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git checkout -b myBranch
sh tool/refresh.sh
git commit -m “description”
git push origin myBranch
sh tool/pull_and_refresh.sh
sh tool/refresh.sh
to pull the latest version from repo, generate missing code and upgrade dependencies.From a separate terminal, start running a flutter app to connect to DevTools:
git clone https://github.com/flutter/gallery.git
(this is an existing application with many examples of Flutter widgets)cd gallery
flutter run
NOTE: Though DevTools is shipped as a Flutter Web app, we recommend developing as a Flutter Desktop app where possible for a more efficient development workflow. Please see the [Desktop Embedder] section below for instructions on running DevTools as a Flutter Desktop app.
To pull fresh version, regenerate code and upgrade dependencies:
sh tool/pull_and_refresh.sh
To regenerate mocks and upgrade dependencies (after switching branches, for example):
sh tool/refresh.sh
To run DevTools as a Flutter web app, from the packages/devtools_app directory:
flutter run -d chrome
To test release performance:
flutter run -d web-server --release --dart-define=FLUTTER_WEB_USE_SKIA=true
You can also use -d headless-server
, which will start a headless server that serves the HTML files for the DevTools Flutter app.
To connect to your running application, paste the earlier copied observatory URL into the section “Connect to a Running App” in DevTools.
To develop with a workflow that exercises the DevTools server <==> DevTools client connection, change to the packages/devtools
directory, and run:
flutter pub get dart bin/devtools.dart --debug
That will:
flutter run -d web-server
from the packages/devtools_app
directoryflutter run
development web serverYou can then open a browser at the regular DevTools server URL (typically http://127.0.0.1:9100). When you make changes on disk, you can hit r
in your command-line to rebuild the app, and refresh in your browser to see the changes. Hit q
in the command line to terminate both the flutter run
instance and the devtools server instance.
You can also run the app in the Flutter desktop embedder on linux or macos.
NOTE: The Linux desktop version only works with the master branch of Flutter (and sometimes this is true for MacOS as well). Syncing to a the master branch of Flutter may fail with a runner version error. If this occurs run flutter create .
from devtools/packages/devtools_app
, re-generates files in the linux and macos directories.
Depending on your OS, set up like this:
flutter config --enable-macos-desktop
flutter config --enable-linux-desktop
Now you can run with either of the following:
flutter run -d macos
flutter run -d linux
If you're using VS Code to work on DevTools you can run DevTools from the editor using the VS Code tasks without having to run in a terminal window:
F5
This will serve the application in the background and launch Google Chrome. Subsequent launches will just re-launch the browser since the task remains running in the background and rebuilding as necessary.
Run and debug the local version of the server with a release build:
Run Server with Release Build
config. Press F5. This will produce a release build of DevTools and then debug the server (bin/devtools.dart
) to serve it../devtools/tool/publish.sh
). Then cd packages/devtools
and run dart bin/devtools.dart
.If you need to make breaking changes to DevTools that require changes to the server (such that DevTools cannot run against the live Pub version of devtools_server) it's critical that the devtools_server is released first and the version numbers in packages/devtools/pubspec.yaml
and packages/devtools_app/pubspec.yaml
are updated. Please make sure this is clear on any PRs you open.
Make sure your Flutter SDK matches the version specified in devtools/flutter-version.txt
before running these tests.
cd packages/devtools_app flutter test -j1 --no-sound-null-safety
The flag -j1
tells Flutter to run tests with 1 concurrent test runner. If your test run does not include the directory devtools_app/test/integration_tests
, then you do not need to include this flag. For example, it is OK to do the following:
flutter test test/ui/ --no-sound-null-safety
If you run the tests on other than Linux environment, first time add the flag --update-goldens
, because goldens on your machine will be little different.
Some of the golden file tests will fail if Flutter changes the implementation or diagnostic properties of widgets used by the inspector tests. If this happens, make sure the golden file output still looks reasonable and execute the following command to update the golden files.
./tool/update_goldens.sh
This will update the master or stable goldens depending on whether you're on the stable Flutter branch.
To update goldens for both channels do:
flutter channel master ./tool/update_goldens.sh flutter channel stable ./tool/update_goldens.sh
All content not authored by the Flutter team must go in the third_party directory. As an expedient to make the third_party code work well with our build scripts, code in third_party should be given a stub pubspec.yaml file so that you can reference the resources from the packages directory from packages/devtools_app/web/index.html