Enable LogCat on Release Build in Android Studio
By default, when I change Build Variants
to release
I don't get any Logs on the logcat, but I do need to read release logs of my app, how can I enable this?
Solution 1:
Add android:debuggable="true"
(default is false) to your Manifest inside the <application>
tag.
From the docs:
android:debuggable
Whether or not the application can be debugged, even when running on a device in user mode — "true" if it can be, and "false" if not.
respectively
You can disable debugging by removing the android:debuggable attribute from the tag in your manifest file, or by setting the android:debuggable attribute to false in your manifest file.
Edit
You may need to add the following to your build.gradle
file inside the android{...} tag:
lintOptions {
checkReleaseBuilds false
}
And as a side-note: Right on the device the Logs are always written, no matter if your application's debuggable is set to false or true. But via the LogCat in Android Studio it's only possible if debuggable is set to true. (Just tested this)
Solution 2:
I do not like the other solution because then you are not testing how the App really is deployed.
A better solution is to open the Android Device Monitor where you can see the logs even when in release configuration with debuggable=false
.
Find it here:
Tools -> Android -> Android Device Monitor
Update:
Android Device Monitor was removed in Android Studio 3.2. However, it is still present in SDK, and you can use it to see the logs (it is located in $ANDROID_SDK/tools/
)
Solution 3:
You should add
android {
buildTypes {
release {
debuggable true
In this case you can use Log.
or System.out.println
and see logs.
If you cannot run release version (app
is disabled), and error is shown: "apk is not signed. Please configure the signing information for the selected flavor using the Project Structure dialog", see app-release-unsigned.apk is not signed.
Solution 4:
debuggable true
in build.gradle
works well, except that BuildConfig.DEBUG
is also going to be true. This might be a problem if your app relies on BuildConfig.DEBUG
to do something only when it's a debug build.
In such a case, try Log.wtf(BuildConfig.APPLICATION_ID, "something went wrong")
, which will print to logcat even if it's a release build.