Files
stuartmorgan-g abb2e34ce2 Disable SwiftPM for xcode-analyze (#9666)
Until https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/172427 is resolved, `xcode-analyze` doesn't work as desired with SwiftPM enabled (it analyzes only the test code, not the plugin code). To avoid losing analysis coverage in the meantime, this disabled SwiftPM temporarily while running analysis.

This PR also updates `build-examples` to use the newer pubspec-based config option to set the SwiftPM flag state instead of setting global state, to avoid future issues where we are unintentionally bleeding flag changes across different tests, and to make local runs not impact developer machine state.

To unit test this functionality, this adds a new feature to the existing process mock system that allows running an arbitrary test callback at the ponit where a process is being run, which in this case allows reading the temporarily-modified pubspec contents at the right point in the command execution.

Fixes https://github.com/flutter/flutter/issues/171442

## Pre-Review Checklist

**Note**: The Flutter team is currently trialing the use of [Gemini Code Assist for GitHub](https://developers.google.com/gemini-code-assist/docs/review-github-code). Comments from the `gemini-code-assist` bot should not be taken as authoritative feedback from the Flutter team. If you find its comments useful you can update your code accordingly, but if you are unsure or disagree with the feedback, please feel free to wait for a Flutter team member's review for guidance on which automated comments should be addressed.

[^1]: Regular contributors who have demonstrated familiarity with the repository guidelines only need to comment if the PR is not auto-exempted by repo tooling.
2025-08-18 12:35:15 +00:00
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Flutter Plugin Tools

This is a set of utilities used in this repository, both for CI and for local development.

Getting Started

Set up:

cd script/tool && dart pub get && cd ../../

Run:

dart run script/tool/bin/flutter_plugin_tools.dart <args>

Many commands require the Flutter-bundled version of Dart to be the first dart in the path.

Commands

Run with --help for a full list of commands and arguments, but the following shows a number of common commands being run for a specific package.

Most commands take a --packages argument to control which package(s) the command is targetting. An package name can be any of:

  • The name of a package (e.g., path_provider_android).
  • The name of a federated plugin (e.g., path_provider), in which case all packages that make up that plugin will be targetted.
  • A combination federated_plugin_name/package_name (e.g., path_provider/path_provider for the app-facing package).

The examples below assume they are being run from the repository root, but the script works from anywhere. If you develop in flutter/packages frequently, it may be useful to make an alias for dart run /absolute/path/to/script/tool/bin/flutter_plugin_tools.dart so that you can easily run commands from within packages. For that use case there is also a --current-package flag as an alternative to --packages, to target the current working directory's package (or enclosing package; it can be used from anywhere within a package).

Format Code

dart run script/tool/bin/flutter_plugin_tools.dart format --packages package_name

The flutter/packages repository uses clang version 15.0.0 . Newer versions of clang may format code differently.

Run the Dart Static Analyzer

dart run script/tool/bin/flutter_plugin_tools.dart analyze --packages package_name

Run Dart Unit Tests

dart run script/tool/bin/flutter_plugin_tools.dart test --packages package_name

Run Dart Integration Tests

dart run script/tool/bin/flutter_plugin_tools.dart build-examples --apk --packages package_name
dart run script/tool/bin/flutter_plugin_tools.dart drive-examples --android --packages package_name

Replace --apk/--android with the platform you want to test against (omit it to get a list of valid options).

Run Native Tests

native-test takes one or more platform flags to run tests for. By default it runs both unit tests and (on platforms that support it) integration tests, but --no-unit or --no-integration can be used to run just one type.

Examples:

# Run just unit tests for iOS and Android:
dart run script/tool/bin/flutter_plugin_tools.dart native-test --ios --android --no-integration --packages package_name
# Run all tests for macOS:
dart run script/tool/bin/flutter_plugin_tools.dart native-test --macos --packages package_name
# Run all tests for Windows:
dart run script/tool/bin/flutter_plugin_tools.dart native-test --windows --packages package_name

Update README.md from Example Sources

# Update all .md files for all packages:
dart run script/tool/bin/flutter_plugin_tools.dart update-excerpts

# Update the .md files only for one package:
dart run script/tool/bin/flutter_plugin_tools.dart update-excerpts --packages package_name

See also: https://github.com/flutter/flutter/blob/master/docs/ecosystem/contributing/README.md#readme-code

Update CHANGELOG and Version

update-release-info will automatically update the version and CHANGELOG.md following standard repository style and practice. It can be used for single-package updates to handle the details of getting the CHANGELOG.md format correct, but is especially useful for bulk updates across multiple packages.

For instance, if you add a new analysis option that requires production code changes across many packages:

dart run script/tool/bin/flutter_plugin_tools.dart update-release-info \
  --version=minimal \
  --base-branch=upstream/main \
  --changelog="Fixes violations of new analysis option some_new_option."

The minimal option for --version will skip unchanged packages, and treat each changed package as either bugfix or next depending on the files that have changed in that package, so it is often the best choice for a bulk change.

For cases where you know the change type, minor or bugfix will make the corresponding version bump, or next will update only CHANGELOG.md without changing the version.

If you have a standard repository setup, --base-branch=upstream/main will usually give the behavior you want, finding all packages changed relative to the branch point from upstream/main. For more complex use cases where you want a different diff point, you can pass a different --base-branch, or use --base-sha to pick the exact diff point.

Update a dependency

update-dependency will update a pub dependency to a new version.

For instance, to updated to version 3.0.0 of some_package in every package that depends on it:

dart run script/tool/bin/flutter_plugin_tools.dart update-dependency \
  --pub-package=some_package \
  --version=3.0.0 \

If a --version is not provided, the latest version from pub will be used.

Currently this only updates the dependency itself in pubspec.yaml, but in the future this will also update any generated code for packages that use code generation (e.g., regenerating mocks when updating mockito).

Publish a Release

Releases are automated for flutter/packages.

The manual procedure described here is deprecated, and should only be used when the automated process fails. Please read Releasing a Plugin or Package before using publish.

cd <path_to_repo>
git checkout <commit_hash_to_publish>
dart run script/tool/bin/flutter_plugin_tools.dart publish --packages <package>

By default the tool tries to push tags to the upstream remote, but some additional settings can be configured. Run dart run script/tool/bin/flutter_plugin_tools.dart publish --help for more usage information.

The tool wraps pub publish for pushing the package to pub, and then will automatically use git to try to create and push tags. It has some additional safety checking around pub publish too. By default pub publish publishes everything, including untracked or uncommitted files in version control. publish will first check the status of the local directory and refuse to publish if there are any mismatched files with version control present.