The Android SDK includes a mobile device emulator -- a virtual mobile device that runs on your computer. The emulator lets you prototype, develop, and test Android applications without using a physical device.
The Android emulator mimics all of the hardware and software features of a typical mobile device, except that it can not receive or place actual phone calls. It provides a variety of navigation and control keys, which you can "press" using your mouse or keyboard to generate events for your application. It also provides a screen in which your application is displayed, together with any other Android applications running.
To let you model and test your application more easily, the emulator supports Android Virtual Device (AVD) configurations. AVDs let you specify the Android platform that you want to run on the emulator, as well as the hardware options and emulator skin files tht you want to use. Once your application is running on the emulator, it can use the services of the Android platform to invoke other applications, access the network, play audio and video, store and retrieve data, notify the user, and render graphical transitions and themes.
The emulator also includes a variety of debug capabilities, such as a console from which you can log kernel output, simulate application interrupts (such as arriving SMS messages or phone calls), and simulate latency effects and dropouts on the data channel.
In this document: | |
The Android emulator is a QEMU-based application that provides a virtual ARM mobile device on which you can run your Android applications. It runs a full Android system stack, down to the kernel level, that includes a set of preinstalled applications (such as the dialer) that you can access from your applications. You can choose what version of the Android system you want to run in the emulator by configuring AVDs, and you can also customize the mobile device skin and key mappings. When launching the emulator and at runtime, you can use a variety of commands and options to control the its behaviors.
The Android system image distributed in the SDK contains ARM machine code for the Android Linux kernel, the native libraries, the Dalvik VM, and the various Android package files (such as for for the Android framework and preinstalled applications). The emulator's QEMU layers provide dynamic binary translation of the ARM machine code to the OS and processor architecture of your development machine.
Adding custom capabilities to the underlying QEMU services, the Android emulator supports many hardware features likely to be found on mobile devices, including:
The sections below provide more information about the emulator and how to use it for developing Android applications.
During development and testing of your application, you install and run your application in the Android emulator. You can launch the emulator as a standalone application, from a command line, or you can use it as part of your Eclipse development environment. In either case, you specify the AVD configuration to load and any startup options you want to use, as described in this document.
You can run your application on a single instance of the emulator or, depending on your needs, you can start multiple emulator instances and run your application in more than one emulated device. You can use the emulator's built-in commands to simulate GSM phone calling or SMS between emulator instances, and you can set up network redirections that allow emulators to send data to one another. For more information, see Telephony Emulation, SMS Emulation, and Emulator Networking
To start an instance of the emulator from the command line, change to the
tools/
folder of the SDK. Enter emulator
command
like this:
emulator -avd <avd_name>
This initializes the emulator and loads an AVD configuration (see the next section for more information about AVDs). You will see the emulator window appear on your screen.
If you are working in Eclipse, the ADT plugin for Eclipse installs your application and starts the emulator automatically, when you run or debug the application. You can specify emulator startup options in the Run/Debug dialog, in the Target tab. When the emulator is running, you can issue console commands as described later in this document.
If you are not working in Eclipse, see Installing Applications on the Emulator for information about how to install your application.
To stop an emulator instance, just close the emulator's window.
To use the emulator, you first must create one or more AVD configurations. In each configuration, you specify an Android platform to run in the emulator and the set of hardware options and emulator skin you want to use. Then, when you launch the emulator, you specify the AVD configuration that you want to load.
To specify the AVD you want to load when starting the emulator, you use the
-avd
argument, as shown in the previous section.
Each AVD functions as an independent device, with its own private storage for user data, SD card, and so on. When you launch the emulator with an AVD configuration, it automatically loads the user data and SD card data from the AVD directory. By default, the emulator stores the user data, SD card data, and cache in the AVD directory.
To create and manage AVDs you use the android tool, a command-line utility included in the SDK. For complete information about how to set up AVDs, see Android Virtual Devices.
You can use emulator startup options and console commands to control the behaviors and characteristics of the emulated environment itself.
When the emulator is running, you can interact with the emulated mobile device just as you would an actual mobile device, except that you use your mouse pointer to "touch" the touchscreen and your keyboard keys to "press" the simulated device keys.
The table below summarizes the mappings between the emulator keys and and the keys of your keyboard.
Emulated Device Key | Keyboard Key |
---|---|
Home | HOME |
Menu (left softkey) | F2 or Page-up button |
Star (right softkey) | Shift-F2 or Page Down |
Back | ESC |
Call/dial button | F3 |
Hangup/end call button | F4 |
Search | F5 |
Power button | F7 |
Audio volume up button | KEYPAD_PLUS, Ctrl-5 |
Audio volume down button | KEYPAD_MINUS, Ctrl-F6 |
Camera button | Ctrl-KEYPAD_5, Ctrl-F3 |
Switch to previous layout orientation (for example, portrait, landscape) | KEYPAD_7, Ctrl-F11 |
Switch to next layout orientation (for example, portrait, landscape) | KEYPAD_9, Ctrl-F12 |
Toggle cell networking on/off | F8 |
Toggle code profiling | F9 (only with -trace startup option) |
Toggle fullscreen mode | Alt-Enter |
Toggle trackball mode | F6 |
Enter trackball mode temporarily (while key is pressed) | Delete |
DPad left/up/right/down | KEYPAD_4/8/6/2 |
DPad center click | KEYPAD_5 |
Onion alpha increase/decrease | KEYPAD_MULTIPLY(*) / KEYPAD_DIVIDE(/) |
Note that, to use keypad keys, you must first disable NumLock on your development computer.
The emulator supports a variety of options that you can specify when launching the emulator, to control its appearance or behavior. Here's the command-line usage for launching the emulator with options:
emulator -avd <avd_name> [-<option> [<value>]] ... [-<qemu args>]
The table below summarizes the available options.
Category | Option | Description | Comments |
---|---|---|---|
Help | -help |
Print a list of all emulator options. | |
-help-all |
Print help for all startup options. | ||
-help-<option> |
Print help for a specific startup option. | ||
-help-debug-tags |
Print a list of all tags for -debug <tags> . |
||
-help-disk-images |
Print help for using emulator disk images. | ||
-help-environment |
Print help for emulator environment variables. | ||
-help-keys |
Print the current mapping of keys. | ||
-help-keyset-file |
Print help for defining a custom key mappings file. | ||
-help-virtual-device |
Print help for Android Virtual Device usage. | ||
AVD | -avd <avd_name> or @<avd_name> |
Required. Specifies the AVD to load for this emulator instance. | You must create an AVD configuration before launching the emulator. For information, see Android Virtual Devices. |
Disk Images | -cache <filepath> |
Use <filepath> as the working cache partition image. | Optionally, you can specify a path relative to the current working directory.
If no cache file is specified, the emulator's default behavior is to use a temporary file instead.
For more information on disk images, use |
-data <filepath> |
Use <filepath> as the working user-data disk image. | Optionally, you can specify a path relative to the current working directory.
If -data is not used, the emulator looks for a file named "userdata-qemu.img"
in the storage area of the AVD being used (see -avd ).
| |
-initdata <filepath> |
When resetting the user-data image (through -wipe-data ), copy the contents
of this file to the new user-data disk image. By default, the emulator copies the <system>/userdata.img . |
Optionally, you can specify a path relative to the current working directory. See also -wipe-data . For more information on disk images, use |
|
-nocache |
Start the emulator without a cache partition. | See also -cache <file> . |
|
-ramdisk <filepath> |
Use <filepath> as the ramdisk image. | Default value is <system>/ramdisk.img .
Optionally, you can specify a path relative to the current working directory. For more information on disk images, use |
|
-sdcard <filepath> |
Use <file> as the SD card image. | Default value is <system>/sdcard.img .
Optionally, you can specify a path relative to the current working directory. For more information on disk images, use |
|
-wipe-data |
Reset the current user-data disk image (that is, the file specified by -datadir and
-data , or the default file). The emulator deletes all data from the user data image file,
then copies the contents of the file at -inidata data to the image file before starting.
|
See also -initdata .
For more information on disk images, use |
|
Debug | -debug <tags> |
Enable/disable debug messages for the specified debug tags. | <tags> is a space/comma/column-separated list of debug component names.
Use -help-debug-tags to print a list of debug component names that you can use. |
-debug-<tag> |
Enable/disable debug messages for the specified debug tag. | Use -help-debug-tags to print a list of debug component names that you can use in <tag> . |
|
-debug-no-<tag> |
Disable debug messages for the specified debug tag. | ||
-logcat <logtags> |
Enable logcat output with given tags. | If the environment variable ANDROID_LOG_TAGS is defined and not empty, its value will be used to enable logcat output by default. | |
-shell |
Create a root shell console on the current terminal. | You can use this command even if the adb daemon in the emulated system is broken. Pressing Ctrl-c from the shell stops the emulator instead of the shell. | |
-shell-serial <device> |
Enable the root shell (as in -shell and specify the QEMU character
device to use for communication with the shell. |
<device> must be a QEMU device type. See the documentation for '-serial dev' at
http://www.bellard.org/qemu/qemu-doc.html#SEC10
for a list of device types.
Here are some examples:
|
|
-show-kernel <name> |
Display kernel messages. | ||
-trace <name> |
Enable code profiling (press F9 to start), written to a specified file. | ||
-verbose |
Enable verbose output. | Equivalent to -debug-init .
You can define the default verbose output options used by emulator instances in the Android environment variable
ANDROID_VERBOSE. Define the options you want to use in a comma-delimited list, specifying only the stem of each option:
Here's an example showing ANDROID_VERBOSE defined with the
For more information about debug tags, use |
|
Media | -audio <backend> |
Use the specified audio backend. | |
-audio-in <backend> |
Use the specified audio-input backend. | ||
-audio-out <backend> |
Use the specified audio-output backend. | ||
-noaudio |
Disable audio support in the current emulator instance. | ||
-radio <device> |
Redirect radio modem interface to a host character device. | ||
-useaudio |
Enable audio support in the current emulator instance. | Enabled by default. | |
Network | -dns-server <servers> |
Use the specified DNS server(s). | The value of <servers> must be a comma-separated list of up to 4 DNS server names or
IP addresses. |
-http-proxy <proxy> |
Make all TCP connections through a specified HTTP/HTTPS proxy | The value of <proxy> can be one of the following:http://<server>:<port> http://<username>:<password>@<server>:<port>
The |
|
-netdelay <delay> |
Set network latency emulation to <delay>. | Default value is none . See the table in Network Delay Emulation for
supported <delay> values. |
|
-netfast |
Shortcut for -netspeed full -netdelay none |
||
-netspeed <speed> |
Set network speed emulation to <speed>. | Default value is full . See the table in Network Speed Emulation for
supported <speed> values. |
|
-port <port> |
Set the console port number for this emulator instance to <port> . |
The console port number must be an even integer between 5554 and 5584, inclusive. <port> +1
must also be free and will be reserved for ADB. |
|
-report-console <socket> |
Report the assigned console port for this emulator instance to a remote third party before starting the emulation. | <socket> must use one of these formats:
Use |
|
System | -cpu-delay <delay> |
Slow down emulated CPU speed by <delay> | Supported values for <delay> are integers between 0 and 1000.
Note that the <delay> does not correlate to clock speed or other absolute metrics — it simply represents an abstract, relative delay factor applied non-deterministically in the emulator. Effective performance does not always scale in direct relationship with <delay> values. |
-gps <device> |
Redirect NMEA GPS to character device. | Use this command to emulate an NMEA-compatible GPS unit connected to
an external character device or socket. The format of <device> must be QEMU-specific
serial device specification. See the documentation for 'serial -dev' at
http://www.bellard.org/qemu/qemu-doc.html#SEC10.
|
|
-nojni |
Disable JNI checks in the Dalvik runtime. | ||
-qemu |
Pass arguments to qemu. | ||
-qemu -h |
Display qemu help. | ||
-radio <device> |
Redirect radio mode to the specified character device. | The format of <device> must be QEMU-specific
serial device specification. See the documentation for 'serial -dev' at
http://www.bellard.org/qemu/qemu-doc.html#SEC10.
|
|
-timezone <timezone> |
Set the timezone for the emulated device to <timezone>, instead of the host's timezone. | <timezone> must be specified in zoneinfo format. For example:
"America/Los_Angeles" |
|
-version |
Display the emulator's version number. | ||
UI | -dpi-device <dpi> |
Scale the resolution of the emulator to match the screen size of a physical device. | The default value is 165. See also -scale . |
-no-boot-anim |
Disable the boot animation during emulator startup. | Disabling the boot animation can speed the startup time for the emulator. | |
-no-window |
Disable the emulator's graphical window display. | ||
-scale <scale> |
Scale the emulator window. | <scale> is a number between 0.1 and 3 that represents the desired scaling factor. You can
also specify scale as a DPI value if you add the suffix "dpi" to the scale value. A value of "auto"
tells the emulator to select the best window size. |
|
-raw-keys |
Disable Unicode keyboard reverse-mapping. | ||
-noskin |
Don't use any emulator skin. | ||
-keyset <file> |
Use the specified keyset file instead of the default. | The keyset file defines the list of key bindings between the emulator and the host keyboard.
For more information, use -help-keyset to print information about this topic.
|
|
-onion <image> |
Use overlay image over screen. | No support for JPEG. Only PNG is supported. | |
-onion-alpha <percent> |
Specify onion skin translucency value (as percent). | Default is 50. | |
-onion-rotation <position> |
Specify onion skin rotation. | <position> must be one of the values 0, 1, 2, 3. |
|
-skin <skinID> |
This emulator option is deprecated. | Please set skin options using AVDs, rather than by using this emulator option. Using this option may yield unexpected and in some cases misleading results, since the density with which to render the skin may not be defined. AVDs let you associate each skin with a default density and override the default as needed. For more information, see Android Virtual Devices. | |
-skindir <dir> |
This emulator option is deprecated. | See comments for -skin , above. |
The emulator uses mountable disk images stored on your development machine to simulate flash (or similar) partitions on an actual device. For example, it uses disk image containing an emulator-specific kernel, the Android system, a ramdisk image, and writeable images for user data and simulated SD card.
To run properly, the emulator requires access to a specific set of disk image files. By default, the Emulator always looks for the disk images in the private storage area of the AVD in use. If no images exist there when the Emulator is launched, it creates the images in the AVD directory based on default versions stored in the SDK.
Note: The default storage location for
AVDs is in ~/.android/avd
on OS X and Linux, C:\Documents and
Settings\<user>\.android\
on Windows XP, and
C:\Users\<user>\.android\
on Windows Vista.
To let you use alternate or custom versions of the image files, the emulator provides startup options that override the default locations and filenames of the image files. When you use the options, the emulator searches for the image file under the image name or location that you specify; if it can not locate the image, it reverts to using the default names and location.
The emulator uses three types of image files: default image files, runtime image files, and temporary image files. The sections below describe how to override the location/name of each type of file.
When the emulator launches but does not find an existing user data image in the active AVD's storage area, it creates a new one from a default version included in the SDK. The default user data image is read-only. The image files are read-only.
The emulator provides the -system <dir>
startup option to
let you override the location under which the emulator looks for the default
user data image.
The emulator also provides a startup option that lets you override the name
of the default user data image, as described in the table below. When you use the
option, the emulator looks in the default directory, or in a custom location
(if you specified -system <dir>
).
Name | Description | Comments |
---|---|---|
userdata.img |
The initial user-data disk image | Override using -initdata <file> . Also see
-data <file> , below. |
At runtime, the emulator reads and writes data on two disk images: a user-data image and (optionally) an SD card image. This emulates the user-data partition and removable storage media on actual device.
The emulator provides a default user-data disk image. At startup, the emulator creates the default image as a copy of the system user-data image (user-data.img), described above. The emulator stores the new image with the files of the active AVD.
The emulator provides startup options to let you override the actual names and storage locations of the runtime images to load, as described in the table below. When you use one of these options, the emulator looks for the specified file(s) in the current working directory, in the AVD directory, or in a custom location (if you specified a path with the filename).
Name | Description | Comments |
---|---|---|
userdata-qemu.img |
An image to which the emulator writes runtime user-data for a unique user. | Override using -data <filepath> , where <filepath> is the
path the image, relative to the current working directory. If you supply a filename only,
the emulator looks for the file in the current working directory. If the file at <filepath> does
not exist, the emulator creates an image from the default userdata.img, stores it under the name you
specified, and persists user data to it at shutdown. |
sdcard.img |
An image representing an SD card inserted into the emulated device. | Override using -sdcard <filepath> , where <filepath> is the
path the image, relative to the current working directory. If you supply a filename only,
the emulator looks for the file in the current working directory. |
Each emulator instance uses a writeable user-data image to store user- and session-specific data. For example, it uses the image to store a unique user's installed application data, settings, databases, and files.
At startup, the emulator attempts to load a user-data image stored during a previous session. It looks for the file in the current working directory, in the AVD directory as described above, and at the custom location/name that you specified at startup.
-data
startup option.Note: Because of the AVD configurations used in the emulator,
each emulator instance now gets its own dedicated storage. There is no need
to use the -d
option to specify an instance-specific storage area.
Optionally, you can create a writeable disk image that the emulator can use to simulate removeable storage in an actual device. For information about how to create an emulated SD card and load it in the emulator, see SD Card Emulation
You can also use the android tool to automatically create an SD Card image for you, when creating an AVD. For more information, see Command-line options for AVDs.
The emulator creates two writeable images at startup that it deletes at device power-off. The images are:
/cache
partition imageThe emulator does not permit renaming the temporary system image or persisting it at device power-off.
The /cache
partition image is initially empty, and is used by
the browser to cache downloaded web pages and images. The emulator provides an
-cache <file>
, which specifies the name of the file at which
to persist the /cache
image at device power-off. If <file>
does not exist, the emulator creates it as an empty file.
You can also disable the use of the cache partition by specifying the
-nocache
option at startup.
The emulator provides versatile networking capabilities that you can use to set up complex modeling and testing environments for your application. The sections below introduce the emulator's network architecture and capabilities.
Each instance of the emulator runs behind a virtual router/firewall service that isolates it from your development machine's network interfaces and settings and from the internet. An emulated device can not see your development machine or other emulator instances on the network. Instead, it sees only that it is connected through Ethernet to a router/firewall.
The virtual router for each instance manages the 10.0.2/24 network address space — all addresses managed by the router are in the form of 10.0.2.<xx>, where <xx> is a number. Addresses within this space are pre-allocated by the emulator/router as follows:
Network Address | Description |
---|---|
10.0.2.1 | Router/gateway address |
10.0.2.2 | Special alias to your host loopback interface (i.e., 127.0.0.1 on your development machine) |
10.0.2.3 | First DNS server |
10.0.2.4 / 10.0.2.5 / 10.0.2.6 | Optional second, third and fourth DNS server (if any) |
10.0.2.15 | The emulated device's own network/ethernet interface |
127.0.0.1 | The emulated device's own loopback interface |
Note that the same address assignments are used by all running emulator instances. That means that if you have two instances running concurrently on your machine, each will have its own router and, behind that, each will have an IP address of 10.0.2.15. The instances are isolated by a router and can not see each other on the same network. For information about how to let emulator instances communicate over TCP/UDP, see Connecting Emulator Instances.
Also note that the address 127.0.0.1 on your development machine corresponds to the emulator's own loopback interface. If you want to access services running on your development machine's loopback interface (a.k.a. 127.0.0.1 on your machine), you should use the special address 10.0.2.2 instead.
Finally, note that each emulated device's pre-allocated addresses are specific to the Android emulator and will probably be very different on real devices (which are also very likely to be NAT-ed, i.e., behind a router/firewall)
Each emulator instance runs behind a virtual router, but unlike an actual device connected to a physical router, the emulated device doesn't have access to a physical network. Instead it runs as part of a normal application on your development machine. This means that it is subject to the same networking limitations as other applications on your machine:
The emulator's virtual router should be able to handle all outbound TCP and UDP connections/messages on behalf of the emulated device, provided your development machine's network environment allows it to do so. There are no built-in limitations on port numbers or ranges except the one imposed by your host operating system and network.
Depending on the environment, the emulator may not be able to support other protocols (such as ICMP, used for "ping") might not be supported. Currently, the emulator does not support IGMP or multicast.
To communicate with an emulator instance behind its virtual router, you need to set up network redirections on the virtual router. Clients can then connect to a specified guest port on the router, while the router directs traffic to/from that port to the emulated device's host port.
To set up the network redirections, you create a mapping of host and guest ports/addresses on the the emulator instance. There are two ways to set up network redirections: using emulator console commands and using the ADB tool, as described below.
Each emulator instance provides a control console the you can connect to, to
issue commands that are specific to that instance. You can use the
redir
console command to set up redirections as needed for an
emulator instance.
First, determine the console port number for the target emulator instance. For example, the console port number for the first emulator instance launched is 5554. Next, connect to the console of the target emulator instance, specifying its console port number, as follows:
telnet localhost 5554
Once connected, use the redir
command to work with redirections.
To add a redirection, use:.
add <protocol>:<host-port>:<guest-port>
where <protocol>
is either tcp
or udp
,
and <host-port>
and <guest-port>
sets the
mapping between your own machine and the emulated system, respectively.
For example, the following command sets up a redirection that will handle all incoming TCP connections to your host (development) machine on 127.0.0.1:5000 and will pass them through to the emulated system's 10.0.2.15:6000.:
redir add tcp:5000:6000
To delete a redirection, you can use the redir del
command. To
list all redirections for a specific instance, you can use redir
list
. For more information about these and other console commands, see
Using the Emulator Console.
Note that port numbers are restricted by your local environment. this typically
means that you cannot use host port numbers under 1024 without special
administrator privileges. Also, you won't be able to set up a redirection for a
host port that is already in use by another process on your machine. In that
case, redir
generates an error message to that effect.
The Android Debug Bridge (ADB) tool provides port forwarding, an alternate way for you to set up network redirections. For more information, see Forwarding Ports in the ADB documentation.
Note that ADB does not currently offer any way to remove a redirection, except by killing the ADB server.
At startup, the emulator reads the list of DNS servers that your system is currently using. It then stores the IP addresses of up to four servers on this list and sets up aliases to them on the emulated addresses 10.0.2.3, 10.0.2.4, 10.0.2.5 and 10.0.2.6 as needed.
On Linux and OS X, the emulator obtains the DNS server addresses by parsing
the file /etc/resolv.conf
. On Windows, the emulator obtains the
addresses by calling the GetNetworkParams()
API. Note that this
usually means that the emulator ignores the content of your "hosts" file
(/etc/hosts
on Linux/OS X, %WINDOWS%/system32/HOSTS
on Windows).
When starting the emulator at the command line, you can also use the
-dns-server <serverList>
option to manually specify the
addresses of DNS servers to use, where <serverList> is a comma-separated
list of server names or IP addresses. You might find this option useful if you
encounter DNS resolution problems in the emulated network (for example, an
"Unknown Host error" message that appears when using the web browser).
If your emulator must access the Internet through a proxy server, you can use
the -http-proxy <proxy>
option when starting the emulator, to
set up the appropriate redirection. In this case, you specify proxy information
in <proxy>
in one of these formats:
http://<machineName>:<port>
or
http://<username>:<password>@<machineName>:<port>
The -http-proxy
option forces the emulator to use the specified
HTTP/HTTPS proxy for all outgoing TCP connections. Redirection for UDP is not
currently supported.
Alternatively, you can define the environment variable
http_proxy
to the value you want to use for
<proxy>
. In this case, you do not need to specify a value for
<proxy>
in the -http-proxy
command — the
emulator checks the value of the http_proxy
environment variable at
startup and uses its value automatically, if defined.
You can use the -verbose-proxy
option to diagnose proxy
connection problems.
To allow one emulator instance to communicate with another, you must set up the necessary network redirections as illustrated below.
Assume that your environment is
and you want to run a server on B, to which C will connect, here is how you could set it up:
10.0.2.15:<serverPort>
A:localhost:<localPort>
to
B:10.0.2.15:<serverPort>
For example, if you wanted to run an HTTP server, you can select
<serverPort>
as 80 and <localPort>
as
8080:
redir add tcp:8080:80
The emulator automatically forwards simulated voice calls and SMS messages from one instance to another. To send a voice call or SMS, you use the dialer application and SMS application (if available) installed on one emulator
To initiate a simulated voice call to another emulator instance:
To send an SMS message to another emulator instance, launch the SMS application (if available). Specify the console port number of the target emulator instance as as the SMS address, enter the message text, and send the message. The message is delivered to the target emulator instance.
You can also connect to an emulator instance's console to simulate an incoming voice call or SMS. For more information, see Telephony Emulation and SMS Emulation.
Each running emulator instance includes a console facility that lets you dynamically query and control the simulated device environment. For example, you can use the console to dynamically manage port redirections and network characteristics and simulate telephony events. To access the console and enter commands, you use telnet to connect to the console's port number.
To connect to the console of any running emulator instance at any time, use this command:
telnet localhost <console-port>
An emulator instance occupies a pair of adjacent ports: a console port and an adb port. The port numbers differ by 1, with the adb port having the higher port number. The console of the first emulator instance running on a given machine uses console port 5554 and adb port 5555. Subsequent instances use port numbers increasing by two — for example, 5556/5557, 5558/5559, and so on. Up to 16 concurrent emulator instances can run a console facility.
To connect to the emulator console, you must specify a valid console port. If multiple emulator instances are running, you need to determine the console port of the emulator instance you want to connect to. You can find the instance's console port listed in the title of the instance window. For example, here's the window title for an instance whose console port is 5554:
Android Emulator (5554)
Alternatively, you can use the adb devices
command, which prints a list of running emulator instances and their console port numbers. For more information, see Querying for Emulator/Device Instances in the adb documentation.
Note: The emulator listens for connections on ports 5554-5587 and accepts connections only from localhost.
Once you are connected to the console, you can then enter help [command]
to see a list of console commands and learn about specific commands.
To exit the console session, use quit
or exit
.
The sections below describe the major functional areas of the console.
You can use the console to add and remove port redirections while the emulator is running. After connecting to the console, you can manage port redirections in this way:
redir <list|add|del>
The redir
command supports the subcommands listed in the table below.
Subcommand | Description | Comments |
---|---|---|
list |
List the current port redirections. | |
add <protocol>:<host-port>:<guest-port> |
Add a new port redirection. | |
del <protocol>:<host-port> |
Delete a port redirection. | See above for meanings of <protocol> and <host-port>. |
The console provides commands to let you set the geo position used by an emulator emulated device. You can use the geo
command to send a simple GPS fix to the emulator, without needing to use NMEA 1083 formatting. The usage for the command is:
geo <fix|nmea>
The geo
command supports the subcommands listed in the table below.
Subcommand | Description | Comments |
---|---|---|
fix <longitude> <latitude> [<altitude>] |
Send a simple GPS fix to the emulator instance. | Specify longitude and latitude in decimal degrees. Specify altitude in meters. |
nmea <sentence> |
Send an NMEA 0183 sentence to the emulated device, as if it were sent from an emulated GPS modem. | <sentence> must begin with '$GP'. Only '$GPGGA' and '$GPRCM' sentences are currently supported. |
You can issue the geo
command to fix the GPS location as soon as an emulator instance is running. The emulator creates a mock location provider that sends it to GPS-aware applications as soon as they start and register location listeners. Any application can query the location manager to obtain the current GPS fix for the emulated device by calling:
LocationManager.getLastKnownLocation("gps")
For more information about the Location Manager, see LocationManager
and its methods.
You can use the event
command to send various events to the emulator.The usage for the command is:
event <send|types|codes|text>
The event
command supports the subcommands listed in the table below.
Subcommand | Description | Comments |
---|---|---|
send <type>:<code>:<value> [...] |
Send one or more events to the Android kernel. | You can use text names or integers for <type> and <value> . |
types |
List all <type> string aliases supported by the event subcommands. |
|
codes <type> |
List all <codes> string aliases supported by the event
subcommands for the specified <type> . |
|
event text <message> |
Simulate keypresses to send the specified string of characters as a message, | The message must be a UTF-8 string. Unicode posts will be reverse-mapped according to the current device keyboard. Unsupported characters will be discarded silently. |
You can use the power
command to control the simulated power state of the emulator instance.The usage for the command is:
power <display|ac|status|present|health|capacity>
The event
command supports the subcommands listed in the table below.
Subcommand | Description | Comments |
---|---|---|
display |
Display battery and charger state. | |
ac <on|off> |
Set AC charging state to on or off. | |
status <unknown|charging|discharging|not-charging|full> |
Change battery status as specified. | |
present <true|false> |
Set battery presence state. | |
health <unknown|good|overheat|dead|overvoltage|failure> |
Set battery health state. | |
power health <percent> |
Set remaining battery capacity state (0-100). |
You can use the console to check the network status and current delay and speed characteristics. To do so, connect to the console and use the netstatus
command. Here's an example of the command and its output.
network status
The emulator lets you simulate various network latency levels, so that you can test your application in an environment more typical of the actual conditions in which it will run. You can set a latency level or range at emulator startup or you can use the console to change the latency dynamically, while the application is running in the emulator.
To set latency at emulator startup, use the -netdelay
emulator option with a supported <delay>
value, as listed in the table below. Here are some examples:
emulator -netdelay gprs emulator -netdelay 40 100
To make dynamic changes to network delay while the emulator is running, connect to the console and use the netdelay
command with a supported <delay>
value from the table below.
network delay gprs
The format of network
Value | Description | Comments |
---|---|---|
gprs | GPRS | (min 150, max 550) |
edge | EDGE/EGPRS | (min 80, max 400) |
umts | UMTS/3G | (min 35, max 200) |
none | No latency | (min 0, max 0) |
<num> |
Emulate an exact latency (milliseconds). | |
<min>:<max> |
Emulate an specified latency range (min, max milliseconds). |
The emulator also lets you simulate various network transfer rates. You can set a transfer rate or range at emulator startup or you can use the console to change the rate dynamically, while the application is running in the emulator.
To set the network speed at emulator startup, use the -netspeed
emulator option with a supported <speed>
value, as listed in the table below. Here are some examples:
emulator -netspeed gsm emulator -netspeed 14.4 80
To make dynamic changes to network speed while the emulator is running, connect to the console and use the netspeed
command with a supported <speed>
value from the table below.
network speed 14.4 80
The format of network <speed>
is one of the following (numbers are
kilobits/sec):
Value | Description | Comments |
---|---|---|
gsm |
GSM/CSD | (Up: 14.4, down: 14.4) |
hscsd |
HSCSD | (Up: 14.4, down: 43.2) |
gprs |
GPRS | (Up: 40.0, down: 80.0) |
edge |
EDGE/EGPRS | (Up: 118.4, down: 236.8) |
umts |
UMTS/3G | (Up: 128.0, down: 1920.0) |
hsdpa |
HSDPA | (Up: 348.0, down: 14400.0) |
full |
no limit | (Up: 0.0, down: 0.0) |
<num> |
Set an exact rate used for both upload and download. | |
<up>:<down> |
Set exact rates for upload and download separately. |
The Android emulator includes its own GSM emulated modem that lets you simulate telephony functions in the emulator. For example, you can simulate inbound phone calls and establish/terminate data connections. The Android system handles simulated calls exactly as it would actual calls. The emulator does not support call audio in this release.
You can use the console to access the emulator's telephony functions. After connecting to the console, you can use
gsm <call|accept|busy|cancel|data|hold|list|voice|status>
to invoke telephony functions.
The gsm
command supports the subcommands listed in the table below.
Subcommand | Description | Comments |
---|---|---|
call <phonenumber> |
Simulate an inbound phone call from <phonenumber>. | |
accept <phonenumber> |
Accept an inbound call from <phonenumber> and change the call's state "active". | You can change a call's state to "active" only if its current state is "waiting" or "held". |
busy <phonenumber> |
Close an outbound call to <phonenumber> and change the call's state to "busy". | You can change a call's state to "busy" only if its current state is "waiting". |
cancel <phonenumber> |
Terminate an inbound or outbound phone call to/from <phonenumber>. | |
data <state> |
Change the state of the GPRS data connection to <state>. | Supported <state> values are:unregistered -- No network availablehome -- On local network, non-roamingroaming -- On roaming networksearching -- Searching networksdenied -- Emergency calls onlyoff -- Same as 'unregistered'on -- same as 'home' |
hold |
Change the state of a call to "held". | You can change a call's state to "held" only if its current state is "active" or "waiting". |
list |
List all inbound and outbound calls and their states. | |
voice <state> |
Change the state of the GPRS voice connection to <state>. | Supported <state> values are:unregistered -- No network availablehome -- On local network, non-roamingroaming -- On roaming networksearching -- Searching networksdenied -- Emergency calls onlyoff -- Same as 'unregistered'on -- Same as 'home' |
status |
Report the current GSM voice/data state. | Values are those described for the voice and data commands. |
The Android emulator console lets you generate an SMS message and direct it to an emulator instance. Once you connect to an emulator instance, you can generate an emulated incoming SMS using this command:
sms send <senderPhoneNumber> <textmessage>
where <senderPhoneNumber>
contains an arbitrary numeric string.
The console forwards the SMS message to the Android framework, which passes it through to an application that handles that message type.
You can use the vm
command to control the VM on an emulator instance.The usage for the command is:
vm <start|stop|status>
The vm
command supports the subcommands listed in the table below.
Subcommand | Description | Comments |
---|---|---|
start |
Start the VM on the instance. | |
stop |
Stop the VM on the instance. | |
start |
Display the current status of the VM (running or stopped). |
You can use the window
command to manage the emulator window. The usage for the command is:
window <scale>
The vm
command supports the subcommands listed in the table below.
Subcommand | Description | Comments |
---|---|---|
scale <scale> |
Scale the emulator window. | <scale> must be a number between 0.1 and 3 that describes the desired scaling factor. You can also specify scale as a DPI value if you add the suffix "dpi" to the scale value. A value of "auto" tells the emulator to select the best window size. |
You can terminate an emulator instance through the console, using the kill
command.
The Android SDK includes several Emulator skins that you can use to control the resolution and density of the emulated device's screen. To select a specific skin for running the emulator, create an AVD that uses that skin. Please do not use deprecated emulator options such as -skin
to control the skin used by an emulator instance. For more information about AVDs, see Android Virtual Devices.
Through the AVDs configurations used by the emulator, you can run multiple
instances of the emulator concurrently, each with its own AVD configuration and
storage area for user data, SD card, and so on. You no longer need to use the
-d
option when launching the emulator, to point to an
instance-specific storage area.
If you don't have access to Eclipse or the ADT Plugin, you can install your application on the emulator using the adb utility. Before installing the application, you need to package it in a .apk file using the Android Asset Packaging Tool. Once the application is installed, you can start the emulator from the command line, as described in this document, using any startup options necessary. When the emulator is running, you can also connect to the emulator instance's console to issue commands as needed.
As you update your code, you periodically package and install it on the emulator.
The emulator preserves the application and its state data across restarts,
in a user-data disk partition. To ensure that the application runs properly
as you update it, you may need to delete the emulator's user-data partition.
To do so, start the emulator with the -wipe-data
option.
For more information about the user-data partition and other emulator storage,
see Working with Emulator Disk Images.
You can create a disk image and then load it to the emulator at startup, to simulate the presence of a user's SD card in the device. To do this, you can use the android tool to create a new SD card image with a new AVD, or you can use the mksdcard utility included in the SDK.
The sections below describe how to create an SD card disk image, how to copy files to it, and how to load it in the emulator at startup.
Note that you can only load disk image at emulator startup. Similarly, you can not remove a simulated SD card from a running emulator. However, you can browse, send files to, and copy/remove files from a simulated SD card either with adb or the emulator.
The emulator supports emulated SDHC cards, so you can create an SD card image of any size up to 128 gigabytes.
The easiest way to create a new SD card is to use the android tool. When
creating an AVD, you simply specify the -c
option, like this:
android create avd -n <avd_name> -t <targetID> -c <size>[K|M]
You can also use the -c
option to specify a path to an SD card
image to use in the new AVD. For more information, see Android Virtual Devices.
You can use the mksdcard tool, included in the SDK, to create a FAT32 disk image that you can load in the emulator at startup. You can access mksdcard in the tools/ directory of the SDK and create a disk image like this:
mksdcard <size> <file>
For example:
mksdcard 1024M sdcard1.iso
For more information, see Other Tools.
Once you have created the disk image, you can copy files to it prior to loading it in the emulator. To copy files, you can mount the image as a loop device and then copy the files to it, or you can use a utility such as mtools to copy the files directly to the image. The mtools package is available for Linux, Mac, and Windows.
By default, the emulator loads the SD card image that is stored with the active
AVD (see the -avd
startup option).
Alternatively, you ca start the emulator with the
-sdcard
flag and specify the name and path of your image (relative
to the current working directory):
emulator -sdcard <filepath>
The adb utility sees the emulator as an actual physical device. For this reason, you might have to use the -d flag with some common adb commands, such as install
. The -d flag lets you specify which of several connected devices to use as the target of a command. If you don't specify -d, the emulator will target the first device in its list. For more information about adb, see Android Debug Bridge.
For emulators running on Mac OS X, if you see an error "Warning: No DNS servers found" when starting the emulator, check to see whether you have an /etc/resolv.conf
file. If not, please run the following line in a command window:
ln -s /private/var/run/resolv.conf /etc/resolv.conf
See Frequently Asked Questions for more troubleshooting information.
In this release, the limitations of the emulator include: