You can configure the behavior of Android Studio and the command-line tools by setting environment variables. One of the most useful environment variables to set is ANDROID_HOME
, which many tools read to determine the Android SDK installation directory. To run tools from the command line without including the full path to the executable, set your command search path environment variable to include ANDROID_HOME/tools
, ANDROID_HOME/tools/bin
, and ANDROID_HOME/platform-tools
.
How to set environment variables
The following examples show how to set environment variables in a terminal window and in a shell script for different operating systems. Variable settings in terminal windows last only as long as the window is open. On macOS and Linux, each time a new shell starts, variable settings are set in shell initialization scripts. On Windows, variable settings can be set through the system settings.
Windows: In a terminal window, type the following:
set HTTP_PROXY=myserver:1981
Alternately, add it through the Windows UI. Check the documentation for your version of Windows to learn how.
macOS and Linux: The precise method of setting environment variables depends on which shell you are using. To determine which shell type is running, type the following:
echo $0
In shells such as Gnu Bash or Zsh, variables are set using the following syntax:
export VARIABLE_NAME=<new-value>
In other shells, such as TCSH, variables are set using the following syntax:
setenv VARIABLE_NAME <new-value>
These commands can be added to the shell initialization script to set the variables each time a new shell instance is run.
The location of the shell initialization script depends on the shell being used. For Gnu Bash, the location can be ~/.bash_profile
. For Zsh, the location can be ~/.zprofile
. For TCSH, the location can be ~/.cshrc
. Check the documentation for the shell that you're using to be sure.
You can also update the PATH
environment variable to include the tool locations.
For Gnu Bash or Zsh:
export ANDROID_HOME=~/Library/Android/sdk export PATH=$PATH:$ANDROID_HOME/tools:$ANDROID_HOME/tools/bin:$ANDROID_HOME/platform-tools
And for TCSH:
setenv ANDROID_HOME ~/Library/Android/sdk setenv PATH $PATH\:$ANDROID_HOME/tools\:$ANDROID_HOME/tools/bin\:$ANDROID_HOME/platform-tools
Variables reference
The following table describes commonly used environment variables for the Android SDK tools.
Table 1. Environment variables
Android SDK environment variables | |
---|---|
ANDROID_HOME | Sets the path to the SDK installation directory. Once set, the value does not typically change and can be shared by multiple users on the same machine. ANDROID_SDK_ROOT , which also points to the SDK installation directory, is deprecated. If you continue to use it, Android Studio and the Android Gradle plugin will check that the old and new variables are consistent. |
ANDROID_USER_HOME | Sets the path to the user preferences directory for tools that are part of the Android SDK. Defaults to $HOME/.android/ . Some older tools, such as Android Studio 4.3 and earlier, do not read |
REPO_OS_OVERRIDE | Set this variable to windows , macosx , or linux when you use sdkmanager to download packages for an operating system different from the current machine. |
Android Studio configuration environment variables | |
The Android Studio configuration variables contain settings that customize the location of configuration files and the JDK. On startup, Android Studio checks these variables for settings. For more information, see Configure Android Studio. | |
STUDIO_VM_OPTIONS | Sets the location of the studio.vmoptions file. This file contains settings that affect the performance characteristics of the Java HotSpot Virtual Machine. This file can also be accessed from within Android Studio. See Customize your VM options. |
STUDIO_PROPERTIES | Sets the location of the idea.properties file. This file lets you customize Android Studio IDE properties, such as the path to user installed plugins and the maximum file size supported by the IDE. See Customize your IDE properties. |
STUDIO_JDK | Sets the location of the JDK that Android Studio runs in. When you launch the IDE, it checks the STUDIO_JDK , JDK_HOME , and JAVA_HOME environment variables, in that order. |
STUDIO_GRADLE_JDK | Sets the location of the JDK that Android Studio uses to start the Gradle daemon. When you launch the IDE, it first checks STUDIO_GRADLE_JDK . If STUDIO_GRADLE_JDK is not defined, the IDE uses the value set in the project structure settings. |
Emulator environment variables | |
By default, the emulator stores configuration files under $HOME/.android/ and AVD data under $HOME/.android/avd/ . You can override the defaults by setting the following environment variables. The emulator -avd <avd_name> command searches the avd directory in the order of the values in $ANDROID_AVD_HOME , $ANDROID_USER_HOME/avd/ , and $HOME/.android/avd/ . For emulator environment variable help, type | |
ANDROID_EMULATOR_HOME | Sets the path to the user-specific emulator configuration directory. Defaults to $ANDROID_USER_HOME . Older tools, such as Android Studio 4.3 and earlier, do not read |
ANDROID_AVD_HOME | Sets the path to the directory that contains all AVD-specific files, which mostly consist of very large disk images. The default location is $ANDROID_EMULATOR_HOME/avd/ . You might want to specify a new location if the default location is low on disk space. |
The Android emulator queries the following environment variables when it starts: | |
ANDROID_LOG_TAGS | See ANDROID_LOG_TAGS . |
HTTP_PROXY | Contains the HTTP/HTTPS proxy setting for a global HTTP proxy. Uses a colon (:) separator between the host and the port. For example, This is the same as specifying the
|
ANDROID_VERBOSE | See ANDROID_VERBOSE . |
ANDROID_HOME | See ANDROID_HOME . |
ANDROID_EMULATOR_USE_SYSTEM_LIBS | Contains a value of 0 (default) or 1. A value of 1 means the system's libstdc++.so file is used instead of the one that comes bundled with the emulator. Set this environment variable only when the emulator does not start on your Linux system because of a system library problem. For example, some Linux Radeon GL driver libraries require a more recent libstdc++.so file. |
Quick emulator (QEMU) audio | |
QEMU_AUDIO_DRV QEMU_AUDIO_OUT_DRV QEMU_AUDIO_IN_DRV | On Linux, you can change the default audio backend of the emulator by setting the QEMU_AUDIO_DRV environment variable to one of the following values:
set QEMU_AUDIO_DRV=alsa You can also use distinct backends for audio input and audio outputs by selecting one of the QEMU values for the set QEMU_AUDIO_OUT=esd set QEMU_AUDIO_IN=oss If you want to disable the audio support, use the
|
adb environment variables | |
ANDROID_SERIAL | Use this variable to provide an emulator serial number, such as emulator-5555, to an adb command. If you set this variable but use the -s option to specify a serial number from the command line, the command-line input overrides the value in ANDROID_SERIAL . The following example sets set ANDROID_SERIAL=emulator-555 adb install helloWorld.apk |
adb logcat environment variables | |
ANDROID_LOG_TAGS | Use this environment variable to set a default filter expression when you are running logcat from your development computer. For example: set This is the same as specifying the See Filter log output for more information and examples. |
ADB_TRACE | Contains a comma-separated list of the debug information to log. Values can be the following: all , adb , sockets , packets , rwx , usb , sync , sysdeps , transport , and jdwp . To display the set ADB_TRACE=all adb logcat |
ANDROID_VERBOSE | Contains a comma-separated list of verbose output options (debug tags) used by the emulator. The following example shows ANDROID_VERBOSE defined with the debug-socket and debug-radio debug tags: set ANDROID_VERBOSE=socket,radio This is the same as specifying the
Unsupported debug tags are ignored. For more information about debug tags, use |