Android Studio build fails with "Task '' not found in root project 'MyProject'."

I get this error when trying to build my project after changing laptop and updating to Android Studio version 0.8.2.

FAILURE: Build failed with an exception.

  • What went wrong: Task '' not found in root project 'MyProject'.

  • Try: Run gradle tasks to get a list of available tasks. Run with --stacktrace option to get the stack trace. Run with --info or --debug option to get more log output.

BUILD FAILED

Here are my Gradle files:

Top Level settings.gradle

include ':MyProject'

build.gradle in MyProject:

apply plugin: 'com.android.application'

buildscript {
    repositories {
        mavenCentral()
    }
    dependencies {
        classpath "com.android.tools.build:gradle:0.12.+"
    }
}
repositories {
    mavenCentral()
}

android {
    compileSdkVersion 20
    buildToolsVersion "20"

    defaultConfig {
        minSdkVersion 14
        targetSdkVersion 20
    }
}

dependencies {
    compile 'de.timroes.android:EnhancedListView:0.3.0@aar'
    compile 'com.nineoldandroids:library:2.4.0'
}

Top level build.gradle is empty


Though late in answering, this is a hard one to Google (the single quotes) and it’s not clear what’s happening. I don't have the reputation yet to comment or ask for scope (or post 3 links), so this answer may be a little tedious.

To answer fast, you may have multiple Gradle plugins in your project.

Synchronize Gradle Wrapper and Plugins

My issue seemed to start with a corrupted IML file. Android Studio (between closing and reopening a project) began complaining an IML was gone (it wasn’t) and a module should be deleted, which I declined. It persisted, I upgraded to AS 0.8.7 (canary channel) and got stuck on the OP issue (Task '' not found in root project). This completely blocked builds so I had to dig in to Gradle.

My repair steps on OSX (please adjust for Windows):

  1. Upgrade Android Studio to 0.8.7
    • Preferences | Updates | Switch "Beta Channel" to "Canary Channel", then do a Check Now.
    • You might be able to skip this.
  2. Checked the Gradle wrapper (currently 1.12.2; don’t try to use 2.0 at this time).

    • Assuming you don’t need a particular version, use the latest supported distribution

      $ vi ~/project/gradle-wrapper.properties ... distributionUrl=http\://services.gradle.org/distributions/gradle-1.12-all.zip

    • This can be set in Android Studio at Preferences | Gradle (but 0.8.7 was giving me ‘invalid location’ errors).

    • The 'wrapper' is just a copy of Gradle for each Android Studio project. It allows you to have Gradle 2 in your OS, and different versions in your projects. The Android Developer docs explain that here.
    • Then adjust your build.gradle files for the plugin. The Gradle plugin version must be compatible with the distribution/wrapper version, for the whole project. As the Tools documentation (tools.android.com/tech-docs/new-build-system/user-guide#TOC-Requirements) is slightly out of date, you can set the plugin version too low (like 0.8.0) and Android Studio will throw an error with the acceptable range for the wrapper.

Example, in build.gradle, you have this plugin:

dependencies {
    classpath "com.android.tools.build:gradle:0.12.+"
}

You can try switching it to the exact version, like this:

dependencies {
    classpath "com.android.tools.build:gradle:0.12.2"
}

and (after recording what version you’re changing from in each case) verifying that every build.gradle file in your project pulls in the same plugin version. Keeping the “+” should work (for 0.12.0, 0.12.1, 0.12.2, etc), but my build succeeded when I updated Google’s Volley library (originally gradle:0.8.+) and my main project (originally 0.12.+) to the fixed version: gradle:0.12.2.

Other checks

  1. Ensure you don’t have two Android Application modules in the same Project

    • This may interact with the final solution (different Gradle versions, above), and cause

      UNEXPECTED TOP-LEVEL EXCEPTION: com.android.dex.DexException: Multiple dex files define (various classes)

    • To check, Build | Make Project should not pop up a window asking what application you want to make.

  2. Invalidate your caches
    • File | Invalidate Caches / Restart (stackoverflow.com/a/19223269/513413)
  3. If step 2 doesn't work, delete ~/.gradle/ (www.wuttech.com/index.php/tag/groovy-lang-closure/)
    • Quit Android Studio
    • $ rm -rf ~/.gradle/
    • Start Android Studio, then sync:
      • Tools | Android | Sync Project with Gradle Files
    • Repeat this entire sequence (quit...sync) a few times before giving up.
  4. Clean the project
    • Build | Clean Project

If You See This...

In my recent builds, I kept seeing horrible fails (pages of exceptions) but within seconds the messages would clear, build succeeded and the app deployed. Since I could never explain it and the app worked, I never noticed that I had two Gradle plugins in my project. So I think the Gradle plugins fought each other; one crashed, the other lost its state and reported the error.

If you have time, the 1-hour video "A Gentle Introduction to Gradle" (www.youtube.com/watch?v=OFUEb7pLLXw) really helped me approach the Gradle build files, tasks, build decisions, etc.

Disclaimer

I'm learning this entire stack, on a foreign OS, after working a different career...all at the same time and under pressure. In the last few months I have hit every wall I think Android has; I've been here quite often and this is my first post. I thought this was a hard fix, so I sincerely apologize if the quality of my answer reflects the difficulty I had in getting to it.


Download system image(of targeted android level of your project) from sdk manager for the project you have imported.

This error comes when you do not have target sdk of your android project installed in sdk folder

for eg. Your imported project's target sdk level may be android-19 and on sdk folder->system-images you may have android-21 installed. so you have to download android-19 system image and other files from sdk manager or you can copy paste it if you have the system image.


Remove:

<facet type="android" name="Android">
    <configuration />
</facet>

in your iml file. That works for me.

https://plus.google.com/+AlexRuiz/posts/49hP3V9GSGe


This happened to me recently when I close one Android Studio project and imported another Eclipse project. It seemed to be some bug in Android Studio where it preserves some gradle settings from previously open project and then get confused in the new project.

The solution was extremely simple: Close the project and shut down Android Studio completely, before re-opening it and then import/open the new project. Everything goes smoothly from then on.


Apparently this error has multiple causes. Here's what fixed it for me.

I was running the build command like this:

./gradlew :testapp: build

Running it without the space fixed the issue:

./gradlew :testapp:build