Todd Volkert 9f5ff2306b
v1.12.13+hotfix.7 cherry-picks (#49437)
* flutter/engine@a677925 Cherry pick infra testing updates into hotfixes
* flutter/engine@b1bb773 Raise API level for reportFullyDrawn
* flutter/engine@a433ed9 v1.12.13+hotfix.7 cherry-picks
  * google/skia@a640745 Disable QCOM_tiled_rendering while we wait for test devices
  * flutter/engine@bcb8267 Revert "Do not default to downstream affinity on iOS insertText"
* d345a3b Revert "Track and use fallback TextAffinity for null affinity platform TextSelections. (#44622)"
* bd25f70 Upgrade dartdoc to 0.29.3
* 7915e58 Change firebase Pixel3 version from Q-beta3 to 29
2020-01-26 22:38:26 -08:00
..

Dart SDK dependency

The bin/internal/engine.version file controls which version of the Flutter engine to use. The file contains the commit hash of a commit in the https://github.com/flutter/engine repository. That hash must have successfully been compiled on https://build.chromium.org/p/client.flutter/ and had its artifacts (the binaries that run on Android and iOS, the compiler, etc) successfully uploaded to Google Cloud Storage.

The /bin/internal/engine.merge_method file controls how we merge a pull request created by the engine auto-roller. If it's squash, there's only one commit for a pull request no matter how many engine commits there are inside that pull request. If it's rebase, the number of commits in the framework is equal to the number of engine commits in the pull request. The latter method makes it easier to detect regressions but costs more test resources.