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How can I install the Google Play .apk onto my Android 4.0 emulator?

2
  • 1
    Note: comments have mixed results, so your mileage may vary
    – amb
    Jun 22, 2012 at 10:25
  • but its the same with other emulator versions, and it worked there so why it shoudnt work in 4.x? :)
    – reox
    Jun 22, 2012 at 10:29

8 Answers 8

259

Download Google apps (GoogleLoginService.apk , GoogleServicesFramework.apk , Phonesky.apk)
from here.

Start your emulator:

emulator -avd VM_NAME_HERE -partition-size 500 -no-audio -no-boot-anim

Then use the following commands:

# Remount in rw mode.
# NOTE: more recent system.img files are ext4, not yaffs2
adb shell mount -o remount,rw -t yaffs2 /dev/block/mtdblock0 /system

# Allow writing to app directory on system partition
adb shell chmod 777 /system/app

# Install following apk
adb push GoogleLoginService.apk /system/app/.
adb push GoogleServicesFramework.apk /system/app/.
adb push Phonesky.apk /system/app/. # Vending.apk in older versions
adb shell rm /system/app/SdkSetup*
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  • 21
    Note: Vending.apk is called Phonesky.apk in latest releases Sep 11, 2012 at 8:44
  • 16
    the -partition-size param is important, without it i got OutOfMemory exception while pushing the apks
    – mike
    May 20, 2013 at 11:39
  • 12
    I think this answer should be the accepted answer. After all, this IS an actual answer, the current accepted answer (11/11/2013) is only a "breaking the eula is like a bad thing, m'kay?" type of comment.
    – chris-l
    Nov 11, 2013 at 22:16
  • 3
    Does anyone have problem with connecting to Google services after installing Play this way on emulator?
    – Johnny_D
    Feb 5, 2014 at 19:22
  • 4
    Am I the only one not able to get this to work? On both 4.4 and 5.0 emulators, adding the APKs does not show the Play Store icon, and adb reboot just hangs.
    – Nate
    Feb 9, 2015 at 10:27
85

For future visitors.

As of now Android 4.2.2 platform includes Google Play services. Just use an emulator running Jelly Bean. Details can be found here:

Setup Google Play Services SDK

EDIT:

Another option is to use Genymotion (runs way faster)

EDIT 2:

As @gdw2 commented: "setting up the Google Play Services SDK does not install a working Google Play app -- it just enables certain services provided by the SDK"

After version 2.0 Genymotion does not come with Play Services by default, but it can be easily installed manually. Just download the right version from here and drag and drop into the virtual device (emulador).

14
  • do you mean that Genymotion's vms have a google play implementation in them?
    – quinestor
    Jul 12, 2013 at 12:49
  • 6
    Holy mother! Genymotion is suweet! Aug 21, 2013 at 2:16
  • 6
    @Exception-al I think you should update your answer to clarify that setting up the Google Play Services SDK does not install a working Google Play app -- it just enables certain services provided by the SDK.
    – gdw2
    Oct 3, 2013 at 16:49
  • 1
    +1 for suggesting Genymotion!!! I didn't know it existed and now I can't live without it. It plays flawlessly with Android Studio (just add the plugin) and now I can debut my Google Maps V2 apps without resorting to "real" devices! Thanks a million!
    – Loudenvier
    Oct 19, 2013 at 23:26
  • 1
    @SeanChamp good point but final tests should always be on a real device Dec 14, 2015 at 16:24
27

I do this in a more permanent way - instead of installing the APKs each time with adb, permanently add them to the system image that the emulator uses. You will need Yaffey on Windows, or a similar utility on other systems, to modify YAFFS2 images. Copy GoogleLoginService.apk, GoogleServicesFramework.apk, and Phonesky.apk (or Vending.apk in older versions of Android) to the /system/app folder of the system.img file of the emulator. Afterwards I can start the emulator normally, without messing with adb, and Play Store is always there.

Obtaining the Google Play app from your device

Downloading Google Apps from some Internet site may not be quite legal, but if you have a phone or tablet with a corresponding Android version, just pull them out of your device:

adb -d root
adb -d pull /system/app/GoogleLoginService.apk
adb -d pull /system/app/GoogleServicesFramework.apk
adb -d pull /system/app/Phonesky.apk

You must have root-level access (run adb root) to the device in order to pull these files from it.

Adding it to the image

Now start yaffey on Windows or a similar utility on Linux or Mac, and open system.img for the emulator image you want to modify. I modify most often the one in [...]\android-sdk\system-images\android-17\x86.

Rename the original system.img to system-original.img. Under yaffey, copy the APK files you pulled from your device to /app folder. Save your modified image as system.img in the original folder. Then start your emulator (in my case it would be Android 4.2 emulator with Intel Atom processor running under Intel HAX, super-fast on Windows machines) and you'll have Play Store there. I did not find it necessary to delete SdkSetup.apk and SdkSetup.odex - the Play Store and other services still work fine for me with these files present.

When finished with your testing, to alleviate your conscience guilty of temporarily pirating the Google Apps from your device, you may delete the modified system.img and restore the original from system-original.img.

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  • 5
    There doesn't seem to be a working YAFF2 editor for Linux—but fortunately, it turns out that with a one-line change, Yaffey itself compiles and runs on Linux. Posted the steps I used on this Ask Ubuntu question. Apr 14, 2013 at 0:29
  • +1s are way too less for the aha- moment happiness.. StackOverflow should have a kiss-cos-ur-so-happy-button :) Jan 17, 2014 at 11:52
  • I was able to pull the three APKs off of aa Android 4.1.2 phone without root, but I'm still working on getting them installed someplace else.
    – bonh
    Aug 11, 2014 at 1:52
  • Any yaffey alternative for Mac? Jul 10, 2015 at 9:24
  • 1
    @OlcayErtaş Mac Yaffey: github.com/danielkutik/yaffey. Builds a Yaffey.app, works perfectly on my Yosemite.
    – Xiao
    Nov 3, 2015 at 21:56
4
  1. Download the gapps package from http://goo.im/gapps
  2. extract GoogleLoginService.apk,GoogleServicesFramework.apk and Vending.apk Go to cmd window type adb shell
    1. on the shell type mount -o rw,remount -t yaffs2 /dev/block/mtdblock3 /system
    2. then press Ctrl+c to exit. cd to the directory where apks has been extracted,
    3. type adb push <appname>.apk /system/app
    4. then type adb reboot
5
  • Where I need to place the .apk file.In my project or adt bundle platform tools?
    – Stephen
    Oct 9, 2014 at 10:42
  • copy it to platform-tools unless you have set your PATH environmental variable
    – insomniac
    Oct 9, 2014 at 11:18
  • 1
    Permission Denied. May 30, 2016 at 16:56
  • @SanyamJain Did you solve that problem? I get the same message, mount: Permission denied
    – Joshua Son
    Jun 3, 2016 at 8:30
  • @JoshuaSon: No I couldn't. And after reading from various sources I came to conclusion that It might not be worth the effort, as the emulator keeps on crashing or this strategy doesn't work for Upcoming versions of Android. Correct me if I am wrong :) Jun 7, 2016 at 5:15
3

It is simple for me i downloaded the apk file in my computer and drag that file to emulator it install the google play for me Hope it help some one

2

You could download it from a Android 4.0 phone and then mount the system image rw and copy it over.

Didnt tried it before but it should work.

1
  • Nope, the zip with GAPPS is too big. May 9, 2016 at 14:39
0

Playstore + Google Play Services In Linux(Ubuntu 14.04)


Download Google apps (GoogleLoginService.apk , GoogleServicesFramework.apk )

from here http://www.securitylearn.net/2013/08/31/google-play-store-on-android-emulator/

and Download ( Phonesky.apk) from here https://basketbuild.com/filedl/devs?dev=dankoman&dl=dankoman/Phonesky.apk

GO TO ANDROID SDK LOCATION>>

cd -Android SDK's tools Location-

TO RUN EMULATOR>>

Android/Sdk/tools$ ./emulator64-x86 -avd Kitkat -partition-size 566 -no-audio -no-boot-anim

SET PERMISSIONS>>

cd Android/Sdk/platform-tools platform-tools$ adb shell mount -o remount,rw -t yaffs2 /dev/block/mtdblock0 /system

platform-tools$ adb shell chmod 777 /system/app

platform-tools$ adb push /home/nazmul/Downloads/GoogleLoginService.apk /system/app/.

PUSH PLAY APKS >>

platform-tools$ adb push /home/nazmul/Downloads/GoogleServicesFramework.apk /system/app/. platform-tools$ adb push /home/nazmul/Downloads/Phonesky.apk /system/app/. platform-tools$ adb shell rm /system/app/SdkSetup*

1
  • System doesn't have enough space to install GAPPS. May 9, 2016 at 14:40
-1

Have you ever tried Genymotion? I've read about it last week and it is great. They have several Android Images that you run (with their own software). The images are INCREDIBLY fast and they have Google Play installed on them. Check it out if it is the kind of thing that you need.

http://www.genymotion.com/

2
  • genymotion does not provide VMs with API level lower than 16 Jan 28, 2015 at 15:57
  • As a comment about Genymotion, in advise to the arbitrary reader: Genymotion uses the VirtualBox Virtualization platform. VIrtualBox is designed as to emulate Intel microcontroller platforms. Due to this limitation, It may not be possible to emulate ARM microcontroller platforms with Genymotion. This, of course, may serve to introduce an orthogonal question, as whether, when, and why it may be necessary to beta-test an app using a cross-platform SDK, on every single possible microconotroller or microcontroller emulator. The Intel-virt limitation may not be as much a concern, not in all apps?
    – Sean Champ
    Dec 14, 2015 at 16:17

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