I have been running into the same problem, and there does not seem to be a standard way of doing this. However, an emulator's date and time can be updated using the date
command of the ADB shell, which can be used in conjunction with standard commands for displaying date and time on your OS to update the emulator date and time to the current date and time.
According to the android date
command's --help
output, the following formats are acceptable:
MMDDhhmm[[CC]YY][.ss]
(POSIX)
YYYY-MM-DD [hh:mm[:ss]]
(ISO 8601)
The ISO 8601 format is most standard, and it supports using a T
instead of a space (which can cause problems in shell parameter passing).
To set a date and time of the emulator, you need to execute the following command in your OS (the su root
is often necessary to get date setting permissions), where $date
matches one of the above formats:
adb shell su root date -s $date
Linux
Setting the emulator date and time to the current date and time is relatively straightforward from a UNIX-style shell, so the following command will work on Linux:
adb shell su root date -s `date +"%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S"`
macOS
adb -e shell su root date -s `date +"%m%d%H%M%y"`
Windows
On Windows (which I am using), the easiest way to do it is through Windows PowerShell:
adb shell su root date -s $(get-date -format yyyy-MM-ddTHH:mm:ss)
In Command Prompt, it is a bit more tricky because there is no way to specify a custom format to display date and time. The best way I found to get it in locale-independent format is by using the command wmic os get LocalDateTime
(line 2). Its date-time format can be parsed to adapt to the format needed by the ADB shell: the symbols :~
can be used to print a substring of an environment variable contents, with the format %var:~<start-index>,<number-of-chars>%
. We also need to ignore everything except line 2, so the full command that you need to run is as follows:
for /f "skip=1 delims=" %A in ('wmic os get localDateTime') do @for /f "delims=" %B in ("%A") do @cmd /v /c "set wmicdate=%B & adb shell date -s !wmicdate:~0,4!-!wmicdate:~4,2!-!wmicdate:~6,2!T!wmicdate:~8,2!:!wmicdate:~10,2!:!wmicdate:~12,2!"
For the curious: this first saves the date-time into the %wmicdate%
variable and then passes it to ADB by parsing it appropriately. The !
are used instead of %
to read the variable on-the-fly. This is all done in a child cmd
process launched with the /v
option that enables this on-the-fly variable reading.
EDIT: Fixed the command for macOS (thanks @user836003).