Run DevTools from the command line

To run DevTools from the CLI, you must have dart on your path. Then you can run either of the following commands to launch DevTools:

dart devtools

or

flutter devtools

To upgrade DevTools, upgrade Flutter. If a newer Dart SDK (which is included in the Flutter SDK) includes a newer version of DevTools, running devtools automatically launches this version. If which dart points to a Dart SDK not included in your Flutter SDK, updating that Dart SDK won't update the Flutter version.

When you run DevTools from the command line, you should see output that looks something like:

Serving DevTools at http://127.0.0.1:9100

Start an application to debug

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Next, start an app to connect to. This can be either a Flutter application or a Dart command-line application. The command below specifies a Flutter app:

cd path/to/flutter/app
flutter run

You need to have a device connected, or a simulator open, for flutter run to work. Once the app starts, you'll see a message in your terminal that looks like the following:

An Observatory debugger and profiler on macOS is available at:
http://127.0.0.1:52129/QjqebSY4lQ8=/
The Flutter DevTools debugger and profiler on macOS is available at:
http://127.0.0.1:9100?uri=http://127.0.0.1:52129/QjqebSY4lQ8=/

Open the DevTools instance connected to your app by opening the second link in Chrome.

This URL contains a security token, so it's different for each run of your app. This means that if you stop your application and re-run it, you need to connect to DevTools again with the new URL.

Connect to a new app instance

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If your app stops running or you opened DevTools manually, you should see a Connect dialog:

Screenshot of the DevTools connect dialog

You can manually connect DevTools to a new app instance by copying the Observatory link you got from running your app, such as http://127.0.0.1:52129/QjqebSY4lQ8=/ and pasting it into the connect dialog: