DeviceLab is a physical lab that tests Flutter on real devices.
This package contains the code for the test framework and tests. More generally the tests are referred to as “tasks” in the API, but since we primarily use it for testing, this document refers to them as “tests”.
Current statuses for the devicelab are available at https://flutter-dashboard.appspot.com/#/build. See dashboard user guide for information on using the dashboards.
DeviceLab tests are run against physical devices in Flutter's lab (the “DeviceLab”).
Tasks specify the type of device they are to run on (linux_android
, mac_ios
, mac_android
, windows_android
, etc). When a device in the lab is free, it will pickup tasks that need to be completed.
Do make sure your tests pass locally before deploying to the CI environment. Below is a handful of commands that run tests in a similar way to how the CI environment runs them. These commands are also useful when you need to reproduce a CI test failure locally.
You must set the ANDROID_SDK_ROOT
environment variable to run tests on Android. If you have a local build of the Flutter engine, then you have a copy of the Android SDK at .../engine/src/third_party/android_tools/sdk
.
You can find where your Android SDK is using flutter doctor -v
.
Running the devicelab will do things to your environment.
Notably, it will start and stop Gradle, for instance.
To run a test, use option -t
(--task
):
# from the .../flutter/dev/devicelab directory ../../bin/cache/dart-sdk/bin/dart bin/test_runner.dart test -t {NAME_OF_TEST}
Where NAME_OR_PATH_OF_TEST
is the name of a task, which is a file's basename in bin/tasks
. Example: complex_layout__start_up
.
To run multiple tests, repeat option -t
(--task
) multiple times:
../../bin/cache/dart-sdk/bin/dart bin/run.dart -t test1 -t test2 -t test3
To run device lab tests against a local engine build, pass the appropriate flags to bin/run.dart
:
../../bin/cache/dart-sdk/bin/dart bin/run.dart --task=[some_task] \ --local-engine-src-path=[path_to_local]/engine/src \ --local-engine=[local_engine_architecture] \ --local-engine-host=[local_engine_host_architecture]
An example of a local engine architecture is android_debug_unopt_x86
and an example of a local engine host architecture is host_debug_unopt
.
You can run an A/B test that compares the performance of the default engine against a local engine build. The test runs the same benchmark a specified number of times against both engines, then outputs a tab-separated spreadsheet with the results and stores them in a JSON file for future reference. The results can be copied to a Google Spreadsheet for further inspection and the JSON file can be reprocessed with the summarize.dart
command for more detailed output.
Example:
../../bin/cache/dart-sdk/bin/dart bin/run.dart --ab=10 \ --local-engine=host_debug_unopt \ --local-engine-host=host_debug_unopt \ -t bin/tasks/web_benchmarks_canvaskit.dart
The --ab=10
tells the runner to run an A/B test 10 times.
--local-engine=host_debug_unopt
tells the A/B test to use the host_debug_unopt
engine build. --local-engine-host=host_debug_unopt
uses the same engine build to run the frontend_server
(in this example). --local-engine
is required for A/B test.
--ab-result-file=filename
can be used to provide an alternate location to output the JSON results file (defaults to ABresults#.json
). A single #
character can be used to indicate where to insert a serial number if a file with that name already exists, otherwise, the file will be overwritten.
A/B can run exactly one task. Multiple tasks are not supported.
Example output:
Score Average A (noise) Average B (noise) Speed-up bench_card_infinite_scroll.canvaskit.drawFrameDuration.average 2900.20 (8.44%) 2426.70 (8.94%) 1.20x bench_card_infinite_scroll.canvaskit.totalUiFrame.average 4964.00 (6.29%) 4098.00 (8.03%) 1.21x draw_rect.canvaskit.windowRenderDuration.average 1959.45 (16.56%) 2286.65 (0.61%) 0.86x draw_rect.canvaskit.sceneBuildDuration.average 1969.45 (16.37%) 2294.90 (0.58%) 0.86x draw_rect.canvaskit.drawFrameDuration.average 5335.20 (17.59%) 6437.60 (0.59%) 0.83x draw_rect.canvaskit.totalUiFrame.average 6832.00 (13.16%) 7932.00 (0.34%) 0.86x
The output contains averages and noises for each score. More importantly, it contains the speed-up value, i.e. how much faster is the local engine than the default engine. Values less than 1.0 indicate a slow-down. For example, 0.5x means the local engine is twice as slow as the default engine, and 2.0x means it's twice as fast. Higher is better.
Summarize tool example:
../../bin/cache/dart-sdk/bin/dart bin/summarize.dart --[no-]tsv-table --[no-]raw-summary \ ABresults.json ABresults1.json ABresults2.json ...
--[no-]tsv-table
tells the tool to print the summary in a table with tabs for easy spreadsheet entry. (defaults to on)
--[no-]raw-summary
tells the tool to print all per-run data collected by the A/B test formatted with tabs for easy spreadsheet entry. (defaults to on)
Multiple trailing filenames can be specified and each such results file will be processed in turn.
To reproduce the breakage locally git checkout
the corresponding Flutter revision. Note the name of the test that failed. In the example above the failing test is flutter_gallery__transition_perf
. This name can be passed to the run.dart
command. For example:
../../bin/cache/dart-sdk/bin/dart bin/run.dart -t flutter_gallery__transition_perf
A test is a simple Dart program that lives under bin/tasks
and uses package:flutter_devicelab/framework/framework.dart
to define and run a task.
Example:
import 'dart:async'; import 'package:flutter_devicelab/framework/framework.dart'; Future<void> main() async { await task(() async { ... do something interesting ... // Aggregate results into a JSONable Map structure. Map<String, dynamic> testResults = ...; // Report success. return new TaskResult.success(testResults); // Or you can also report a failure. return new TaskResult.failure('Something went wrong!'); }); }
Only one task
is permitted per program. However, that task can run any number of tests internally. A task has a name. It succeeds and fails independently of other tasks, and is reported to the dashboard independently of other tasks.
A task runs in its own standalone Dart VM and reports results via Dart VM service protocol. This ensures that tasks do not interfere with each other and lets the CI system time out and clean up tasks that get stuck.
Host only tests should be added to flutter_tools
.
There are several PRs needed to add a DeviceLab task to CI.
TASK- the name of your test that also matches the name of the file in bin/tasks
without the .dart
extension.
devicelab_drone
If your test needs to run on multiple operating systems, create a separate target for each operating system.
Flutter's DeviceLab has a limited capacity in presubmit. File an infra ticket to investigate feasibility of adding a test to presubmit.
To better utilize limited DeviceLab testbed resources and speed up commit validation time, it is now supported to separate building artifacts (.apk/.app) from testing them. The artifact will be built on a host only bot, a VM or physical bot without a device, and the test will run based on the artifact against a testbed with a device.
Steps:
BuildTestTask
getBuildArgs
getTestArgs
parseTaskResult
getApplicationBinaryPath
bin/tasks/{TEST}.dart
to point to the new task classdart bin/test_runner.dart test -t {NAME_OR_PATH_OF_TEST} --task-args build --task-args application-binary-path={PATH_TO_ARTIFACT}
dart bin/test_runner.dart test -t {NAME_OR_PATH_OF_TEST} --task-args test --task-args application-binary-path={PATH_TO_ARTIFACT}
Linux_build_test
or Mac_build_test
task_name
.PROD
by removing bringup: true
and deleting the old target entry without build+test model.Take gallery tasks for example: