It asks me to mark the location of the sdk file in the adb section of the genymotion emulator.
However, android studio is not installed on my computer. Therefore, there is no Android/sdk file in C:\Users\Win10\AppData\Local. In short, do I have to install android studio to use genymotion emulator in vs code program?
Solve the problem by downloading command tool files and running sdkmanager.bat without using android studio.
You can download the android sdk using command lines tools without the use of android studio
Once installed run the sdkManager in a command line tools. The sdkmanager is a command line tool that allows you to view, install, update, and uninstall packages for the Android SDK.
List installed and available packages
sdkmanager --list [options] \
[--channel=channel_id] // Channels: 0 (stable), 1 (beta), 2 (dev), or 3 (canary)
Use the channel option to include a package from a channel up to and including channel_id. For example, specify the canary channel to list packages from all channels.
Install packages
sdkmanager packages [options]
I've noticed there's no quick way of installing and configuring all nativescript dependencies on linux like windows and mac, so I followed the advanced setup guide for linux and all the commands ran successfully, however, when running tns doctor it tells me that android sdk is not installed or not configured correctly. everything else is giving me green check marks
here is what I did
Download android sdk
Extract it to /usr/local/android/sdk/
changed java version back to 8 since i had version 10 installed
run sudo sdkmanager "tools", sudo sdkmanager "build-tools" etc.
Made sure that the sdkmanager command is accessible without sudo
yet it doesn't work and I don't know why. any help please and thanks in advance.
here is the output of tns doctor
✔ Getting environment information
There seem to be issues with your configuration.
✔ Getting NativeScript components versions information...
✔ Component nativescript has 6.3.0 version and is up to date.
✔ Your ANDROID_HOME environment variable is set and points to correct directory.
✔ Your adb from the Android SDK is correctly installed.
✔ A compatible Android SDK for compilation is found.
✔ Javac is installed and is configured properly.
✔ The Java Development Kit (JDK) is installed and is configured properly.
✔ Local builds for iOS can be executed only on a macOS system. To build for iOS on a different operating system, you can use the NativeScript cloud infrastructure.
✖ WARNING: The Android SDK is not installed or is not configured properly.
You will not be able to run your apps in the native emulator. To be able to run apps
in the native Android emulator, verify that you have installed the latest Android SDK
and its dependencies as described in http://developer.android.com/sdk/index.html#Requirements
You are missing the nativescript-cloud extension and you will not be able to execute cloud builds. Your environment is not configured properly and you will not be able to execute local builds. To continue, choose one of the following options:
Select "Sync to Playground" to enjoy NativeScript without any local setup. All you need is a couple of companion apps installed on your devices.
Select "Configure for Cloud Builds" to install the nativescript-cloud extension and automatically configure your environment for cloud builds.
Select "Configure for Local Builds" to run the setup script and automatically configure your environment for local builds.
Select "Configure for Both Local and Cloud Builds" to automatically configure your environment for both options.
Select "Configure for Both Local and Cloud Builds" to automatically configure your environment for both options.
Edit:
here are the lines I've added to my ~/.bashrc file.
export JAVA_HOME=$(update-alternatives --query javac | sed -n -e 's/Best: *\(.*\)\/bin\/javac/\1/p')
export ANDROID_HOME="/usr/local/android/sdk"
export PATH="$PATH:$ANDROID_HOME/tools/:$ANDROID_HOME/platform-tools/:$ANDROID_HOME/tools/bin"
also here is the first part of the output of $ sdkmanager --list
Warning: File /home/mahmoud/.android/repositories.cfg could not be loaded.
Installed packages:=====================] 100% Computing updates...
Path | Version | Description | Location
------- | ------- | ------- | -------
build-tools;28.0.3 | 28.0.3 | Android SDK Build-Tools 28.0.3 | build-tools/28.0.3/
extras;android;m2repository | 47.0.0 | Android Support Repository | extras/android/m2repository/
extras;google;m2repository | 58 | Google Repository | extras/google/m2repository/
patcher;v4 | 1 | SDK Patch Applier v4 | patcher/v4/
platform-tools | 29.0.5 | Android SDK Platform-Tools | platform-tools/
platforms;android-28 | 6 | Android SDK Platform 28 | platforms/android-28/
tools | 26.1.1 | Android SDK Tools 26.1.1 | tools/
Look at this link for nativescript setup in ubuntu system. Because I am already follow that link for setup. https://docs.nativescript.org/start/ns-setup-linux.
Focus on step 5 for android sdk installation and anroid sdk path set in environment variable in ~/.bashrc file.
I had the same adventure:
Please consider & try the below:
1) Make sure you haven't edited the sdkmanager script, with the line:
DEFAULT_JVM_OPTS='"-Dcom.android.sdklib.toolsdir=$APP_HOME" -XX:+IgnoreUnrecognizedVMOptions --add-modules java.se.ee'
In case you did replace it with:
DEFAULT_JVM_OPTS='"-Dcom.android.sdklib.toolsdir=$APP_HOME"'
Then try something like:
$ANDROID_HOME/tools/bin/sdkmanager "build-tools;29.0.0"
and if all goes well, then the final check:
tns doctor
Actually I am trying to get latest build tool installed in my machine.
But here I don't want to go through my file system, I am looking for Android SDK commands to figure out latest build tool installed in my system.
Not the prettiest or more stable trick but you can get the latest installed build tools by doing:
$ANDROID_HOME/tools/bin/sdkmanager --list | grep "build-tools/" | awk '{ print $3 }' | tail -1
As of the moment, I am running a Windows 8.1 PC that does not have the storage or the RAM for a IDE like Android Studio or Eclipse. I want to download the Android SDK tools, without the IDE. How can this be accomplished?
You can find the command line tools at the downloads page under the "Command line tools only" section.
These are the links provided in that page as of now (version 2022.1.1.20):
Windows no installer: https://dl.google.com/android/repository/commandlinetools-win-9477386_latest.zip
MacOS: https://dl.google.com/android/repository/commandlinetools-mac-9477386_latest.zip
Linux:
https://dl.google.com/android/repository/commandlinetools-linux-9477386_latest.zip
Be sure to have read and agreed with the terms of service before downloading any of the command line tools.
The installer version for windows doesn't seem to be available any longer, this is the link for version 24.4.1:
Windows installer: https://dl.google.com/android/installer_r24.4.1-windows.exe
Navigate to the "Get just the command line tools" section of the android downloads page, and download the tools for your system.
For Windows:
Extract the contents to C:\Android\android-sdk
Navigate to
C:\Android\android-sdk\tools\bin and open a command line window
(shift + right click)
Run the following to download the latest android package:
sdkmanager "platforms;android-25"
Update everything
sdkmanager --update
Other operation systems
Do pretty much the same, but not using windows directories.
The sdkmanager page gives more info in to what commands to use to install your sdk.
Command-line approach
mkdir android-sdk
cd android-sdk
wget https://dl.google.com/android/repository/sdk-tools-linux-*.zip
unzip sdk-tools-linux-*.zip
tools/bin/sdkmanager --update
When executing the above commands, make sure that you replace * with an appropriate version number which you could find in the download page.
Installing packages
You can also use the sdkmanager to list and to install any specific packages needed.
tools/bin/sdkmanager --list
tools/bin/sdkmanager "platform-tools" "platforms;android–27" "build-tools;27.0.3"
FYI
sdk-tools-linux-*.zip only includes the command-line tools. This extracts content to a single directory named tools, like:
+- android-sdk
+- tools
To get the SDK packages we could run:
tools/bin/sdkmanager --update
The sdkmanager accepts the following flag:
--sdk_root=<sdkRootPath>: Use the specified SDK root instead of the SDK
containing this tool
But if we omit this flag, it assumes parent directory of tools directory as the sdk root, here in our case android-sdk directory.
If you check the android-sdk folder after running tools/bin/sdkmanager --update it will be like:
+- android-sdk
+- tools
+- emulator
+- platforms
+- platform-tool
If needed, also set ANDROID_HOME environment variable like:
export ANDROID_HOME=/path/to/android-sdk
What worked for me on Windows:
Downloaded command line tools from https://developer.android.com/studio/index.html
Put the whole tools folder from the ZIP archive to C:\Program Files (x86)\Android SDK\
Launched tools\android.bat as administrator, which opened the usual SDK Manager window
Installed required components. The files were downloaded to ...\Android SDK\ directory (that is build-tools, platforms, platform-tools, etc. directories appeared alongside tools inside ...\Android SDK\)
Opened the Android project in Intellij IDEA, navigated to File->Project Structure->SDKs, and added Android SDK by directing to ...\Android SDK\ directory
This tutorial is a just step by step for installing Android SDK (Software Development Kit) assuming the user is starting from scratch.
There are just a couple of prerequisites to note:
Java runtime environment (or JDK) at Oracle website (and download the correct version (32- or 64-bit) for your computer).
A good internet connection (needed for downloading system images etc)
I recommed using the offline SDK installer for installing the essential tools namely SDK and AVD manager: The last version of he installer is found here: SDK Installer_r24.4.1 (for windows), SDK Installer_r24.4.1 (for linux) or SDK Installer_r24.4.1 (for macos)
For this guide I was using windows:
Here is the workthrough:
Depending on your choice download the appropriate SDK package from above links (but for this example I will be using the manual method)
After downloading the package, begin installation (and choose the desired installation folder to proceed or just leave the default %USERPROFILE%\android-sdk):
When done leave the option to download system images "checked":
Now we're in business...
The SDK manager window will appear, now you need to update/download other sdk packages (i.e platform-tools, system-images, platforms etc according to API levels)
Note: I recommend downloading x86 images as they're much faster tham arm counterparts, also get intel HAXM (hardware accelerated execution manager) driver to significantly increase your emulator speed
All set, now you just need to create and configure an Android virtual device matching your target Android version and tweak desired settings.
To do this click on the Tools tab in SDK manager and select manage AVDs, then in the following window click Create you'll see a similar screen as below:
After that boot the newly created virtual device.
Install applications and test as you wish ..
Command line only without sdkmanager (for advanced users / CI):
You can find the download links for all individual packages, including various revisions, in the repository XML file:
https://dl.google.com/android/repository/repository-12.xml
(where 12 is the version of the repository index and will increase in the future).
All <sdk:url> values are relative to https://dl.google.com/android/repository, so
<sdk:url>platform-27_r03.zip</sdk:url>
can be downloaded at https://dl.google.com/android/repository/platform-27_r03.zip
Similar summary XML files exist for system images as well:
(default) https://dl.google.com/android/repository/sys-img/android/sys-img.xml
(google_apis) https://dl.google.com/android/repository/sys-img/google_apis/sys-img.xml
For those using the latest distribution on windows, the following should be enough:
Download the command line tools from here
Extract it somewhere (e.g. C:\androidsdk)
Add ANDROID_SDK_TOOLS as environment variable pointing to where you extracted it (C:\androidsdk)
Create a folder named latest inside the cmdlime-tools you extracted. And move what's inside(bin,lib...) to the folder latest.
cd cmdline-tools/latest/bin and execute the following:
sdkmanager.bat system-images;android-29;default;x86_64 platforms;android-29 build-tools;29.0.3 extras;google;m2repository extras;android;m2repository
Agree to the terms and conditions and continue. voilà
Well the folks who are trying to download either on *ix or Ec2 machine would suggest to clean approach in below steps:
$ mkdir android-sdk
$ cd android-sdk
$ mkdir cmdline-tools
$ cd cmdline-tools
$ wget https://dl.google.com/android/repository/commandlinetools-linux-*.zip
$ unzip commandlinetools-linux-*.zip
The king - sdkmanager lives inside
cmdline-tools/tools/bin
, you'd better set in PATH environment variable.
but cmdline-tools should not be set as ANDROID_HOME. Because later, when updating Android SDK, or installing more packages, the other packages will be placed under ANDROID_HOME, but not under cmdline-tools.
The final, complete ANDROID_HOME directory structure should look like below, consist of quite a few sub-directories:
build-tools, cmdline-tools, emulator, licenses, patcher, platform-tools, platforms, tools.
You can easily point out that build-tools and cmdline-tools are siblings, all resides inside the parent ANDROID_HOME.
Add SDK tools directory in PATH environment variable to make executable available globally. Add below line either in ~/.bashrc or ~/.profile file to make it permanent.
In order to edit the ~/.bashrc simply can be editable in vim mode
$ vim .bashrc
Now set your preferred ANDROID_HOME in .bashrc file :
export ANDROID_HOME=/home/<user>/android-sdk
export PATH=${PATH}:$ANDROID_HOME/cmdline-tools/tools/bin:$ANDROID_HOME/platform-tools
here strange thing that we haven't download the platform-tools directory as of now but mentoning it under path but let it be as it will help you avoid remodification on the same file later.
Now go inside the same directory:
$ cd android-sdk
NOTE: well in first attempt sdkmanager command didnt found for me so I close the terminal and again created the connection or you can also refresh the same if it works for you.
after that use the sdkmanager to list and install the packages needed:
$ sdkmanager "platform-tools" "platforms;android-27" "build-tools;27.0.3"
Hence Sdkmanager path is already set it will be accessible from anywhere:
$ sdkmanager --update
$ sdkmanager --list
Installed packages:=====================] 100% Computing updates...
Path | Version | Description | Location
------- | ------- | ------- | -------
build-tools;27.0.3 | 27.0.3 | Android SDK Build-Tools 27.0.3 | build-tools/27.0.3/
emulator | 30.0.12 | Android Emulator | emulator/
patcher;v4 | 1 | SDK Patch Applier v4 | patcher/v4/
platform-tools | 30.0.1 | Android SDK Platform-Tools | platform-tools/
platforms;android-27 | 3 | Android SDK Platform 27 | platforms/android-27/
Install latest version from CLI without specifying version
Here is an approach to downloading the last version of the Android SDK from CLI.
First of all, create and move to the following dir:
mkdir -p ~/android-sdk/cmdline-tools
cd ~/android-sdk/cmdline-tools
Then download the SDK (it basically finds the download URL from the HTML and downloads it, if you go to the web page, you'll see that it only shows the last one, so it works):
curl -s https://developer.android.com/studio\#command-tools | grep -Eo 'https://dl.google.com/android/repository/commandlinetools-mac-[0-9]*_latest.zip' | head -n 1 | xargs wget
Unzip file
ls -A1 | xargs unzip
Sadly, straight from google, which is where you will want to download if your company firewall blocks other sources, Release 1.6 r1 September 2009 is the latest SDK they have.
To download the SDK over command line, the link has changed slightly than previously mentioned:
wget --quiet --output-document=/tmp/sdk-tools-linux.zip https://dl.google.com/android/repository/commandlinetools-linux-${ANDROID_SDK_TOOLS}.zip
Latest version listed on the downloads page.
I downloaded Android Studio and installed it. The installer said:-
Android Studio => ( 500 MB )
Android SDK => ( 2.3 GB )
Android Studio installer is actually an "Android SDK Installer" along with a sometimes useful tool called "Android Studio".
Most importantly:-
Android Studio Installer will not just install the SDK. It will also:-
Install the latest build-tools.
Install the latest platform-tools.
Install the latest AVD Manager which you cannot do without.
Things which you will have to do manually if you install the SDK from its zip file.
Just take it easy. Install the Android Studio.
****************************** Edit ******************************
So, being inspired by the responses in the comments I would like to update my answer.
The update is that only (and only) if 500MB of hard disk space does not matter much to you than you should go for Android Studio otherwise other answers would be better for you.
Android Studio worked for me as I had a 1TB hard disk which is 2000 times 500MB.
Also, note: that RAM sizse should not a restriction for you as you would not even be running Android Studio.
I came to this solution as I was myself stuck in this problem. I tried other answers but for some reason (maybe my in-competencies) they did not work for me. I decided to go for Android Studio and realized that it was merely 18% of the total installation and SDK was 82% of it. While I used to think otherwise. I am not deleting the answers inspite of negative rating as the answer worked for me. I might work for someone elese with a 1 TB hard disk (which is pretty common these days).
I want to list the installed sdk packages by command lines.(For some reasons I cannot use the GUI)
I have done some research and found out several commands to list the available packages on the remote server, but I fail to find any command to list the installed sdk packages yet.
Thanks
With Android SDK Tools 25.2.3 (and higher):
$ANDROID_HOME/tools/bin/sdkmanager --list
See: https://developer.android.com/studio/command-line/sdkmanager.html#usage
If you have your path set up, run
sdkmanager --list_installed
This will print out all the packages installed using sdkmanager.
For those want to use awk getting the inner paragraph between "Installed packages" and "Aavaliable Packages", but not include "Installed packages" and "Aavaliable Packages" lines.
sdkmanager --list | awk '/Installed/{flag=1; next} /Available/{flag=0} flag'
As described in $ANDROID_HOME/tools/android list --help
list : Lists existing targets or virtual devices.
list avd : Lists existing Android Virtual Devices.
list target : Lists existing targets.
list device : Lists existing devices.
list sdk : Lists remote SDK repository.
I guess you are looking for this:
$ANDROID_HOME/tools/android list target
You can learn more on the android tool in the Command Line Reference.
Good luck!
On my mac just sdkmanager --list was not working, path needed to be specified.
Using android studio default SDK location the path is ~/Library/Android/sdk/tools/bin/sdkmanager --list
As mentioned by #tnissi this is for Android SDK Tools 25.2.3 (and higher).
Or add the path by: export PATH=$PATH:~/Library/Android/sdk/tools/bin
in case you need only the installed packages with full names
sdkmanager --verbose --list | sed -n '/^Installed packages:$/,/^Available Packages:$/p'
It's not quite a listing, but the source.properties files give details of the provenance. I'm using this to compare SDKs on different machines:
for i in $(find -name source.properties); do
if [ -e ../other.sdk/$i ] ; then
echo ========================= $i
diff -wu $i ../other.sdk/$i | grep -v Pkg.License
fi
done
I strip Pkg.License because it's hyoooj.
A bit old topic but I had similar problem, And noticed that avdmanager lists installed platforms as targets
"%ANDROID_SDK_ROOT%\tools\bin\avdmanager" list target
Available Android targets:==============] 100% Fetch remote repository...
----------
id: 1 or "android-25"
Name: Android API 25
Type: Platform
API level: 25
Revision: 3
----------
id: 2 or "android-28"
Name: Android API 28
Type: Platform
API level: 28
Revision: 6