I want to build an app with multiple flavors, which work very well. But now I have the requirement to include static json files into my preview app, because sometime the backend differs in development speed. So I can use the json files within my app as fake/mock data.
Hard requirements are:
Preview has jsons included
Production should be release without any unused files (no jsons files)
What's the best way to do it?
I think it depends on the data. If JSON will not change anymore or rarely change, you can just load JSON from the local asset. Otherwise, getting the JSON data from the cloud is a better way. It's more flexible.
Related
after building the flutter project for desktop, flutter copies all asset files inside the assets directory into the build/flutter_assets/assets which are easily accessible and modifiable (which is not secure at all!), user can change the whole images easily and do some kind of modding the app with no experience required! or even in the worst situation with modifying the AssetManifest he could change the runtime dynamic libs with the malicious libs and get a hook from the app.
most modern frameworks/languages have the option to embed the resources inside a single file (that makes it harder to modify the files / repack the resource file) for example C#(WPF/Win32) embeds the resources in the resource Resource section or even Electron (Javascript) embed the whole resources into a file (it's easy but better than nothing)
I didn't find any similar behavior in Flutter Desktop (Windows/Mac/Linux) is there any alternative for flutter?
For now [12/12/22] it seems flutter desktop won't use resources to bundle the resources into a single file.
So I've created two separate libraries to achieve this
https://github.com/kooroshh/bundler that compresses the whole given assets into a single file and encrypts it with AES-128
https://github.com/kooroshh/flutter_bundler that reads the bundle file from and decrypts it into the memory that can be used with Image.memory or Direct file access using Virtual Files.
I hope an official solution gets implemented in the flutter framework.
I am limited to the size of web applications I can build by the "Build\application.data" file.
I.e if its over a certain size I cannot upload it certain hosts, github, etc.
Ideally I would like to split the application into multiple data files under a certain size, while the application is still executable.
How would this be possible? Is this something I can do from Unity build configuration?
Can I do it after the build is done?
Can I split the file into chunks by archiving it with zero compression, and somehow still execute it from the browser? There is a file called Build.Loader.js, is it something that can be edited for this purpose?
This is for the purposes of using the application after it has been uploaded, not sharing it, I do not want to compress it into separate archives, or use gitlfs, I've tested this and the application does not work from the browser with github and gitlfs.
Thanks
Unity has 2 technologies for split data file:
Asset bundle
An AssetBundle is an archive file that contains platform-specific
non-code Assets (such as Models, Textures, Prefabs, Audio clips, and
even entire Scenes) that Unity can load at run time
Addressbles
The Addressable Asset System allows the developer to ask for an asset
via its address. Once an asset (e.g. a prefab) is marked
"addressable", it generates an address which can be called from
anywhere. Wherever the asset resides (local or remote), the system
will locate it and its dependencies, then return it.
Both technologies create separate files that you can host on a server and download as needed. Addressable is a newer technology that Unity team recommends.
Probably the total size of the bundle will grow, but user will be able to download only the necessary assets and the amount of data for the user may decrease
If you do not use Unity solutions, you can divide data file into parts. But on the client side (javascript) you will need to download all the parts, connect them and pass to Unity loader. You probably won't be able to use the browser's built-in gzip or brotli (not sure). It seems to be quite difficult.
Apparently, the web implementation of FlutterFire storageref.putFile does not support the dart:html File object.
Because of this I cannot find a simple way to upload large files, since all the other options require to load the data into the browser first.
Am I missing something here?
I am new to flutter and I found load csv from local and display as listview but I want to load from url and display. How can I do that?
A .csv from a remote source will probably have the content type of text/csv.
You should be able to call the url using a library (https://pub.dev/packages/http is a good choice, although I hear good things about Dio and probably a few others I haven't come across), get the data (e.g. as a http.Response), parse the response into some sort of model and then display it within the list view. Ideally the differences between displaying data from a local and remote source would be minimal - just where the data is coming from. This means you should be able to reuse the code you've written to load the data from a local source.
Without more information its hard to help. There's a good tutorial on building out Flutter apps using the Clean architecture at https://resocoder.com/category/tutorials/flutter/tdd-clean-architecture/. The difference will be that the Response data will be csv rather than JSON, so you'll need to sub in what you've done for the local loading.
Right, this is the problem I have a container (rar,zip) which contains images png's tiffs bmps or jpegs in an order.
The file extension isnt zip or rar though but uses the same compression.
I want to pull out a list of images contained within the file in the numerical order, then depending on the user decision go to the image selected.
I'm not after any code just the high level thought process/logic of how this can be achieved and how it could be achieved on iphone OS.
From what i know of iphone OS it uses a kind of sandbox environment so how would this effect the process as well.
Thanks
You can include the libz framework in your project and write some C to manage zipped data. Or you can use Objective-C wrapper classes others have written.
Your application resides in its own sandbox. You can include zip files in the "bundle", i.e. add them to your project, and copy them to the application's Documents folder to work with them. Or you can copy archived data over the network to the application's Documents folder if you don't want to include files in your project.
I don't think the extension matters so much as the data being in the format you expect it to be.
Everything I wrote above is for zip-ped files. If you're working with rar-formatted archives, you'll need to look at making a static library for the iPhone, perhaps from the UnRAR source code.