Flutter LUCI Service Configurations
Contains configuration and tools related to Flutter's build infrastructure.
Configuration is generated by lucicfg
, which is part of depot_tools
. Rather
than updating the individual .cfg files, updates should be made to
config/main.star
. That file can then be run to regenerate the configuration.
Updating the configuration
- Edit the desired
.star
files (do not edit.cfg
files; those are generated). - Execute
./config/main.star
. - Observe that the
.cfg
files have been updated (e.g. viagit status
). - Create a pull request containing changes both to the
.star
files and.cfg
files. - Review and submit the pull request as normal.
- Changes propagate to LUCI automatically. Go to LUCI config UI to check that new changes have been applied.
Adding new framework test shards
This section talks about test shards defined in dev/bots/test.dart used to split framework tests into smaller chunks that can be tested in parallel. This does not refer to LUCI/Swarming shards.
When you add a new shard it does not automatically run in LUCI. To add it to LUCI you need to add a new builder in the framework_config.star. Typically, you'll add two builders, one "try" builder that tests PRs, and one "prod" builder that tests submitted PRs on the master branch.
Here's an example of a "try" builder:
common.linux_try_builder(
name = "Linux web_tests|web_tests",
recipe = "flutter/flutter",
repo = repos.FLUTTER,
list_view_name = list_view_name,
properties = {
"shard": "web_tests",
"subshards": ["0", "1", "2", "3", "4", "5", "6", "7_last"],
"dependencies": [{"dependency": "android_sdk"}, {"dependency": "chrome_and_driver"}, {"dependency": "goldctl"}],
},
caches = [
swarming.cache(name = "pub_cache", path = ".pub_cache"),
swarming.cache(name = "android_sdk", path = "android29"),
],
)
The easiest way to add a new one is to copy an existing builder and tweak the parameters.
Testing new shards
As of today, it is not possible to test configuration changes until after they
propagated to LUCI. One way to mitigate the risk of breakage is to run your test
shard using an existing builder. To do that, find a builder in one of the
.star
files (e.g. framework_config.star
) that satisfies the dependencies of
the new test shard, then use the led
tool (bundled with depot_tools
) to run
it.
For example, let's say you are adding an integration test shard for web, and the
new shard needs a Linux builder with Chrome and ChromeDriver in order to run.
Luckily, there's already the Linux web_tests
builder that satisfies these
dependencies. To test the new shard, use the Linux web_tests
builder, but ask
it to run a different shards and/or subshard. Let's say the new test shard is
called "foo", it has 3 subshards (0, 1, 2_last) and it's currently staged in pull
request 99999. You can run it using the following led
command:
led get-builder "luci.flutter.try:Linux web_tests" \
| led edit -pa git_ref='refs/pull/99999/head' \
| led edit -pa git_url='https://github.com/flutter/flutter' \
| led edit -pa shard='foo' \
| led edit -pa subshard='1' \
| led launch
Forcing the propagation of these configurations
Configuration changes are read by the LUCI Configuration Service from a git-on-borg mirror of this repo. Both the github -> googlesource mirroring and luci-config reading updated changes happen as scheduled tasks.
Once a change has reached the mirror, one may speed up the propagation of the new configuration files by visiting the luci-config web ui, logging in, and searching for projects/flutter. from there, one may click on the projects/flutter search result and click the download icon to force an update.