Dart2js updated its CLI to support generating a 'dump-info' json file by passing a "--stage" option. The "dump-info-all" stage performs a full compilation (from the provided dill) and then also generates the dump info file.
Tested via the `flutter-dev` CLI locally. This results in the same output but with the addition of an extra `main.dart.js.info.json` file.
Fixes https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/133585.
This PR elects to add a new catch within `_handleToolError` that checks any uncaught error. This new catch will exit the tool without crashing provided the following conditions are met:
1. the error is a `ProcessException`,
2. the error message contains `git` somewhere in the message (we don't match on the entire string in case it changes or is locale-dependent), and
3. `git` does not appear to be runnable on the host system (`ProcessManager.canRun` returns `false` for git).
This is preferable to checking for runnability of `git` before we run it for 1) its simplicity and 2) lack of performance penalty for users that already have git installed (almost every single one).
This PR also does some light refactoring to runner_test.dart to make room for tests that aren't related to crash reporting.
The choice screen is irrelevant when debugging apps locally. `flutter run` creates a separate user profile for testing only. It doesn't touch users' browser settings.
Fixes https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/153928
Fixes https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/153972 (unless the cause of https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/153064#issuecomment-2305662791 happens to also prevent this fix from working).
In this PR, I've looked for all non-test call sites of `ChromeConnection.getTabs` and made sure are all wrapped in `try` blocks that handle `IOException` (`HttpException` is what we see in crash reporting, but I figure any `IOException` might as well be the same for all intents and purposes).
I plan on cherry-picking this the stable branch.
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`.
Turns out just supporting the right value for `kDebugMode` was a lot simpler than I thought. Debug builds used to never go through the build system code path when using `flutter run`, but now that we have wasm this can occur with the run command.
This should address https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/148850
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.
This will make
* `flutter run` have source maps enabled by default
* `flutter build` have source maps disabled by default
which mirrors what happens already today with the js compilers.
For local development this works quite well - even better than with
dart2js (see dart2js issues in [0]).
We do have some follow-up items for source maps in dart2wasm compiler,
see [1]
[0]
[flutter/flutter/issues/151641](https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/151641)
[1]
[dart-lang/sdk/issues/56232](https://github.com/dart-lang/sdk/issues/56232)
https://github.com/flutter/flutter/pull/150645 tries to shut down Chrome by sending a browser close command through a debug protocol. The webkit_inspection_protocol library used to send the command may throw a SocketException if Chrome has already been shut down.
The previous approach of killing the Chromium parent process sometimes caused leaks of child processes on Windows. The Browser.close command in the debug protocol will tell Chromium to shut down all of its processes.
- When `--web-renderer` is omitted, keep the value `null` until it later materializes to either `canvaskit` or `skwasm`.
- No more hardcoded defaults anywhere. We use `WebRendererMode.defaultForJs/defaultForWasm` instead.
- When in `--wasm` mode, the JS fallback is now `canvaskit` instead of `auto`.
- Add test for defaulting to `skwasm` when `--wasm` is enabled.
Fixes https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/149826
Changing the web renderer doesn't directly modify the environment's dart defines, and so doesn't do a full build invalidation. We need to include the web renderer in the build key for the compiler configuration. This information is used directly by the web targets to modify the dart defines that are passed into the compiler, so we need to rebuild if this information changes.
This adds support for adding the `--wasm` flag to `flutter run` and `flutter drive`
* Emits errors if you attempt to use the skwasm renderer without the `--wasm` flag
* Emits errors if you try to use `--wasm` when not using a web device
* Uses the skwasm renderer by default if you pass `--wasm` and no `--web-renderer`
Convert `ProjectMigration.run()` and `ProjectMigrator.migrate()` to be async.
Needed for Swift Package Manager migration, which requires some async processes: https://github.com/flutter/flutter/pull/146256
* Adds support for `flutter test --wasm`.
* The test compilation flow is a bit different now, so that it supports compilers other than DDC. Specifically, when we run a set of unit tests, we generate a "switchboard" main function that imports each unit test and runs the main function for a specific one based off of a value set by the JS bootstrapping code. This way, there is one compile step and the same compile output is invoked for each unit test file.
* Also, removes all references to `dart:html` from flutter/flutter.
* Adds CI steps for running the framework unit tests with dart2wasm+skwasm
* These steps are marked as `bringup: true`, so we don't know what kind of failures they will result in. Any failures they have will not block the tree at all yet while we're still in `bringup: true`. Once this PR is merged, I plan on looking at any failures and either fixing them or disabling them so we can get these CI steps running on presubmit.
This fixes https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/126692
This makes several changes to flutter web app bootstrapping.
* The build now produces a `flutter_bootstrap.js` file.
* By default, this file does the basic streamlined startup of a flutter app with the service worker settings and no user configuration.
* The user can also put a `flutter_bootstrap.js` file in the `web` subdirectory in the project directory which can have whatever custom bootstrapping logic they'd like to write instead. This file is also templated, and can use any of the tokens that can be used with the `index.html` (with the exception of `{{flutter_bootstrap_js}}`, see below).
* Introduced a few new templating tokens for `index.html`:
* `{{flutter_js}}` => inlines the entirety of `flutter.js`
* `{{flutter_service_worker_version}}` => replaced directly by the service worker version. This can be used instead of the script that sets the `serviceWorkerVersion` local variable that we used to have by default.
* `{{flutter_bootstrap_js}}` => inlines the entirety of `flutter_bootstrap.js` (this token obviously doesn't apply to `flutter_bootstrap.js` itself).
* Changed `IndexHtml` to be called `WebTemplate` instead, since it is used for more than just the index.html now.
* We now emit warnings at build time for certain deprecated flows:
* Warn on the old service worker version pattern (i.e.`(const|var) serviceWorkerVersion = null`) and recommends using `{{flutter_service_worker_version}}` token instead
* Warn on use of `FlutterLoader.loadEntrypoint` and recommend using `FlutterLoader.load` instead
* Warn on manual loading of `flutter_service_worker.js`.
* The default `index.html` on `flutter create` now uses an async script tag with `flutter_bootstrap.js`.
So far `flutter build web --wasm` was always stripping wasm symbols
except if `--no-strip-wasm` is passed.
=> Ensure that in profile mode we also keep the symbols
### Context:
DDC modules are abstractions over how libraries are loaded/updated. The entirety of google3 uses the DDC/legacy module system due to its flexibility extensibility over the other two (ES6 and AMD/RequireJS). Unifying DDC's module system saves us from duplicating work and will allow us to have finer grained control over how JS modules are loaded. This is a a prerequisite to features such as hot reload.
### Overview:
This change plumbs a boolean flag through flutter_tools that switches between DDC (new) and AMD (current) modules. This mode is automatically applied when `--extra-front-end-options=--dartdevc-module-format=ddc` is specified alongside `flutter run`. Other important additions include:
* Splitting Flutter artifacts between DDC and AMD modules
* Adding unit tests for the DDC module system
* Additional bootstrapper logic for the DDC module system
We don't expect to see any user-visible behavior or performance differences.
This is dependent on [incoming module system support in DWDS](https://github.com/dart-lang/webdev/pull/2295) and [additional artifacts in the engine](https://github.com/flutter/engine/pull/47783).
This is part of a greater effort to deprecate the AMD module system: https://github.com/dart-lang/sdk/issues/52361
Update: Accidentally use `--O4` instead of `-O4` in `dev/devicelab/lib/tasks/web_benchmarks.dart` update.
Original description:
* Make `flutter build web` have one option that determins the
optimization level: `-O<level>` / `--optimization-level=<level>` =>
Defaulting to -O4 => Will apply to both dart2js and dart2wasm
* Deprecate `--dart2js-optimization=O<level>`
* Disentagle concept of optimization from concept of static symbols =>
Add a `--strip-wasm` / `--no-strip-wasm` flag that determins whether
static symbols are kept in the resulting wasm file.
* Remove copy&past'ed code in the tests for wasm build tests
* Cleanup some artifacts code, now that we no longer use `wasm-opt`
inside flutter tools
Reverts flutter/flutter#143517
Initiated by: dnfield
Reason for reverting: broke CI, see https://ci.chromium.org/ui/p/flutter/builders/prod/Linux%20web_benchmarks_skwasm/3446/overview
Original PR Author: mkustermann
Reviewed By: {eyebrowsoffire}
This change reverts the following previous change:
Original Description:
* Make `flutter build web` have one option that determins the optimization level: `-O<level>` / `--optimization-level=<level>` => Defaulting to -O4 => Will apply to both dart2js and dart2wasm
* Deprecate `--dart2js-optimization=O<level>`
* Disentagle concept of optimization from concept of static symbols => Add a `--strip-wasm` / `--no-strip-wasm` flag that determins whether static symbols are kept in the resulting wasm file.
* Remove copy&past'ed code in the tests for wasm build tests
* Cleanup some artifacts code, now that we no longer use `wasm-opt` inside flutter tools
* Make `flutter build web` have one option that determins the
optimization level: `-O<level>` / `--optimization-level=<level>` =>
Defaulting to -O4 => Will apply to both dart2js and dart2wasm
* Deprecate `--dart2js-optimization=O<level>`
* Disentagle concept of optimization from concept of static symbols =>
Add a `--strip-wasm` / `--no-strip-wasm` flag that determins whether
static symbols are kept in the resulting wasm file.
* Remove copy&past'ed code in the tests for wasm build tests
* Cleanup some artifacts code, now that we no longer use `wasm-opt`
inside flutter tools
* Flags to `dart compile wasm`
Some options are not relevant to a standalone user of `dart compile
wasm` (e.g. specyfing dart-sdk, platform file etc). => Those aren't
offered by the `dart compile wasm` tool directly. => We use the
`--extra-compiler-option=` instead which passes through arbitrary
options to the dart2wasm compiler. => We don't maintain compatibility of
those options, if we update them we'll ensure to also update flutter
tools
* Binaryen optimization passes
This change will mean we use the binaryen flags from Dart SDK which are
slightly different from the ones in flutter.
* Optimization configuration
This change will also start using the more standardized `-O` flag for
determining optimization levels. The meaning of those flags have been
mostly aligned with dart2js (with some differences remaining).
* Minimization
Using the new optimization flags, namely `-O4` for `--wasm-opt=full`,
will automatically enable the new `--minify` support. Minification is
Dart semantics preserving but changes the `<obj>.runtimeType.toString()`
to use minified names (just as in dart2js).
* Code size changes
Overall this change will reduce wonderous code size by around 10%.
Issue https://github.com/dart-lang/sdk/issues/54675
This is an attempt at a reland of https://github.com/flutter/flutter/pull/141396
The main changes here that are different than the original PR is fixes to wire up the `flutter test` command properly with the web renderer.
Dual Web Compile has had some issues where `flutter test` is not respecting the `--web-renderer` flag for some reason. I haven't gotten entirely to the bottom of the issue, but for now we need to rever these changes while I investigate. This reverts the following PRs:
https://github.com/flutter/flutter/pull/143128https://github.com/flutter/flutter/pull/141396
While doing this revert, I had a few merge conflicts with https://github.com/flutter/flutter/pull/142760, and I tried to resolve the merge conflicts within the spirit of that PR's change, but @chingjun I might need your input on whether the imports I have modified are okay with regards to the change you were making.
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!
This implements dual compile via the newly available flutter.js bootstrapping APIs for intelligent build fallback.
* Users can now use the `FlutterLoader.load` API from flutter.js
* Flutter tool injects build info into the `index.html` of the user so that the bootstrapper knows which build variants are available to bootstrap
* The semantics of the `--wasm` flag for `flutter build web` have changed:
- Instead of producing a separate `build/web_wasm` directory, the output goes to the `build/web` directory like a normal web build
- Produces a dual build that contains two build variants: dart2wasm+skwasm and dart2js+CanvasKit. The dart2wasm+skwasm will only work on Chrome in a cross-origin isolated context, all other environments will fall back to dart2js+CanvasKit.
- `--wasm` and `--web-renderer` are now mutually exclusive. Since there are multiple build variants with `--wasm`, the web renderer cannot be expressed via a single command-line flag. For now, we are hard coding what build variants are produced with the `--wasm` flag, but I plan on making this more customizable in the future.
* Build targets now can optionally provide a "build key" which can uniquely identify any specific parameterization of that build target. This way, the build target can invalidate itself by changing its build key. This works a bit better than just stuffing everything into the environment defines because (a) it doesn't invalidate the entire build, just the targets which are affected and (b) settings for multiple build variants don't translate well to the flat map of environment defines.
Relates to tracker issue:
- https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/128251
This PR includes 3 major updates:
- Adding the `commandHasTerminal` parameter for `Event.flutterCommandResult`
- In `packages/flutter_tools/lib/src/runner/flutter_command.dart`
- Adding the new event for `sendException` from package:usage to be `Event.exception` (this event can be used by all dash tools)
- In `packages/flutter_tools/lib/runner.dart`
- Migrating the generic `UsageEvent` which was only used for Apple related workflows for iOS and macOS. I did an initial analysis in this [sheet](https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/11KJLkHXFpECMX7tw-trNkYSr5MHDG15XNGv6TgLjfQs/edit?resourcekey=0-j4qdvsOEEg3wQW79YlY1-g#gid=0) to identify all the call sites
- Found in several files, highlighted in the sheet above