382

I would like to have my code run slightly differently when running on the emulator than when running on a device. (For example, using 10.0.2.2 instead of a public URL to run against a development server automatically.) What is the best way to detect when an Android application is running in the emulator?

4
  • 2
    Might have a look at android.os.Build.
    – yanchenko
    Commented May 9, 2010 at 21:25
  • 16
    Amaze me... Google should have a standard way of doing this?
    – powder366
    Commented Apr 11, 2014 at 19:41
  • @kreker what is issue, you are facing in existing solutions? Commented Oct 1, 2018 at 6:07
  • @Khemraj fraud issues. Evil guy can mock some sensors and change some strings to pretend real device
    – k4dima
    Commented Oct 2, 2018 at 8:46

41 Answers 41

199

How about this solution (class implementation of SystemProperties is available here), which I also published on my public repository here:

val isProbablyRunningOnEmulator: Boolean by lazy {
    return@lazy (
            // Android SDK emulator
            Build.MANUFACTURER == "Google" && Build.BRAND == "google" &&
                    ((Build.FINGERPRINT.startsWith("google/sdk_gphone_")
                            && Build.FINGERPRINT.endsWith(":user/release-keys")
                            && Build.PRODUCT.startsWith("sdk_gphone_")
                            && Build.MODEL.startsWith("sdk_gphone_"))
                            //alternative
                            || (Build.FINGERPRINT.startsWith("google/sdk_gphone64_") && (Build.FINGERPRINT.endsWith(":userdebug/dev-keys")
                            || (Build.FINGERPRINT.endsWith(":user/release-keys")) && Build.PRODUCT.startsWith("sdk_gphone64_")
                            && Build.MODEL.startsWith("sdk_gphone64_")))
                            //Google Play Games emulator https://play.google.com/googleplaygames https://developer.android.com/games/playgames/emulator#other-downloads
                            || (Build.MODEL == "HPE device" &&
                            Build.FINGERPRINT.startsWith("google/kiwi_") && Build.FINGERPRINT.endsWith(":user/release-keys")
                            && Build.BOARD == "kiwi" && Build.PRODUCT.startsWith("kiwi_"))
                            )
                    //
                    || Build.FINGERPRINT.startsWith("generic")
                    || Build.FINGERPRINT.startsWith("unknown")
                    || Build.MODEL.contains("google_sdk")
                    || Build.MODEL.contains("Emulator")
                    || Build.MODEL.contains("Android SDK built for x86")
                    //bluestacks
                    || "QC_Reference_Phone" == Build.BOARD && !"Xiaomi".equals(Build.MANUFACTURER, ignoreCase = true)
                    //bluestacks
                    || Build.MANUFACTURER.contains("Genymotion")
                    || Build.HOST.startsWith("Build")
                    //MSI App Player
                    || Build.BRAND.startsWith("generic") && Build.DEVICE.startsWith("generic")
                    || Build.PRODUCT == "google_sdk"
                    // another Android SDK emulator check
                    || SystemProperties.getProp("ro.kernel.qemu") == "1")
}

Note that some emulators fake exact specs of real devices, so it might be impossible to detect it. I've added what I could, but I don't think there is a 100% way to detect if it's really an emulator or not.

Here a tiny snippet you can make in the APK to show various things about it, so you could add your own rules:

        textView.text = "FINGERPRINT:${Build.FINGERPRINT}\n" +
                "MODEL:${Build.MODEL}\n" +
                "MANUFACTURER:${Build.MANUFACTURER}\n" +
                "BRAND:${Build.BRAND}\n" +
                "DEVICE:${Build.DEVICE}\n" +
                "BOARD:${Build.BOARD}\n" +
                "HOST:${Build.HOST}\n" +
                "PRODUCT:${Build.PRODUCT}\n"
24
  • 15
    That's the way Facebook detects emulators in React-Native
    – Vaiden
    Commented Jan 27, 2016 at 9:12
  • 2
    @Sid Have you printed out various Build class variables there? Nothing seems special? Have you tried this: github.com/framgia/android-emulator-detector ? Commented Aug 13, 2017 at 11:14
  • 1
    @DrDeo You can add a check of the current build using BuildConfig.DEBUG, or create your own build with your own custom variable. You might also be able to use Proguard to make this function always return false, or something (you can remove logs, for example, as shown here: medium.com/tixdo-labs/… , so maybe that's possible too) Commented Dec 26, 2017 at 10:19
  • 1
    @digitalbreed OK I've updated it so that it will be more fitting for MSI app player. But always remember: this is not a reliable thing... Commented Mar 28, 2021 at 11:01
  • 2
    @AyxanHaqverdili Sometimes I'm very tired too, making weird mistakes. Commented Jul 28, 2021 at 23:16
121

One common one sems to be Build.FINGERPRINT.contains("generic")

7
  • This works even with Galaxy Tab Emulator. The top liked answer didn't. Commented Jun 30, 2012 at 13:29
  • 15
    Please state whether a fingerprint containing "generic" is either an emulator or the device. That information is key but not provided. Commented Jun 20, 2013 at 16:07
  • 2
    Emulator - judging by the comments before yours :)
    – Dori
    Commented Mar 31, 2014 at 10:46
  • 10
    This returns true on my devices running CyanogenMod so beware.
    – ardevd
    Commented Apr 12, 2015 at 20:38
  • 11
    The Android documentation says you shouldn't try to interpret the FINGERPRINT value.
    – gnuf
    Commented Dec 14, 2015 at 20:04
106

The Flutter community uses this code in the device-info plugin to determine if the device is an emulator:

private val isEmulator: Boolean
    get() = (Build.BRAND.startsWith("generic") && Build.DEVICE.startsWith("generic"))
        || Build.FINGERPRINT.startsWith("generic")
        || Build.FINGERPRINT.startsWith("unknown")
        || Build.HARDWARE.contains("goldfish")
        || Build.HARDWARE.contains("ranchu")
        || Build.MODEL.contains("google_sdk")
        || Build.MODEL.contains("Emulator")
        || Build.MODEL.contains("Android SDK built for x86")
        || Build.MANUFACTURER.contains("Genymotion")
        || Build.PRODUCT.contains("sdk_google")
        || Build.PRODUCT.contains("google_sdk")
        || Build.PRODUCT.contains("sdk")
        || Build.PRODUCT.contains("sdk_x86")
        || Build.PRODUCT.contains("sdk_gphone64_arm64")
        || Build.PRODUCT.contains("vbox86p")
        || Build.PRODUCT.contains("emulator")
        || Build.PRODUCT.contains("simulator");
}
6
  • Here is a link directly to the code in question: github.com/flutter/plugins/blob/master/packages/device_info/…
    – Raman
    Commented Nov 14, 2020 at 0:28
  • This is how the firebase crashlytics library does it: public static boolean isEmulator(Context context) { String androidId = Secure.getString(context.getContentResolver(), "android_id"); return "sdk".equals(Build.PRODUCT) || "google_sdk".equals(Build.PRODUCT) || androidId == null; }
    – Pepijn
    Commented Feb 24, 2021 at 16:13
  • These methods are no longer working on most emulator like Memu
    – Aman
    Commented May 9, 2021 at 9:02
  • Add one more check, Build.PRODUCT == "sdk_gphone64_arm64" Commented Aug 12, 2021 at 22:18
  • You may want to add: Build.FINGERPRINT == "robolectric" if your using robolectric Commented Oct 13, 2021 at 7:44
67

Well Android id does not work for me, I'm currently using:

"google_sdk".equals( Build.PRODUCT );
12
  • 37
    Anyone reading this may be interested to know that this string appears to have changed to 'sdk', rather than 'google_sdk'. Commented Jun 6, 2010 at 19:48
  • 15
    @Daniel: I use 2.3.3 with Google API and it says 'google_sdk'. Seems that it's 'google_sdk' for AVD with Google API and 'sdk' for the normal ones. Commented Apr 25, 2011 at 6:39
  • 4
    The Intel emulator returns "full_x86" so I wouldn't count on this method.
    – user462982
    Commented Jul 28, 2012 at 11:33
  • 4
    @GlennMaynard The reverse form is ugly, but practical: Build.PRODUCT could be null whereas "google_sdk" cannot, thus this form avoids a potential null reference error. Commented Jul 27, 2013 at 16:07
  • 4
    Including more cases: "google_sdk".equals(Build.PRODUCT) || "sdk".equals(Build.PRODUCT) || "sdk_x86".equals(Build.PRODUCT) || "vbox86p".equals(Build.PRODUCT) Commented Mar 7, 2014 at 17:51
32

Based on hints from other answers, this is probably the most robust way:

isEmulator = Build.HARDWARE.equals("ranchu")

4
  • Yes. Unlike Build.PRODUCT, Build.HARDWARE (goldfish) is the same for the official SDK and AOSP. Prior to API 8, you have to use reflection to get at the HARDWARE field, however. Commented Apr 26, 2013 at 15:15
  • 5
    I'd go with isEmulator = Build.HARDWARE.contains("golfdish")
    – holmes
    Commented Oct 2, 2013 at 0:24
  • 9
    @holmes: typo, s/b "goldfish"
    – Noah
    Commented Nov 14, 2013 at 13:11
  • 9
    For the Android 5.1 x86_64 image (and probably other more recent 64bit images) that would be "ranchu" instead of "goldfish".
    – warbi
    Commented Sep 1, 2016 at 22:23
20

How about something like the code below to tell if your app was signed with the debug key? it's not detecting the emulator but it might work for your purpose?

public void onCreate Bundle b ) {
   super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
   if ( signedWithDebugKey(this,this.getClass()) ) {
     blah blah blah
   }

  blah 
    blah 
      blah

}

static final String DEBUGKEY = 
      "get the debug key from logcat after calling the function below once from the emulator";    


public static boolean signedWithDebugKey(Context context, Class<?> cls) 
{
    boolean result = false;
    try {
        ComponentName comp = new ComponentName(context, cls);
        PackageInfo pinfo = context.getPackageManager().getPackageInfo(comp.getPackageName(),PackageManager.GET_SIGNATURES);
        Signature sigs[] = pinfo.signatures;
        for ( int i = 0; i < sigs.length;i++)
        Log.d(TAG,sigs[i].toCharsString());
        if (DEBUGKEY.equals(sigs[0].toCharsString())) {
            result = true;
            Log.d(TAG,"package has been signed with the debug key");
        } else {
            Log.d(TAG,"package signed with a key other than the debug key");
        }

    } catch (android.content.pm.PackageManager.NameNotFoundException e) {
        return false;
    }

    return result;

} 
3
  • 1
    Thank you for this code. I have checked and it is working, aldo coping the long debug key can be painful but it is done only once. This is the only reliable solution, as all other answers compare some part of the OS build info string with a static string, and this can and was changed over Android SDK versions, and also can be forged by custom Android builds.
    – ZoltanF
    Commented Aug 19, 2011 at 5:32
  • I think it is the only reliable solution. However, the debug key can change more quickly than we want.
    – rds
    Commented Aug 26, 2012 at 13:19
  • 2
    A better way to do this is BuildConfig.DEBUG.
    – Mygod
    Commented May 15, 2017 at 9:34
14

This code works for me

TelephonyManager tm = (TelephonyManager)getSystemService(Context.TELEPHONY_SERVICE);
String networkOperator = tm.getNetworkOperatorName();
if("Android".equals(networkOperator)) {
    // Emulator
}
else {
    // Device
}

In case that device does not have sim card, It retuns empty string:""

Since Android emulator always retuns "Android" as network operator, I use above code.

5
  • 4
    What does a device without a SIM card (such as a tablet) return?
    – rds
    Commented Aug 26, 2012 at 13:17
  • Running emulator for Android 2.1. This code was working for me, but since upgrading Cordova to 2.7.0, the Context variable appears to be undefined or something. Here's the error I'm getting in ADT: "Context cannot be resolved to a variable." Also, according to comment above, this is NOT a reliable method (though I haven't actually had it fail myself).
    – Rustavore
    Commented May 17, 2013 at 16:48
  • 2
    @rds Devices which does not have a SIM card returns empty string ("")
    – J.J. Kim
    Commented Jun 12, 2013 at 7:43
  • Is there no way to have this value with emulator? because I'd like to block all the users if they don't have any sim cards.
    – c-an
    Commented Nov 12, 2019 at 6:54
  • fyi, nox does not return "Android" as network operator
    – ramen87x
    Commented May 14, 2021 at 3:58
13

I never found a good way to tell if you're in the emulator.

but if you just need to detecet if you're in a development environment you can do this :

     if(Debug.isDebuggerConnected() ) {
        // Things to do in debug environment...
    }

Hope this help....

1
  • This works only if you don't plan to debug your app on a real hardware device. Commented Jan 15, 2023 at 23:05
12

I tried several techniques, but settled on a slightly revised version of checking the Build.PRODUCT as below. This seems to vary quite a bit from emulator to emulator, that's why I have the 3 checks I currently have. I guess I could have just checked if product.contains("sdk") but thought the check below was a bit safer.

public static boolean isAndroidEmulator() {
    String model = Build.MODEL;
    Log.d(TAG, "model=" + model);
    String product = Build.PRODUCT;
    Log.d(TAG, "product=" + product);
    boolean isEmulator = false;
    if (product != null) {
        isEmulator = product.equals("sdk") || product.contains("_sdk") || product.contains("sdk_");
    }
    Log.d(TAG, "isEmulator=" + isEmulator);
    return isEmulator;
}

FYI - I found that my Kindle Fire had Build.BRAND = "generic", and some of the emulators didn't have "Android" for the network operator.

1
  • Wouldn't product.contains("sdk") would cover all three cases? Commented Aug 16, 2021 at 20:51
12

I just look for _sdk, _sdk_ or sdk_, or even just sdk part in Build.PRODUCT:

if(Build.PRODUCT.matches(".*_?sdk_?.*")){
  //-- emulator --
}else{
  //-- other device --
}
1
  • 6
    Why not just contains("sdk")? The only difference (other than being faster) is that matches(".*_?sdk_?.*") requires that if there is a character before or after sdk, it must be an underscore '_', which is not all that important to check.
    – Nulano
    Commented Jan 28, 2015 at 17:00
11

Both the following are set to "google_sdk":

Build.PRODUCT
Build.MODEL

So it should be enough to use either one of the following lines.

"google_sdk".equals(Build.MODEL)

or

"google_sdk".equals(Build.PRODUCT)
3
  • When running the x86 emulator on Windows, Build.Product is sdk_x86. Commented Oct 14, 2013 at 20:45
  • checking with PRODUCT is not a good choice as it returns various values from different emulators
    – Beeing Jk
    Commented Apr 12, 2018 at 10:30
  • This is out of date and no longer valid.
    – LordWabbit
    Commented Jun 22, 2023 at 8:38
10

This is how Firebase Crashlytics approaches it:

private static final String GOLDFISH = "goldfish";
private static final String RANCHU = "ranchu";
private static final String SDK = "sdk";
    
public static boolean isEmulator() {
    return Build.PRODUCT.contains(SDK)
        || Build.HARDWARE.contains(GOLDFISH)
        || Build.HARDWARE.contains(RANCHU);
}
2
  • 1
    FYI, Android Studio complains: Using getString to get device identifiers is not recommended Commented Oct 7, 2022 at 7:26
  • 1
    @thijsonline looks like this condition got removed recently. Updated my answer.
    – G00fY
    Commented Oct 8, 2022 at 20:32
8

Don't know if there are better ways to detect the emu, but the emulator will have the file init.goldfish.rc in the root-directory.

It's the emulator specific startup-script, and it shouldn't be there on a non-emulator build.

2
  • 1
    During startup of the Android system the Linux kernel first calls the process "init". init reads the files "/init.rc" and "init.device.rc". "init.device.rc" is device specific, on the virtual device this file is called "init.goldfish.rc".
    – NET3
    Commented Feb 9, 2018 at 2:05
  • I read in a different stackoverflow comment here: stackoverflow.com/questions/2799097/… that this file is present on many actual devices, many Samsungs. I'm seeing it in our logs as well from some Samsung devices.
    – gjgjgj
    Commented Sep 1, 2020 at 4:07
8

use this function :

 public static final boolean isEmulator() {

    int rating = 0;

    if ((Build.PRODUCT.equals("sdk")) || (Build.PRODUCT.equals("google_sdk"))
            || (Build.PRODUCT.equals("sdk_x86")) || (Build.PRODUCT.equals("vbox86p"))) {
        rating++;
    }
    if ((Build.MANUFACTURER.equals("unknown")) || (Build.MANUFACTURER.equals("Genymotion"))) {
        rating++;
    }
    if ((Build.BRAND.equals("generic")) || (Build.BRAND.equals("generic_x86"))) {
        rating++;
    }
    if ((Build.DEVICE.equals("generic")) || (Build.DEVICE.equals("generic_x86")) || (Build.DEVICE.equals("vbox86p"))) {
        rating++;
    }
    if ((Build.MODEL.equals("sdk")) || (Build.MODEL.equals("google_sdk"))
            || (Build.MODEL.equals("Android SDK built for x86"))) {
        rating++;
    }
    if ((Build.HARDWARE.equals("goldfish")) || (Build.HARDWARE.equals("vbox86"))) {
        rating++;
    }
    if ((Build.FINGERPRINT.contains("generic/sdk/generic"))
            || (Build.FINGERPRINT.contains("generic_x86/sdk_x86/generic_x86"))
            || (Build.FINGERPRINT.contains("generic/google_sdk/generic"))
            || (Build.FINGERPRINT.contains("generic/vbox86p/vbox86p"))) {
        rating++;
    }

    return rating > 4;

    }
0
8

From Battery, the emulator: Power source is always AC Charger. Temperature is always 0.

And you can use Build.HOST to record host value, different emulator has different host value.

1
  • 1
    How do you get the power source and temperature ? Commented Nov 20, 2019 at 14:05
7

Here is my solution (it works only if you run a web server on your debug machine): I have created a background task that starts when the application starts. It looks for http://10.0.2.2 and if it exists it changes a global parameter (IsDebug) to true. It is a silent way to find out where you are running.

public class CheckDebugModeTask extends AsyncTask<String, Void, String> {
public static boolean IsDebug = false;

public CheckDebugModeTask()
{

}

@Override
protected String doInBackground(String... params) {     
  try {
    HttpParams httpParameters = new BasicHttpParams();
    int timeoutConnection = 1000;
    HttpConnectionParams.setConnectionTimeout(httpParameters, timeoutConnection);
    int timeoutSocket = 2000;
    HttpConnectionParams.setSoTimeout(httpParameters, timeoutSocket);

    String url2 = "http://10.0.2.2";        
          HttpGet httpGet = new HttpGet(url2);
    DefaultHttpClient client = new DefaultHttpClient(httpParameters);

    HttpResponse response2 = client.execute(httpGet);
    if (response2 == null || response2.getEntity() == null || response2.getEntity().getContent() == null)
    return "";

    return "Debug";

} catch (Exception e) {
    return "";
}
}

@Override
protected void onPostExecute (String result)
{       
if (result == "Debug")
{
    CheckDebugModeTask.IsDebug = true;
}
}

from the main activity onCreate:

CheckDebugModeTask checkDebugMode = new CheckDebugModeTask();
checkDebugMode.execute("");
6

Another option would be to look at the ro.hardware property and see if its set to goldfish. Unfortunately there doesn't seem to be an easy way to do this from Java but its trivial from C using property_get().

1
  • 4
    This appears to work from the NDK. Include <sys/system_properties.h> and use __system_property_get("ro.hardware", buf) then check that buf is "goldfish".
    – NuSkooler
    Commented Jan 25, 2011 at 21:19
6

I found the new emulator Build.HARDWARE = "ranchu".

Reference:https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/android-emulator-dev/dltBnUW_HzU

And also I found the Android official way to check whether emulator or not.I think it's good reference for us.

Since Android API Level 23 [Android 6.0]

package com.android.internal.util;

/**
 * @hide
 */
public class ScreenShapeHelper {
    private static final boolean IS_EMULATOR = Build.HARDWARE.contains("goldfish");
}

We have ScreenShapeHelper.IS_EMULATOR to check whether emulator.

Since Android API Level 24 [Android 7.0]

package android.os;

/**
 * Information about the current build, extracted from system properties.
 */
public class Build {


    /**
     * Whether this build was for an emulator device.
     * @hide
     */
    public static final boolean IS_EMULATOR = getString("ro.kernel.qemu").equals("1");

}

We have Build.IS_EMULATOR to check whether emulator.

The way the official to check whether emulator is not new,and also maybe not enough,the answers above also mentioned.

But this maybe show us that the official will provide the way of official to check whether emulator or not.

As using the above all ways mentioned,right now we can also use the two ways about to check whether emulator.

How to access the com.android.internal package and @hide

and wait for the official open SDK.

5

The above suggested solution to check for the ANDROID_ID worked for me until I updated today to the latest SDK tools released with Android 2.2.

Therefore I currently switched to the following solution which works so far with the disadvantage however that you need to put the PHONE_STATE read permission (<uses-permission android:name="android.permission.READ_PHONE_STATE"/>)

private void checkForDebugMode() {
    ISDEBUGMODE = false; //(Secure.getString(getApplicationContext().getContentResolver(), Secure.ANDROID_ID) == null);

    TelephonyManager man = (TelephonyManager) getApplicationContext().getSystemService(Context.TELEPHONY_SERVICE);
    if(man != null){
        String devId = man.getDeviceSoftwareVersion();
        ISDEBUGMODE = (devId == null);
    }
} 
4
Build.BRAND.startsWith("generic") && Build.DEVICE.startsWith("generic")

This should return true if the app is running on an emulator.

What we should be careful about is not detecting all the emulators because there are only several different emulators. It is easy to check. We have to make sure that actual devices are not detected as an emulator.

I used the app called "Android Device Info Share" to check this.

On this app, you can see various kinds of information of many devices (probably most devices in the world; if the device you are using is missing from the list, it will be added automatically).

1
  • On my Genymotion running on a mac Build.DEVICE = vbox86p
    – lxknvlk
    Commented Feb 16, 2016 at 18:54
4

All answers in one method

static boolean checkEmulator()
{
    try
    {
        String buildDetails = (Build.FINGERPRINT + Build.DEVICE + Build.MODEL + Build.BRAND + Build.PRODUCT + Build.MANUFACTURER + Build.HARDWARE).toLowerCase();

        if (buildDetails.contains("generic") 
        ||  buildDetails.contains("unknown") 
        ||  buildDetails.contains("emulator") 
        ||  buildDetails.contains("sdk") 
        ||  buildDetails.contains("genymotion") 
        ||  buildDetails.contains("x86") // this includes vbox86
        ||  buildDetails.contains("goldfish")
        ||  buildDetails.contains("test-keys"))
            return true;
    }   
    catch (Throwable t) {Logger.catchedError(t);}

    try
    {
        TelephonyManager    tm  = (TelephonyManager) App.context.getSystemService(Context.TELEPHONY_SERVICE);
        String              non = tm.getNetworkOperatorName().toLowerCase();
        if (non.equals("android"))
            return true;
    }
    catch (Throwable t) {Logger.catchedError(t);}

    try
    {
        if (new File ("/init.goldfish.rc").exists())
            return true;
    }
    catch (Throwable t) {Logger.catchedError(t);}

    return false;
}
5
  • Nice one. init.goldfish.rc only exists in emulators; it's additionally a good check going forward in addition to the Build details.
    – sud007
    Commented May 25, 2016 at 6:07
  • 3
    @sud007 There are many devices out there with `/init.goldfish.rc and this will lead to false positives. For example, many Samsung Galaxy series devices.
    – laalto
    Commented Jan 5, 2018 at 11:49
  • @laalto you were actually correct. I found that out later and apologies that I forget to update it here.
    – sud007
    Commented Jan 31, 2018 at 7:10
  • test-keys has been generating false positives for me.
    – A P
    Commented Nov 15, 2018 at 17:11
  • On which devices they are generating false positives ?
    – Aman Verma
    Commented Dec 21, 2018 at 21:20
4

Checking the answers, none of them worked when using LeapDroid, Droid4x or Andy emulators,

What does work for all cases is the following:

 private static String getSystemProperty(String name) throws Exception {
    Class systemPropertyClazz = Class.forName("android.os.SystemProperties");
    return (String) systemPropertyClazz.getMethod("get", new Class[]{String.class}).invoke(systemPropertyClazz, new Object[]{name});
}

public boolean isEmulator() {
    boolean goldfish = getSystemProperty("ro.hardware").contains("goldfish");
    boolean emu = getSystemProperty("ro.kernel.qemu").length() > 0;
    boolean sdk = getSystemProperty("ro.product.model").equals("sdk");
    return goldfish || emu || sdk;
}
3
4

My recommendation:

try this from github.

Easy to detect android emulator

How to use with an Example:

EmulatorDetector.with(this)
                .setCheckTelephony(true)
                .addPackageName("com.bluestacks")
                .setDebug(true)
                .detect(new EmulatorDetector.OnEmulatorDetectorListener() {
                    @Override
                    public void onResult(boolean isEmulator) {
                        if(isEmulator){
                         // Do your work
                        }
                        else{
                        // Not emulator and do your work
                        }
                    }
                });
1
  • Does not work with nox player , it is not detecting nox emulator
    – Adi
    Commented Nov 8, 2020 at 3:35
3

you can check the IMEI #, http://developer.android.com/reference/android/telephony/TelephonyManager.html#getDeviceId%28%29

if i recall on the emulator this return 0. however, there's no documentation i can find that guarantees that. although the emulator might not always return 0, it seems pretty safe that a registered phone would not return 0. what would happen on a non-phone android device, or one without a SIM card installed or one that isn't currently registered on the network?

seems like that'd be a bad idea, to depend on that.

it also means you'd need to ask for permission to read the phone state, which is bad if you don't already require it for something else.

if not that, then there's always flipping some bit somewhere before you finally generate your signed app.

2
  • 6
    IMEI is likely also to return 0 on an Android tablet, or on a phone without SIM card. Commented Mar 11, 2011 at 14:07
  • We can edit IMEI on the emulator. so this may not serve the purpose. Also, starting from API 29 we cannot access IMEI.
    – Ananth
    Commented Oct 16, 2019 at 13:33
3

Actually, ANDROID_ID on 2.2 always equals 9774D56D682E549C (according to this thread + my own experiments).

So, you could check something like this:

String androidID = ...;
if(androidID == null || androidID.equals("9774D56D682E549C"))
    do stuff;

Not the prettiest, but it does the job.

1
3

This works for me

public boolean isEmulator() {
    return Build.MANUFACTURER.equals("unknown");
}
1
  • 3
    the firmware engineer we have in-house didn't update this; getting Build.Manufacturer on our hardware returned "unknown". The Fingerprint seems like a better way. Commented Nov 14, 2011 at 20:47
3

Put a file in the file system of the emulator; since the file won't exist on the real device, this should be stable, reliable and easy to fix when it breaks.

3

I've collected all the answers on this question and came up with function to detect if Android is running on a vm/emulator:

public boolean isvm(){


        StringBuilder deviceInfo = new StringBuilder();
        deviceInfo.append("Build.PRODUCT " +Build.PRODUCT +"\n");
        deviceInfo.append("Build.FINGERPRINT " +Build.FINGERPRINT+"\n");
        deviceInfo.append("Build.MANUFACTURER " +Build.MANUFACTURER+"\n");
        deviceInfo.append("Build.MODEL " +Build.MODEL+"\n");
        deviceInfo.append("Build.BRAND " +Build.BRAND+"\n");
        deviceInfo.append("Build.DEVICE " +Build.DEVICE+"\n");
        String info = deviceInfo.toString();


        Log.i("LOB", info);


        Boolean isvm = false;
        if(
                "google_sdk".equals(Build.PRODUCT) ||
                "sdk_google_phone_x86".equals(Build.PRODUCT) ||
                "sdk".equals(Build.PRODUCT) ||
                "sdk_x86".equals(Build.PRODUCT) ||
                "vbox86p".equals(Build.PRODUCT) ||
                Build.FINGERPRINT.contains("generic") ||
                Build.MANUFACTURER.contains("Genymotion") ||
                Build.MODEL.contains("Emulator") ||
                Build.MODEL.contains("Android SDK built for x86")
                ){
            isvm =  true;
        }


        if(Build.BRAND.contains("generic")&&Build.DEVICE.contains("generic")){
            isvm =  true;
        }

        return isvm;
    }

Tested on Emulator, Genymotion and Bluestacks (1 October 2015).

0
3

Whichever code you use to do emulator detection, I'd highly recommend writing unit tests to cover all the Build.FINGERPRINT, Build.HARDWARE and Build.MANUFACTURER values that you are depending on. Here are some example tests:

@Test
public void testIsEmulatorGenymotion() throws Exception {
    assertThat(
            DeviceUtils.isRunningOnEmulator(
                    "generic/vbox86p/vbox86p:4.1.1/JRO03S/eng.buildbot.20150217.102902:userdebug/test-keys",
                    "vbox86", "Genymotion")).isTrue();

    assertThat(
            DeviceUtils.isRunningOnEmulator(
                    "generic/vbox86p/vbox86p:5.1/LMY47D/buildbot06092001:userdebug/test-keys", "vbox86",
                    "Genymotion")).isTrue();
}

@Test
public void testIsEmulatorDefaultAndroidEmulator() throws Exception {
    assertThat(
            DeviceUtils.isRunningOnEmulator(
                    "generic_x86/sdk_google_phone_x86/generic_x86:5.0.2/LSY66H/1960483:eng/test-keys", "goldfish",
                    "unknown")).isTrue();

    assertThat(
            DeviceUtils.isRunningOnEmulator(
                    "Android/sdk_google_phone_x86_64/generic_x86_64:6.0/MASTER/2469028:userdebug/test-keys",
                    "ranchu", "unknown")).isTrue();
}

@Test
public void testIsEmulatorRealNexus5() throws Exception {
    assertThat(
            DeviceUtils.isRunningOnEmulator("google/hammerhead/hammerhead:6.0.1/MMB29K/2419427:user/release-keys",
                    "hammerhead", "LGE")).isFalse();
}

...and here's our code (debug logs and comments removed for conciseness):

public static boolean isRunningOnEmulator() {
    if (sIsRunningEmulator == null) {
        sIsRunningEmulator = isRunningOnEmulator(Build.FINGERPRINT, Build.HARDWARE, Build.MANUFACTURER);
    }

    return sIsRunningEmulator;
}

static boolean isRunningOnEmulator(String fingerprint, String hardware, String manufacturer) {
    boolean isEmulatorFingerprint = fingerprint.endsWith("test-keys");
    boolean isEmulatorManufacturer = manufacturer.equals("Genymotion")
            || manufacturer.equals("unknown");

    if (isEmulatorFingerprint && isEmulatorManufacturer) {
        return true;
    } else {
        return false;
    }
}
3

Another option is to check if you are in debug mode or production mode:

if (BuildConfig.DEBUG) { Log.i(TAG, "I am in debug mode"); }

simple and reliable.

Not totally the answer of the question but in most cases you may want to distinguish between debugging/test sessions and life sessions of your user base.

In my case I set google analytics to dryRun() when in debug mode so this approach works totally fine for me.


For more advanced users there is another option. gradle build variants:

in your app's gradle file add a new variant:

buildTypes {
    release {
        // some already existing commands
    }
    debug {
        // some already existing commands
    }
    // the following is new
    test {
    }
}

In your code check the build type:

if ("test".equals(BuildConfig.BUILD_TYPE)) { Log.i(TAG, "I am in Test build type"); }
 else if ("debug".equals(BuildConfig.BUILD_TYPE)) { Log.i(TAG, "I am in Debug build type"); }

Now you have the opportunity to build 3 different types of your app.

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