recording should prove an excellent
attachment to any bug report.
* Remove the workaround that pinned args to v0.13.6
This reverts most of the changes in commit 6331b6c8b5d964ec0dbf2cd9bb84c60c650a0878
* 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
With the old policy the most recent log would not be printed until the next
log is produced (which may be indefinitely). This change prints logs
immediately along with a time delta since the previous log.
This prevents multiple simultaneous runs of the analyzer from stomping
over each other (e.g. multiple runs of 'update-packages'). Certain
long-lived commands (like analyze, run, logs) are exempted once they've
done enough work to be safe from most stomping action.
This still doesn't make us entirely safe from craziness, e.g. if you're
half way through an 'update-packages' run and you call 'git pull', who
knows what state you'll end up in. But there's only so much one can do.
Fixes https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/2762
Also, make it clear the screen between results so it's more obvious
what's going on when you have new results (especially when you have
fixed everything).
* refactor the --resident run option into a separate file
* update daemon to run --resident apps
* re-plumbing daemon start
* send app logs
* update tests
* review changes
* fix test runner
* remove PackageMap.createGlobalInstance; rely on the ctor
* review comments