The pertinent commands outlined in the link above are the following: sudo apt-get install qemu-kvm libvirt-bin ubuntu-vm-builder bridge-utils Once kvm-ok gives the success message above, you’re good to go and should follow these steps to get everything configured properly: Intel HAMX instructions Each motherboard is going to be different, but generally the configuration option is probably going to be found somewhere like along these lines (Advanced -> CPU Configuration -> Hardware Virtualization). If not, then you’ll want to close the setup guide and shutdown your computer to access your bios. It should say something like: INFO: /dev/kvm exists If the setup guide indicates that you can take advantage of KVM (hardware virtualization), then you can run the following command to see if KVM is activated in your bios: kvm-ok Run the studio.sh file and complete the initial step to configure the studio. Unzip the file and navigate to android-studio/bin For instance, we’ve put it in ~/projects/android/ Next, go ahead and retrieve the Android Studio Zip file downloaded in the first step and place it in your preferred development location. Notice that Ubuntu no longer provides the Oracle JDK as a default installation option, so we need to update our apt repositories to include the webupd8team/java location to retrieve the installer. Sudo apt-get install oracle-java7-installer Sudo add-apt-repository ppa:webupd8team/java Or, if you prefer to use the Android Studio recommended Oracle JDK, you can do the following: sudo apt-get install python-software-properties The Android Studio requires Java’s JDK 6 or above (preferably 7), so you’ll want to do the following at your command line: sudo apt-get install openjdk-7-jre To install Android Studio on Ubuntu 14.04, complete the following steps:įirst, download the Android Studio here:
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