All AVD images work on my machine except for Android 9.+ (Google Play) & Android 9.+ (Google APIs) (the Android Studio emulator for Android Q beta).
I just downloaded the most recent images. From android-Q/google_apis_playstore/x86/build.prop:
ro.system.build.version.incremental=5506116
ro.system.build.version.release=10
ro.system.build.version.sdk=28
I am using Android Emulator version 29.0.11.
However, when I start these up, I see the device frame with a black screen. I get no error message, just nothing. It stays like this indefinitely.
Is there any way to debug this or is this a common issue?
Update: on another device (same image), I got the following screen instead of a black screen, however, there is still nothing I can do:
You need to configure correctly the Hardware Acceleration for your Emulator. Please, follow these steps:
1) Install the Intel HAXM driver if you are on Windows and have Intel, follow these steps:
Open the SDK Manager.
Click the SDK Update Sites tab and then select Intel HAXM.
Click OK.
After the download finishes, run the installer. Typically, you can find the installer in the following location: sdk\extras\intel\Hardware_Accelerated_Execution_Manager\intelhaxm-android.exe
Use the wizard to complete the installation.
After installing Intel HAXM, confirm that the virtualization driver is operating correctly by entering the following command in a Command Prompt window:
sc query intelhaxm
You should see a status message that includes the following information:
SERVICE_NAME: intelhaxm
...
STATE : 4 RUNNING
...
For Linux, check this link
For Mac, check this link
2) Open AVD Manager on Android Studio:
Edit the Virtual Device where you set target Android Q
Click Show Advanced Settings.
Set Graphics to Automatic or Hardware.
In my case all other emulators started, except Q. I have all needed SDK and AVDs.
But every time emulator didn't start without any error.
I saw Emulator in Android Studio doesn't start and found a way to understand a reason. I started from avd path:
D:\Android\emulator\emulator.exe -avd Pixel_2_API_29 -netspeed full -netdelay none
and got an error: PANIC: Broken AVD system path. Check your ANDROID_SDK_ROOT value [D:\Android]!. In PANIC: Broken AVD system path. Check your ANDROID_SDK_ROOT value I found that we should read config.ini inside 'Pixel_2_API_29.avd' folder and detect the line
image.sysdir.1=system-images\android-29\google_apis_playstore\x86\
I understood that I missed android-29 image in SDK path!
I knew that moved SDK and AVD folders from C:... to D:\Android, but SDK was kept in two folders.
And I forgot to change one system variable (ANDROID_HOME):
So I changed it to D:\Android and restarted the PC.
After restarting I deleted old SDK folder (in 'AppData\Local\Android'). Then I started again:
D:\Android\emulator\emulator.exe -avd Pixel_2_API_29 -netspeed full -netdelay none
Android 11 (R) emulator was not working for my case. I fixed it with the following steps.
Step 1:
Go to SDK manager -> SDK Platforms and install your required API level ( Like Android 11.0, Android 10.0, etc. For my case Android 11.0 was not installed that's why it was not working )
Step 2: Go to SDK manager -> SDK Tools and install Intel Emulator Accelerator (HAXM installed) if not yet installed. If you are a windows user then make sure that windows firewall is deactivated for a while otherwise it will not be installed and generate an error.
Step 3: Wipe data and Cold boot the device from ADV manager.
If the above steps are not worked then Invalidate caches and Restart your android studio as well as the PC.
I fixed it by reinstalling Android Studio entirely.
Actually, I just wanted to reinstall the Android SDK, however, you seem to need to install a stable version of Android Studio for that. After that, I set everything up the same way again and ran the beta version and now it works.
Had the same problem on macOS. Found out that I didn't have enough space on disk to create 'userdata partition'. So check that.
Complete newbie, fresh Android Studio install, trying to run an emulator ends up coughing a "No emulator installed" error. Clicking the Install Emulator link does nothing. Trouble is, I've gone through tens of how-to articles and StackOverflow questions and did everything mentioned in those, to no avail.
What I have:
Windows 10, Android Studio 2.3.3
CPU: i7, supports HAXM
BIOS: "Virtualization" under Advanced tab is Enabled. It doesn't mention Intel or "Vt-x" or anything like that, just "Virtualization", but I guess that's it
Windows' Hyper-V is disabled
I enabled anything that mentions Google API, Emulator, or Intel in the SDK Manager. Here is how it looks on the SDK Platforms, SDK Tools and SDK Update Sites tabs:
I installed Intel HAXM manually, via its downloaded installer.
In the Terminal, if it type ...\sdk\tools>emulator-check accel, it says:
accel: 0 HAXM version 6.2.1 (4) is installed and usable. accel
If I type sc query intelhaxm, I get:
SERVICE_NAME: intelhaxm
TYPE : 1 KERNEL_DRIVER
STATE : 4 RUNNING
(STOPPABLE, NOT_PAUSABLE, IGNORES_SHUTDOWN)
WIN32_EXIT_CODE : 0 (0x0)
SERVICE_EXIT_CODE : 0 (0x0)
CHECKPOINT : 0x0
WAIT_HINT : 0x0
First time I have met that problem I resolved it by uninstalling and removing all traces of Android Studio and installing it again. Next time when the same problem occurred on another machine I have found easier way to solve the problem:
Go to Android SDK location and remove "emulator" and "system-images"
directories. The default path to SDK is "C:\Users\User\AppData\Local\Android\Sdk"
In the Android Studio launch SDK manager, go to
"Appearance & Behavior > System Settings > Android SDK" menu, select "SDK
Tools" tab and check "Intel x86 Emulator Accelerator (HAXM
installer)" and "Android Emulator" checkboxes and click apply. Some
download and setup actions should occur at that point
Go to AVD manager, delete all AVDs and create new AVD you need.
The Emulator started successfully after that.
Hi simply go to your SDK then SDK tools and click to Uncheck Android emulator to uninstall it , then download and reinstall through SDK tools Android emulator. This work for me
I hope it will helpful to you.
I solved by removing /emulator folder and re-installing via sdk manager.
I had this issue on Linux with i7 processor and 32GB or RAM. This was a reinstall of the Linux OS and it had worked fine before. What I discovered was that the emulator doesn't like my video card, and setting the Hardware Acceleration to Auto caused it to select hardware and crash! Manually setting Hardware Acceleration to Software solved my issues.
Go to "Control Panel\System and Security\System" and open your Device Manager. Once Device Manager opens, go to Display Adapters and select the name of your graphics driver. Select the "Driver" tab, then click "Update Driver". This completely fixed the issue for me.
Here is the path to follow :
goto this location "C:\Users\User\AppData\Local\Android\Sdk"
delete emulator folder.
then go setting in android studio
chick android sdk
sdk tools
select sdk emulator and apply
emulotor will be installed.
Intel HAXM installs successfully (according to the log) both through Android Studio and directly from Intel's executable. However, Android Studio 2.1 says "HAXM is not installed" and prompts me to install it in an endless cycle (Not installed, install? Installed successfully. Not installed, install?).
Note: it worked fine in the previous version of Android Studio. Since upon upgrading it didn't recognize HAXM, I tried uninstalling Android Studio and reinstalling 2.1, but it still is not recognizing the HAXM installation.
How can I get Android Studio to understand that Intel HAXM is installed?
This is on Windows 10.
Running "silent_install.bat" or "intelhaxm-android.exe" resulted in a log file stating that Intel HAXM had been installed when it actually hadn't.
I was finally able to install HAXM 6.0.1 by extracting "intelhaxm-android.exe" with 7-zip and running "setup.exe" manually.
Now it's recognized by Android Studio.
please try to install it from here:
https://software.intel.com/en-us/android/articles/intel-hardware-accelerated-execution-manager
or try to uncheck >> save HAXM installer in your SDK Manager => and install it again
Run the HAXM installer via the path:
your_sdk_folder\extras\intel\Hardware_Accelerated_Execution_Manager\intelhaxm.exe
Take a look at this video : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z7xoPCv3sYs
The link to the youtube from mounir elfassi's answer on this problem worked for me in 2021.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z7xoPCv3sYs
In this tutorial, He go to the HAXM file location where it is already downloaded by android studio and installs it manually.
I tried the same method and my problem was solved.
After trying to install manually by going to file path -
~\AppData\Local\Android\Sdk\extras\intel\Hardware_Accelerated_Execution_Manager
Sometimes the HaxmSetup.exe does not install and shows an error"The system requirements are not satisfied".
This error can have multiple reasons,
Hyper-V is enabled.
Virtualisation is disabled.
...
I found the solution here
For my device the virtualization was disabled, and it can be easily checked
by going to task manager and then under performance tab below the CPU utilization graph.
Then you have to enable it by going into BIOS setting of your device. It is different for every device so it is better you search where can you find virtualization settings for your device.
I solved it by:
1- going to my android sdk.
2- open 'extras' file then 'intel then 'Hardware_Accelerated_Execution_Manager'.
3- Finally 'haxm-7.6.5-setup' to setup manually.
this should work will with you as happened with me.
I installed Android Studio and I had no problems with that. However, when I tried to run the emulator, it said that Intel HAXM was not installed.
So I found the installer, ran it, and it even though it said my laptop supports it, that it was not enabled. I went, enabled the Intel Virtualization Technology (VT-x), but I still got the same message.
I hear something about Hyper-V needs to be disabled, but when I go to Turn Windows features on/off, I cannot find it on that list.
Can someone help me with this?
Alright, so I did everything I could possibly find online, and nothing worked.
So I went to the Intel website, and I downloaded the HAXM installer that they provide (instead of using the one downloaded through Android Studio).
The installation actually went through with this installer and it was installed successfully. Then I open Android Studio, and the emulator finally loaded!
So, for anyone else having this problem, just download the installer directly from the Intel website.
Here's the link:
https://software.intel.com/en-us/android/articles/intel-hardware-accelerated-execution-manager
I think your problem was that you thought that the installer in Android SDK Manager would actually INSTALL the Intel HAXM. But the hook is that it WILL NOT INSTALL it. What it does is extracts the files needed for (really) install Intel HAXM.
I found that out when I got the same problem and then read this in Intel's web page:
Downloading through Android* SDK Manager
... Other steps ...
5) The SDK Manager will download the installer to the "extras" directory, under the main SDK directory. Even though the SDK manager says "Installed" it actually means that the Intel HAXM executable was downloaded. You will still need to run the installer from the "extras" directory to get it installed.
6) Run the installer inside the /sdk/extras/intel/Hardware_Accelerated_Execution_Manager/ directory and follow the installation instructions for your platform.
So all I needed to do was go to folder where my Android SDK was, opened that folder (sdk_location/sdk/extras/intel/Hardware_Accelerated_Execution_Manager) and run the silent_install.bat.
After this when I launched my emulator, it said this:
HAXM is working and emulator runs fast virt mode
and everything works as should!
You can also use some useful parameters with silent_install.bat:
-v Print HAXM version
-c Check VT/NX capability of the platform
-h Print usage
Make sure the emulator is not running while installing HAXM. Otherwise, there will be an error which you only see when using the standalone installer but not within Android Studio or IntelliJ Idea.
dism.exe /Online /Disable-Feature:Microsoft-Hyper-V
or
bcdedit /set hypervisorlaunchtype off
Other things you may need to do:
If using Avast? disable Enable hardware-assisted virtualization under: Settings > Troubleshooting
bcdedit /set nx AlwaysOn
sfc /scannow and reboot
Important: After anything you try, Restart the PC and try to run the HAXM installation again
I faced this problem.I got the solution too.It will work.
Step 1: Go to your BIOS settings and check that INTERNET VIRTUAL TECHNOLOGY is Enabled or Disabled.
And make sure HYPER V is disabled.
To disable it :
a)Go to Control Panel
b)Click on Programs(Uninstall a Program)
c)Then click on Turn Windows features on or off , then look for HYPER-V and untick it. And Restart.
If disabled then enable it.
Step 2: Try to install Intel HAXM now and restart. If It shows same problem again.
go to Step 3.
Step 3: You have to disable Digitally Signed Enforcement. To disable it permanently you have to make sure that Secure Boot option is disabled in your system.
How to check ?
Answer is given in the following link. I found it in Internet.[Thanks whoever made that blog]
link : http://www.windowspasswordsrecovery.com/win8-tips/how-to-disable-uefi-secure-boot-in-windows-8-1-8.html
Step 4: Now restart again.
To disable driver signature enforcement permanently in Windows 10, you need to do the following:
1.Open an elevated command prompt instance.
2.Type/paste the following text:
`bcdedit.exe /set nointegritychecks on`
or Windows 10
`bcedit.exe -set loadoptions DISABLE_INTEGRITY_CHECKS`
Windows 10 disable driver signature enforcement
Restart Windows 10.
*If you somehow want to enable it again:
1.Type/paste the following text:
`bcdedit.exe /set nointegritychecks off`
<==||=====>For me who have an AMD Processor:<=====||==>
1. Click on the windows button in the bottom left hand corner
2. Look for Enable/Disable Windows features
( Just type : "windows features", it will appear)
3. And contrary to the other posts here, enable Hyper-V and Windows Hypervisor Platform
Thanks.
I probably tried all the solutions mentioned above but all in vain.
To summarize, I did:
I enable the virtualization going to BIOS setting.
Uncheck Hyper-V option by going to Turn Windows features on or off.
Download HAXM directly from the website https://software.intel.com/en-us/android/articles/intel-hardware-accelerated-execution-manager and install it.
Uninstall and reinstall Android Studio.
Copy the HAXM from my another system where HAXM was working fine, from the location C:\Users\UserName\AppData\Local\Android\Sdk\extras\intel
Nothing worked for me.
What worked for me:
I noticed the issue "unable to run mksdcard sdk tool" when I try to download SDK platform.So after some research, I found some SDK tools such as mksdcard.exe require Microsoft Visual C++ runtime 2015-2019. So based on my system type,(for me it was x64) I downloaded the latest Microsoft Visual C++ Redistributable for Visual Studio 2019 from the link https://visualstudio.microsoft.com/downloads/.
Detailed answer given here:
Android Studio install failed - unable to run mksdcard sdk tool in Windows
After downloading and installing Visual C++ ,the error "unable to run mksdcard sdk tool" was fixed, also when I try to install HAXM after this, it was install successfully. Everything was fine. I was also able to create AVD now(which was also a problem when HAXM was not install).
How I solved this problem:
Step-1: Downloaded the Android Studio and installed it. But it failed to install HAXM.
Step-2: Then ran the AVD. Then it prompts to create a virtual device. But it also failed.
Step-3: I downloaded the latest HAXM from intel's GitHub source. From here github.com/intel/haxm/releases/latest
Step-4: Then installed HAXM manually. Documentation is here: Installing Standalone Intel HAXM on Windows
Step-5: Then again tried to create a virtual device of Pie. It successfully created it.
But if your Step-5 fails anyhow, there may another solution: When downloading the .zip file, it will show you the SDK path and also the source path of the .zip file. So you can manually download the .zip and can place it to the SDK path folder. Then again can try to create the virtual device.
This is what worked for me -
Enable Virtualiztion through BIOS (F10-> System Configuration -> Virtualiztion Technology)
Depending on your hardware, firmware and BIOS configuration utility the option to enable may be named something else or steps may differ.
There is a free software called "Piriform Speccy" which gives information about your machine, which among other things can also be used to check if virtualization is enabled or not on your machine (see screen cap).
Download HAXM intaller from Intel site. https://software.intel.com/en-us/android/articles/intel-hardware-accelerated-execution-manager
If using avast, disable "Enable hardware-assisted virtualization" under: Settings > Troubleshooting by unchecking.
Do a hard boot (power button) just to be safe.
Option 1: Go to Android SDK Folder --> Extra --> Intel and double click on HAXM installer and install it manually.
Option 2: If you do not have latest version of HAXM then you can open sdk manager in android studio and download it.
Option 3: Download HAXM intaller from Intel site. https://software.intel.com/en-us/android/articles/intel-hardware-accelerated-execution-manager
Download HAXM form this link download HAXM .Unzip it and you will see a msi installer file and install it.Then you will see no longer HAXM is not installed while creating your emulator.
Install Intel HAXM from Github.
It requires you to Disable the Hyper-V technology. To disable it follow instructions from Microsoft website.
You are Good To Go Now.
For HP Ultra book with windows 7 enabling hyper-v through bios worked for intel haxm problem.
For enabling hyper-v:-
F10-> Bios advanced setting-> device configurations->enable Hyper-V then install.
It will work.
I've figured out.
Try to disable Security Boot Control in BIOS options: http://remontka.pro/secure-boot-disable/ (sorry for russian examples)
Or try to start system without Digital signature (only for one loading).
I had had many unlucky attempts with 'HAXM installer, before I disabled this line.
At the beginning I thought that's because Windows 10 Home was installed, and there're many limits.
If Nothing Helps then it means Device Guard and Credential Guard are using the virtualization. I had to disable them by downloading and running the following script from microsoft site.
DG_Readiness_Tool_v3.5.ps1 -Disable
You may need to run this first if it doesn't allow to run the command
Set-ExecutionPolicy Unrestricted
Once you do it, you need to restart and confirm disable both when asked just before boot.
hope it helps!
Note: this is not an answer because I could not find a solution. But I think the information may be useful for others (and it wouldn't be practical as a comment).
I have tried all of the steps detailed in the various docs but I could not get Android Emulator to work on my AMD Ryzen 7 :(
Most answers work only for Intel CPUs.
If you have an AMD CPU (like me, an AMD Ryzen 7) you need to know about some restrictions and you have to use WHPX instead of HAXM.
I found this on MS's site: Because the Android emulator currently supports AMD hardware acceleration only on Linux, hardware acceleration is not available for AMD-based computers running Windows.
Fortunatelly there is a way to make it work but configuring hardware acceleration for an AMD CPU is a bit more complex:
Requirements and recommendations:
- AMD CPU recommendation: AMD Ryzen CPU
- Android Studio 3.2 Beta 1 or higher
- Android Emulator version 27.3.8 or higher
- Windows 10 with April 2018 Update or higher
To use WHPX acceleration on Windows, you must enable the Windows
Hypervisor Platform option in the Turn Windows features on or off
dialog box. For changes to this option to take effect, restart your
computer.
Additionally, the following changes must be made in the BIOS settings:
- AMD CPU: Virtualization or SVM must be enabled.
Note that there are further restrictions as well:
You can't run a VM-accelerated emulator inside another VM, such as a VM hosted by VirtualBox, VMWare, or Docker. You must run the emulator
directly on your system hardware.
You can't run software that uses another virtualization technology at the same time that you run the accelerated emulator. For example,
VirtualBox, VMWare, and Docker currently use a different
virtualization technology, so you can't run them at the same time as
the accelerated emulator.
Some more info: Android Emulator - AMD Processor & Hyper-V Support
This recommendation did not help either:
Please note: More recent versions of the emulator (27.2.8, 27.3.0, or
later), require an emulator flag while the feature is in the preview.
To do this, create or edit the file
C:\Users\.android\advancedFeatures.ini and add the
line “WindowsHypervisorPlatform = on”, or start the emulator from the
command line with “-feature WindowsHypervisorPlatform”.
For me who has an AMD Processor:
Click on the windows button in the bottom left hand corner
Look for Enable/Disable Windows features (just type : "windows features", it will appear)
And contrary to the other posts here, enable Hyper-V and Windows Hypervisor Platform
THE SHORT ANSWER:
Disable Microsoft Defender Application Guard
None of the answers helped me. Also, most of the answers here were addressed elsewhere online. I spent hours trying to solve this problem. After much hesitation, I decided to go on a hunch. I was suspicious about msinfo32.exe showing a Hypervisor was running, but it would not provide additional detail. I went into the services manager. I saw an instance of a hypervisor service was running, I went to disable it. Before disabling, I was asked if I am sure and was informed that a couple of other services would stop. One of the other services was Microsoft Defender Application Guard for Internet Explorer. I disabled this and FINALLY after hours of research on this topic was able to install Intel HAXM for Android Studio on my i5-4430 with Z87 chipset.
It was not enough to merely disable Hyper V and Windows Hypervisor Platform.
It should prompt you to install HAXM when creating a new virtual device:
Tools > Android > AVD Manager
It will install through Android Studio automatically.
If you are using windows then edit your AVD config to ARMEABI image instead of X86, Also using ARM will give better performance. HAXM installer is required only if you use X86 image.
I think that you would install Android SDK files not in (your PC)\Appdata\Local\Android\sdk (default Path). Also there was nothing when you double click 'intelhaxm-android.exe' file.
If it was, Browse (your PC)\Appdata\Local\Temp\intel\HAXM\6.0.3(yyyy-mm-dd_hh_mm_ss) (or silent), then you must see 'hax64' (or hax) file, and simply invoke this file.
Enter with Administrator user.
First, you must enable it
http://www.ghacks.net/2014/11/12/how-to-enable-the-hidden-windows-10-administrator-account/
Install it from C:\Android\sdk\extras\intel\Hardware_Accelerated_Execution_Manager\intelhaxm-andoid.exe
And login with your user. It work for me.
Good description here: https://developer.android.com/studio/run/emulator-acceleration.html
You may check current HAXM status with following command:
sc query intelhaxm
If you use Windows 10 Home, all issues about Hyper-V is irrelevant for you as it is not supported (Pro is required) and you will not have conflicts :)
Remark: trying to update HAXM to latest version incidentally removed it, but then can't update with SDK manager, as it shows that latest version 6.1.1 is unsupported for Windows (seems configuration is broken, found 6.1.1 for Mac and 6.0.6 for Windows only inside)
So would recommend manually download HAXM and install as described:
copy to sdk_location/sdk/extras/intel/Hardware_Accelerated_Execution_Manager and run the silent_install.bat
After some trials, knowing that I had all the factors stated in this thread and other threads properly configured, I still got this error in Android Studio.
Even after installing externally, it seems Android Studio could not discover that HAXM is already installed, unless it gets to install it itself.
As a solution that worked for me, under User\AppData\Local\Android\sdk\extras\intel\Hardware_Accelerated_Execution_Manager which android has downloaded when attempting to install HAXM, click the installer and uninstall the software, then re-try from Android Studio to install it, it should work now.
I tried the following:
1. Directly installed HAXM from Intel
2. Tried multiple times to un-install and re-install Android Studio with same default paths in C drive.
3. Un-install various other software including QEMU which also uses HAXM, which might have been interfering with Android recognizing HAXM.
Solution was:
1. To un-install Android Studio and install it on D drive including the SDK. This solved the problem.
I installed Android Chipmunk 2021.2.1 and tried to install HAXM through the SDK manager. It failed first because I was running an emulator. However, one other thing I noticed is that when you first run the installer, it creates the folder for the HAXM install. Then, when the memory allocation dialog pops up, it tries to create the folder again. Since the folder already exists, it appends a "2" on the end of a new one. What I did is watched the install folder and when it creates the folder the first time I deleted it before continuing. I then continued with the install and it created the folder again and completed successfully. It seems there is a bug in the new SDK installer for HAXM
If you are using windows, Hyper-V works via AMD not HAXM.
Try the following: on Android, Click SDK Manager ==>SDK Platforms ==> Show Packages ==>ARM EABI v7a Systems Image.
After downloading the systems image, go to the AVD Manager ==> Create Virtual Device ==> choose device (e.g. 5.4 FWVGA") ==> Marshmallow armeabi v7a Android6 with Google APIs ==> Change the AVD name to anything (eg. myfirst)==> click finish.
If you have all gone through this and it still doesn't work and "systeminfo.exe" shows hypervisor is detected then disable Containers in Windows Features. After that all went well.
None of the suggestions worked on their own.
Here is what worked for me:
chmod -R 777 $ANDROID_HOME
Then try to install it via android studio -> sdk manager. If its not there, reinstall latest version of Android studio over your current installation. HAXM will show up in SDK manager after that.
If you do not have ANDROID_HOME set, then YOU are part of the problem.
The value of it can be found inside Android Studio project structure. On MAC, just type CMD ; and look at SDK Location on left.
Simply run chmod -R 775