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Severe jank observed when enabling useMaterial3 in Flutter 3 #104229

@jongkb

Description

@jongkb

Turning on useMaterial3 flag in Flutter 3 caused app to slow down with very severe jank after a while of use. This issue is observed in both my test devices: Xiaomi Mi A2 (Android 10) and Oppo R9s (Android 6.0.1). Probably has to do with the shader-use implementation in Material 3?

Steps to Reproduce

  1. Create an app with flutter create.
  2. Add useMaterial3: true to ThemeData.
  3. Run app in Profile mode on Android device.
  4. Launch DevTools > Open Performance Page.
  5. Tap '+' button repeatedly and observe DevTools performance chart.

Repeat steps by omitting useMaterial3 or setting the flag to false and compare performance results.

Expected results:

Consistent near-60 FPS throughout.

Actual results:

useMaterial3 == true:
Decreasing FPS with repeated taps on '+' button. After 200 taps, framerate dropped to 28 FPS on Xiaomi Mi A2 and 16 FPS on Oppo R9s.

useMaterial3 == false:
Results are as expected.

Code sample
import 'package:flutter/material.dart';

void main() {
  runApp(const MyApp());
}

class MyApp extends StatelessWidget {
  const MyApp({Key? key}) : super(key: key);

  // This widget is the root of your application.
  @override
  Widget build(BuildContext context) {
    return MaterialApp(
      title: 'Flutter Demo',
      theme: ThemeData(
        // This is the theme of your application.
        //
        // Try running your application with "flutter run". You'll see the
        // application has a blue toolbar. Then, without quitting the app, try
        // changing the primarySwatch below to Colors.green and then invoke
        // "hot reload" (press "r" in the console where you ran "flutter run",
        // or simply save your changes to "hot reload" in a Flutter IDE).
        // Notice that the counter didn't reset back to zero; the application
        // is not restarted.
        primarySwatch: Colors.blue,
        useMaterial3: true,
      ),
      home: const MyHomePage(title: 'Flutter Demo Home Page'),
    );
  }
}

class MyHomePage extends StatefulWidget {
  const MyHomePage({Key? key, required this.title}) : super(key: key);

  // This widget is the home page of your application. It is stateful, meaning
  // that it has a State object (defined below) that contains fields that affect
  // how it looks.

  // This class is the configuration for the state. It holds the values (in this
  // case the title) provided by the parent (in this case the App widget) and
  // used by the build method of the State. Fields in a Widget subclass are
  // always marked "final".

  final String title;

  @override
  State<MyHomePage> createState() => _MyHomePageState();
}

class _MyHomePageState extends State<MyHomePage> {
  int _counter = 0;

  void _incrementCounter() {
    setState(() {
      // This call to setState tells the Flutter framework that something has
      // changed in this State, which causes it to rerun the build method below
      // so that the display can reflect the updated values. If we changed
      // _counter without calling setState(), then the build method would not be
      // called again, and so nothing would appear to happen.
      _counter++;
    });
  }

  @override
  Widget build(BuildContext context) {
    // This method is rerun every time setState is called, for instance as done
    // by the _incrementCounter method above.
    //
    // The Flutter framework has been optimized to make rerunning build methods
    // fast, so that you can just rebuild anything that needs updating rather
    // than having to individually change instances of widgets.
    return Scaffold(
      // drawer: Drawer(
      //   child: Container(),
      // ),
      appBar: AppBar(
        // Here we take the value from the MyHomePage object that was created by
        // the App.build method, and use it to set our appbar title.
        title: Text(widget.title),
      ),
      body: Center(
        // Center is a layout widget. It takes a single child and positions it
        // in the middle of the parent.
        child: Column(
          // Column is also a layout widget. It takes a list of children and
          // arranges them vertically. By default, it sizes itself to fit its
          // children horizontally, and tries to be as tall as its parent.
          //
          // Invoke "debug painting" (press "p" in the console, choose the
          // "Toggle Debug Paint" action from the Flutter Inspector in Android
          // Studio, or the "Toggle Debug Paint" command in Visual Studio Code)
          // to see the wireframe for each widget.
          //
          // Column has various properties to control how it sizes itself and
          // how it positions its children. Here we use mainAxisAlignment to
          // center the children vertically; the main axis here is the vertical
          // axis because Columns are vertical (the cross axis would be
          // horizontal).
          mainAxisAlignment: MainAxisAlignment.center,
          children: <Widget>[
            const Text(
              'You have pushed the button this many times:',
            ),
            Text(
              '$_counter',
              style: Theme.of(context).textTheme.headline4,
            ),
          ],
        ),
      ),
      floatingActionButton: FloatingActionButton(
        onPressed: _incrementCounter,
        tooltip: 'Increment',
        child: const Icon(Icons.add),
      ), // This trailing comma makes auto-formatting nicer for build methods.
    );
  }
}
Logs
[√] Flutter (Channel stable, 3.0.0, on Microsoft Windows [Version 10.0.19043.1706], locale en-MY)
    • Flutter version 3.0.0 at C:\src\flutter
    • Upstream repository https://github.com/flutter/flutter.git
    • Framework revision ee4e09cce0 (10 days ago), 2022-05-09 16:45:18 -0700
    • Engine revision d1b9a6938a
    • Dart version 2.17.0
    • DevTools version 2.12.2

[√] Android toolchain - develop for Android devices (Android SDK version 32.0.0)
    • Android SDK at C:\Users\Jason\AppData\Local\Android\sdk
    • Platform android-32, build-tools 32.0.0
    • ANDROID_SDK_ROOT = C:\Users\Jason\AppData\Local\Android\sdk
    • Java binary at: C:\Program Files\Android\Android Studio\jre\bin\java
    • Java version OpenJDK Runtime Environment (build 11.0.12+7-b1504.28-7817840)
    • All Android licenses accepted.

[√] Chrome - develop for the web
    • Chrome at C:\Program Files (x86)\Google\Chrome\Application\chrome.exe

[!] Visual Studio - develop for Windows (Visual Studio Community 2019 16.2.3)
    • Visual Studio at C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio\2019\Community
    • Visual Studio Community 2019 version 16.2.29215.179
    • Windows 10 SDK version 10.0.17763.0
    X Visual Studio is missing necessary components. Please re-run the Visual Studio installer for the "Desktop development with C++"
      workload, and include these components:
        MSVC v142 - VS 2019 C++ x64/x86 build tools
         - If there are multiple build tool versions available, install the latest
        C++ CMake tools for Windows
        Windows 10 SDK

[√] Android Studio (version 2021.2)
    • Android Studio at C:\Program Files\Android\Android Studio
    • Flutter plugin can be installed from:
       https://plugins.jetbrains.com/plugin/9212-flutter
    • Dart plugin can be installed from:
       https://plugins.jetbrains.com/plugin/6351-dart
    • Java version OpenJDK Runtime Environment (build 11.0.12+7-b1504.28-7817840)

[√] VS Code, 64-bit edition (version 1.67.2)
    • VS Code at C:\Program Files\Microsoft VS Code
    • Flutter extension version 3.40.0

[√] Connected device (4 available)
    • Mi A2 (mobile)    • 2adfa93 • android-arm64  • Android 10 (API 29)
    • Windows (desktop) • windows • windows-x64    • Microsoft Windows [Version 10.0.19043.1706]
    • Chrome (web)      • chrome  • web-javascript • Google Chrome 101.0.4951.67
    • Edge (web)        • edge    • web-javascript • Microsoft Edge 101.0.1210.47

[√] HTTP Host Availability
    • All required HTTP hosts are available

useMaterial3: true (after 200 taps)

Screenshot 2022-05-20 113115

useMaterial3: false (after 200 taps)

Screenshot 2022-05-20 113658

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    P2Important issues not at the top of the work listc: performanceRelates to speed or footprint issues (see "perf:" labels)f: material designflutter/packages/flutter/material repository.found in release: 3.0Found to occur in 3.0found in release: 3.1Found to occur in 3.1frameworkflutter/packages/flutter repository. See also f: labels.has reproducible stepsThe issue has been confirmed reproducible and is ready to work onplatform-androidAndroid applications specificallyr: fixedIssue is closed as already fixed in a newer version

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