This section of the Flutter repository contains the command line developer tools for building Flutter applications.
Be sure to follow the instructions on CONTRIBUTING.md to set up your development environment. Further, familiarize yourself with the style guide, which we follow.
First, ensure that the Dart SDK and other necessary artifacts are available by invoking the Flutter Tools wrapper script. In this directory run:
$ flutter --version
To run Flutter Tools from source, in this directory run:
$ dart bin/flutter_tools.dart
followed by command-line arguments, as usual.
As a convenience for folks developing the flutter
tool itself, you can also use the bin/flutter-dev
script:
# Assuming flutter/bin is on your PATH $ flutter-dev
Note: flutter-dev
is identical to flutter
, except it does not use a cached on-disk snapshot. In other words, it will be significantly slower but you will not need to forget (remember?) to delete the cached snapshot.
To run the analyzer on Flutter Tools, in this directory run:
$ flutter analyze
As with other parts of the Flutter repository, all changes in behavior must be tested. Tests live under the test/
subdirectory.
Hermetic unit tests of tool internals go under test/general.shard
and must run in significantly less than two seconds.
Tests of tool commands go under test/commands.shard
. Hermetic tests go under its hermetic/
subdirectory. Non-hermetic tests go under its permeable
sub-directory. Avoid adding tests here and prefer writing either a unit test or a full integration test.
Integration tests (e.g. tests that run the tool in a subprocess) go under test/integration.shard
.
Slow web-related tests go in the test/web.shard
directory.
In general, the tests for the code in a file called file.dart
should go in a file called file_test.dart
in the subdirectory that matches the behavior of the test.
The dart_test.yaml
file configures the timeout for these tests to be 15 minutes. The test.dart
script that is used in CI overrides this to two seconds for the test/general.shard
directory, to catch behaviour that is unexpectedly slow.
Please avoid setting any other timeouts.
The integration tests can be configured to use a specific local engine variant by setting the FLUTTER_LOCAL_ENGINE
and FLUTTER_LOCAL_ENGINE_HOST
environment variables to the name of the local engines (e.g. android_debug_unopt
and host_debug_unopt
). If the local engine build requires a source path, this can be provided by setting the FLUTTER_LOCAL_ENGINE_SRC_PATH
environment variable. This second variable is not necessary if the flutter
and engine
checkouts are in adjacent directories.
export FLUTTER_LOCAL_ENGINE=android_debug_unopt export FLUTTER_LOCAL_ENGINE_HOST=host_debug_unopt flutter test test/integration.shard/some_test_case
To run all of the unit tests:
$ flutter test test/general.shard
The tests in test/integration.shard
are slower to run than the tests in test/general.shard
. Depending on your development computer, you might want to limit concurrency. Generally it is easier to run these on CI, or to manually verify the behavior you are changing instead of running the test.
The integration tests also require the FLUTTER_ROOT
environment variable to be set. The full invocation to run everything might therefore look something like:
$ export FLUTTER_ROOT=~/path/to/flutter-sdk $ flutter test --concurrency 1
This may take some time (on the order of an hour). The unit tests alone take much less time (on the order of a minute).
You can run the tests in a specific file, e.g.:
$ flutter test test/general.shard/utils_test.dart
To force the Flutter Tools snapshot to be regenerated, delete the following files:
$ rm ../../bin/cache/flutter_tools.stamp ../../bin/cache/flutter_tools.snapshot