This wiki is for Framework CI, and is not applicable to other repositories like Engine, Packages. The integration test is referred to an end-to-end target/test presented in Flutter build dashboard, which is a one-on-one mapping to the entries listed in the .ci.yaml file.
Types of integration tests (based on how they are being executed):
test_runner.dartdevicelab_drone.pydevice_type or device_os in .ci.yaml)none or not defined for both device_type or device_os in .ci.yaml)DeviceLab here for host only testbed is a legacy name which refers to using the devicelab_drone.py recipes and relying on a task.dart file defined under dev/devicelab/bin/tasks. But this does NOT need a physical device. In the long term, we may want to rename to avoid confusion.test.dartflutter_drone.pyshard property is defined for these targetsThe word DeviceLab initially was used to represent targets running in Flutter's self-maintained hardware lab where bots are connected with a physical device. Later it has been extended to represent targets that use the test harness test_runner.dart which is located under dev/devicelab/bin. All these targets need an entry defined under dev/devicelab/bin/tasks, and they include ones that do not need a physical device (known as host only tests).
Shard tests are using the test harness test.dart, which supports targets that are shardable to run in parallel. Additionally it supports tests with a single shard, which means these tests are not feasible to run in parallel. These tests have only a single shard running a block of scripts.
There is an overlap happens between DeviceLab and Shard: a single shard test can also run under the DeviceLab test harness.
Most likely, we can fit a new integration test to existing types, like DeviceLab, Shard or other case-by-case tests that use their own recipes in addition to DeviceLab and Shard, e.g. firebaselab, packaging, docs, etc. If your new test doesn't fit in any of these (very rarely), it may need a new recipe.
[!NOTE]
Recipesare just python scripts detailing steps to set up env. and execute corresponding test harness. Different recipes basically mean different test harness with different environment setup.
For the two main types (DeviceLab/Shard):
DeviceLabDevicelabShardDeviceLab or Shard with a single shard.DeviceLab targetPlease refer to how to write a DeviceLab test and how to add it to continuous integration.
Quick steps:
dev/devicelab/bin/tasks/<test>.dartrecipe: devicelab_drone (see .ci.yaml readme)bringup: truedevice_type or device_os if neededbringup: true after validated in post-submit CI (in staging pool).Shard targetPlease refer to steps-to-add-a-new-framework-test-shard.
In this section we will build a new target for the Linux platform that will run in the DeviceLab with an Android emulator. Note: it is also supported in Shard.
To add a test in the Framework Repository with Android Emulators via the DeviceLab recipe, you will not have to do anything on the recipe side of the code as simply specifying the configuration will allow you to create an Android Emulator on demand. Using other custom tests will possibly require changes in the recipes repository.
When adding a new target make sure that the target platform is Linux_android_emu. This is done through the name of the target. This means that you can define your new target as something like:
- name: Linux_android_emu new_test_to_add
This tells the CI that you want to use the Linux platform and your test is named new_test_to_add. See [.ci.yaml] (https://github.com/flutter/cocoon/blob/main/CI_YAML.md) for more details. The platform-level config already defines all necessary dimensions/properties that an emulator test needs.
The dimensions are a way to use the correct machine type with the supported virtualization, the dependency on the android_virtual_device tells the recipes framework that an emulator was requested and which api level to use and finally the device_type tells it to use a machine without a connected device. This will avoid issues with multiple devices found during testing.
Add any additional properties/dependencies your test may need.
name: Linux_android_emu new_test_to_add recipe: devicelab/devicelab_drone bringup: true properties: tags: > ["framework","hostonly","linux"] task_name: android_views timeout: 60
You will notice that task_name is new and the tags are new. The task_name is the name of your test script (minus the .dart suffix) and the tags allow infra to perform statistical analysis based on these in order to monitor SLO for task times, execution time as well as many other metrics.
The above target can be added and run assuming there exists a ·new_test_to_add.dart· file in the Flutter repo.