I want to install apk from within Eclipse IDE by right-clicking on apk file (that may be in any project, no need for ADT).
The system command to execute is adb install app-name.apk
How to archive that in Eclipse IDE ?
To run some tool Eclipse External tool may be used (that I don't know well),
but that will not appear in context menu for right-button mouse click.
Eclipse lets you right-click any file, and use Open With -> Other , where you can choose any external program or script. On Windows, I created a simple batch script with below line (you should be able to do something similar on other platforms)
adb install -r %1
and in eclipse, i right-click an apk file, and choose Open With -> Other -> above batch script , Eclipse then successfully installed the APK.
Another option: you can create Eclipse plugin, using its Commands interface. This lets you add a context-menu/right-click action. You can execute your adb command from there. Creating this plugin can be easy, please take a look at this code snippet for a sample.
Ideally you would want to use the -r option so it re-installs if apk already present on device : adb install -r app-name.apk.
Related
I have installed Android Studio in the F:\ drive. My Flutter project is in the E:\ drive.
The Flutter plugin is installed in the Android Studio. But when I open my project in Android Studio and I go to the SDK Manager, it shows the following error:
The android sdk location cannot be at the filesystem root
Every package is disabled and the checkboxes are disabled, so I cannot click them to install Android SDK. The "Edit" link next to the error is not working either.
I came with the same problem because of forgetting "sudo"
Using the new android studio (bumble bee version) .
Restart the app and make sure you have an internet access
That will be enough to create the SDK and it’s directories
Just press Edit ( It is clickable) then download and install the required components.
Download the SDK first, and restore the default settings.
You can find the "Restore default settings" feature here.
What you can do is that you click on edit to surely you will get some version of Android that installs it by default and you click on next it will open another configuration verification window and you click on the next one for last it will tell you or It will update the version of android that was downloaded by default and you click again to finish and you can just select other versions of Android. That worked for me. Linux Ubuntu 20.04.4 LTS
Step 1:
Step 2:
Step 3:
Step 4:
Ready!!
For me it was the system language on Windows, I have changed it to English and it worked.
TL; DR
Make sure:
Your user has write permission into Android SDK directory.
ANDROID_HOME is correctly defined with the correct SDK location.
Description
IMHO it is a really bad practice install SDK into user home directory because:
Packages added will be restricted to a single user.
System administrators won't be able to mirror OS images, thus each engineer will have to install SDK manually.
The old school way is according to Linux directory hierarchy as described at The Linux Documentation Project, which consists on:
Ensure your user has adm privileges
Export SDK environment variables
Obey the filesystem hierarchy, installing the IDE and SDK into /opt
The steps above work perfectly on Ubuntu 22.04 and shall work on other distros with minor adjustments.
1. Ensure your user has adm privileges
grep adm /etc/group | grep ${USER}
adm:x:4:syslog,ventura
lpadmin:x:122:ventura
2. Configure environment variables
/etc/profile.d/
├── ...
├── android.sh
├── ...
├── java.sh
└── ...
where android.sh contains
#!/usr/bin/env bash
export ANDROID_HOME=/opt/google/android/
export FLUTTER_HOME=${ANDROID_HOME}/flutter
TOOLS=${ANDROID_HOME}/platform-tools
TOOLS=${ANDROID_HOME}/tools/bin:${ANDROID_HOME}/tools:${TOOLS}
export PATH=${FLUTTER_HOME}/bin:${TOOLS}:${PATH}
and java.sh your JRE directory
#!/usr/bin/env bash
export JAVA_HOME=/usr/lib/jvm/java-18-openjdk-amd64
3. Install Android Studio and Android SDK
Download latest Android Studio and unpack it into /opt/jetbrains/:
VERSION=2021.2.1.16
sudo mkdir -p /opt/google/android
sudo mkdir -p /opt/jetbrains/studio
# Unpack Android Studio into a versioned folder
tar -xvzf android-studio-${VERSION}-linux.tar.gz
sudo mv android-studio /opt/jetbrains/studio/${VERSION}
# Grant write permission to administrators
sudo chown root:adm -R /opt/jetbrains/
sudo chmod g+w -R /opt/jetbrains/
sudo chown root:adm -R /opt/google/android
sudo chmod g+w -R /opt/google/android
Finally launch Android Studio and choose the SDK location:
This approach is extremely powerful because it allows system administrators duplicate development workstations using rsync -avz without relying onto any username or custom privileges.
I searched for many hours for an answer to this
I reinstalled:
I opened a new folder called Android in C:
Into it I reinstalled the android studio
You have created a new SDK folder within it
Then in the blank path, I entered C: \ Android \ sdk
And that's how it all worked.
Try it!
You can clear invalidate caches and restart android studio like follow picture:
Then start download sdk files :)
Make sure that your internet is working and try to close VPN connections if you have any. Then restart Android Studio and hope for the best.
To solve this issue, I had to close Android studio entirely. When I started the application again, it detected that it had a missing SDK problem and then went ahead with the installation process for it.
Your country should not be among the sanctioned countries (using VPN).
Android Studio by Run as Administrator open.
Download : Android SDK and Android SDK Platform.
Fix error: the android sdk location cannot be at the filesystem root.
For test The VPN is working properly.
Open website : https://developer.android.com/
this is the best solution to this error which is just under any drive you have on your laptop which C:// open a folder called "Android" and under the android folder open a folder called "sdk" and change the sdk file path to this recently created folder. That's All.
I have been sent an android app to test. I saved the apk to my desktop, but now I don't know what else to do. How do I import it into androis studio? I know this is a very basic question but please be detailed, thank you.
Connect your android device (or start an emulator), go to the command prompt, change directory to where the apk is, and enter adb install apkname
Please follow the below steps to install apk file.
1.First run the emulator.
2. open the sdk specified path and find the platform tools folder.then copy the apk file and store it inside the platform-tools folder.(G:android-sdks\platform-tools).
3.open the command prompt and change the directory to android-sdks/platform tools.
4.enter the command : adb install apkfile name.
5.if you are getting success in command prompt the apk was sucessfully installed in your emulator..
I have downloaded the adt-bundle for linux and extracted it. Moved the extracted folder in "android" directory in my /home directory. I have also installed openjdk 6. So when i try to run eclipse, Pypar2 window pops up and i just don't understand how do i run eclipse.
If i uninstall PyPar2, it says 'Could not display "/home/siddhartharao17/Androi...20131030/eclipse/eclipse".' There is no application installed for executable files. Do you want to search for application to open this file?
Please help me!!
The problem is that the executable doesn't have the required permissions.
Simple resolution without using the terminal:
Right-click the executable -> Properties -> Permissions.
Check the checkbox that says Allow executing file as program.
Done!
Using the terminal:
navigate to your dir.
Execute the following:
chmod 711 eclipse
Done!
I need to do somethings that must be done from the command prompt of the android tool.
but every one says it's in the platform tools folder in the sdk path but which file is it?
that might help:
the contents of platform tools folder:
aapt.exe
adb.exe
aidl.exe
dexdump.exe
dx.bat
fastboot.exe
llvm-rs-cc.exe
source.properties
AdbWinApi.dll
AdbWinUsbApi.dll
Did you mean android Adb command lin tool if so see this link
if you want to manage emulator from command line see these three link it will help you a lot
Android Emulator
Using the Android Emulator
Android Emulator on Linux
There is an android command, but it's not an executable - run the android.bat in the tools directory, and you should be able to make the changes you need. If you add the tools directory to your system path, you'll be able to run android from any directory when using the command line.
I'm still pretty new to Android and programming in general, and I can't seem to get the command line tools packaged with the Android SDK to work. I'm running Mac OSX and each time I try to run layoutopt, for example, the terminal returns, *-bash: cmd: command not found
*
Also, is it okay to have my SDK located in the Developer directory and my android project in some unrelated directory when using these tools?
If you want you can put the path in your ~/.bash_profile so you can call it from anywhere:
export ANDROID_HOME=/Users/<username>/path/to/sdk/tools
export PATH=$PATH:$ANDROID_HOME/tools:$ANDROID_HOME/platform-tools
You may want to include also the platform-tools into your ~./bash_profile
### Android dev tools
export ANDROID_HOME="/Users/myusername/DEV/tools/adt-bundle-mac-x86_64/sdk"
export PATH="$ANDROID_HOME/tools:$ANDROID_HOME/platform-tools:$PATH"
You will need to start a new terminal session or run
source ~/.bash_profile
to loads the values immediately without having to open a new terminal session.
The current (2016-08-17) answer to this question is:
~/Library/Android/sdk
So my bash_profile contains:
export ANDROID_HOME=~/Library/Android/sdk
export PATH=${PATH}:$ANDROID_HOME/platform-tools:$ANDROID_HOME/tools
I figured it out. I needed to go to the /tools directory in the SDK folder and type in:
./layoutopt <directorypath>
Problem is your command line tool is not seeing required programs from /path/to/sdk/tools.
One solution as user NKijak mentioned is to add those tools to your Home path and the other is to run command line from location where your sdk tools are stored. Here is a tutorial how to do just that http://hathaway.cc/2008/06/how-to-edit-your-path-environment-variables-on-mac-os-x/
Other way is, when opening command line just change your current dir to /path/to/sdk/tools and then run the tools. In windows you can just shift+right click in file explorer and pick open command windows here I am not sure is there equivalent on MacOS but there are some extensions you can install to add this option. Also total commander in windows has command line where you can start command line from current location there are similar programs on mac like Midnight Commander that have same option.
Here is a good description:
To connect to the console of any running emulator instance at any time, use this command:
telnet localhost <console-port>