I can successfully build and run my Android app in my debug and release variants with no problem. Yet, when I try to run my new unit tests (I never had them before), I get t
com.android.dex.DexIndexOverflowException: method ID not in [0, 0xffff]: 65536
Android application (APK) files contain executable bytecode files in the form of Dalvik Executable (DEX) files, which contain the compiled code used to run your app. The Dalvik Executable specification limits the total number of methods that can be referenced within a single DEX file to 65,536, including Android framework methods, library methods, and methods in your own code. Getting past this limit requires that you configure your app build process to generate more than one DEX file, known as a multidex configuration.
The Android plugin for Gradle available in Android SDK Build Tools 21.1 and higher supports multidex as part of your build configuration. Make sure you update the Android SDK Build Tools tools and the Android Support Repository to the latest version using the SDK Manager before attempting to configure your app for multidex.
Setting up your app development project to use a multidex configuration requires that you make a few modifications to your app development project. In particular you need to perform the following steps:
Modify your app Gradle build file configuration to include the support library and enable multidex output .
android {
compileSdkVersion 25
buildToolsVersion "25.0.2"
defaultConfig {
...
minSdkVersion 14
targetSdkVersion 25
...
// Enabling multidex support.
multiDexEnabled true
}
...
}
dependencies {
compile 'com.android.support:multidex:1.0.3'
}
In your manifest add the MultiDexApplication
class from the multidex support library to the application element.
Read Official Document about MultiDex
If your Application class is extending some other class and you don’t want to or can’t change it, override attachBaseContext()
as shown below:
public class MyApplication extends MultiDexApplication {
@Override
protected void attachBaseContext(Context base) {
super.attachBaseContext(base);
MultiDex.install(this);
}
}
Then
While the library fixes the DEX 64K problem in most cases, it should be treated as a last resort. Before attempting to use it, you should audit your project for unwanted dependencies and remove as much unused code as possible using ProGuard.