I\'ve followed step by step the official Getting Started. I started from a clean linux install and installed everything required as per the \"Building Projects with Native C
I'll answer my own questions and sponfeed my fellow linux users:
1- To point JAVA_HOME to the JRE included with Android Studio first locate the Android Studio installation folder, then find the /jre
directory. That directory's full path is what you need to set JAVA_PATH to (thanks to @TentenPonce for his answer).
On linux, you can set JAVA_HOME by adding this line to your .bashrc
or .bash_profile files
:
export JAVA_HOME=<Your Android Studio path here>/jre
This file (one or the other) is the same as the one you added ANDROID_HOME
to if you were following the React Native Getting Started for Linux. Both are hidden by default and can be found in your home directory. After adding the line you need to reload the terminal so that it can pick up the new environment variable. So type:
source $HOME/.bash_profile
or
source $HOME/.bashrc
and now you can run react-native run-android
in that same terminal. Another option is to restart the OS. Other terminals might work differently.
NOTE: for the project to actually run, you need to start an Android emulator in advance, or have a real device connected. The easiest way is to open an already existing Android Studio project and launch the emulator from there, then close Android Studio.
2- Since what react-native run-android
appears to do is just this:
cd android && ./gradlew installDebug
You can actually open the nested android project with Android Studio and run it manually. JS changes can be reloaded if you enable live reload in the emulator. Type CTRL + M (CMD + M on MacOS) and select the "Enable live reload" option in the menu that appears (Kudos to @BKO for his answer)
Windows 10:
Android Studio -> File -> Other Settings -> Default Project Structure... -> JDK location:
copy string shown, such as:
C:\Program Files\Android\Android Studio\jre
In file locator directory window, right-click on "This PC" ->
Properties -> Advanced System Settings -> Environment Variables... -> System Variables
click on the New... button under System Variables, then type and paste respectively:
.......Variable name: JAVA_HOME
.......Variable value: C:\Program Files\Android\Android Studio\jre
and hit OK buttons to close out.
Some installations may require JRE_HOME to be set as well, the same way.
To check, open a NEW black console window, then type echo %JAVA_HOME%
. You should get back the full path you typed into the system variable. Windows 10 seems to support spaces in the filename paths for system variables very well, and does not seem to need ~tilde eliding.
I ran this in the command prompt(have windows 7 os): JAVA_HOME=C:\Program Files\Android\Android Studio\jre
where what its = to is the path to that jre folder, so anyone's can be different.