My project has dynamic feature module and I would like to generate debug or release APK including the dynamic feature. Currently I can get only base APK file.
Basica
You can specify if your on demand module needs to be included in the universal APK that is usually generated for older devices, and then you can use bundletool to generate an Universal APK from the App Bundle:.
In this particular case, you can use something like:
bundletool build-apks --bundle <bundle_file> --output <APKS file> --ks <key_store> --key-pass <jks password> --ks-key-alias <key_alias> --ks-pass <key password> --overwrite --mode=universal
The key point is to include the --mode=universal
this instruct bundletool to generate an Universal APK that will include all modules that have <dist:fusing dist:include="true"/>
in the manifest.
In a similar way, when you run your project from Android Studio on a device, using the default configuration for Run (Deploy = Default APK) it includes all of your on demand modules.
Instead, when you run the application from Studio using the Run configuration (Deploy = APK from AppBundle) you can pick and choose which modules are installed.
However, in both cases, you cannot test on demand module downloads if you don't go through the Play store.
As reported in another answer below, the Android Gradle Plugin includes a couple of undocumented tasks that can be used to generate Debug and unsigned Release universal APKs of your application.
The task related to the Debug version can be a quick alternative if you just need this type of build:
./gradlew :app:packageDebugUniversalApk
This task will generate (by default) app/build/outputs/universal_apk/debug/app-debug-universal.apk
.
Google introduced at I/O Internal App Sharing that allows to allow testing easily your App Bundles and APKs, including debug builds:
With internal app sharing, you can quickly share an app bundle or APK with your internal team and testers by uploading an APK or app bundle on the internal app sharing upload page.
I don't see it documented anywhere, but the Android Gradle build tools include tasks to extract the universal APK for you. You can use something similar to:
./gradlew :yourmodule:packageDebugUniversalApk
Under the hood it uses bundletool and does essentially the same thing as the other answer, but it's nice to be able to do it from Gradle.
Download bundletool jar file from Github (Latest release > Assets > bundletool-all-version.jar file). Rename that file to bundletool.jar
java -jar "path/to/bundletool.jar" build-apks --bundle=myapp-release.aab --output=myapp.apks --ks="/path/to/myapp-release.keystore" --ks-pass=pass:myapp-keystore-pass --ks-key-alias=myapp-alias --key-pass=pass:myapp-alias-pass
java -jar bundletool.jar build-apks --bundle=nhl.aab --output=nhl.apks --mode=universal
`